How to Plan for Your Child’s Higher Education Expenses

Child education planning

How to Plan for Your Child’s Higher Education Expenses

Higher education costs in India have been rising at 10-12% annually. A four-year engineering degree that costs ₹8-10 lakh today could cost ₹25-30 lakh in 15 years. If you are planning to send your child abroad, the numbers are even more staggering — potentially ₹50 lakh to ₹1.5 crore or more.

The key to managing these costs without financial stress is to start planning early. Here is a comprehensive guide to planning for your child’s higher education expenses.

Step 1: Estimate the Future Cost

Start by estimating what education will cost when your child reaches college age. Consider:

  • The type of education (engineering, medicine, MBA, arts, etc.)
  • Whether it will be in India or abroad
  • The current cost of that education today
  • An inflation rate of 10-12% for education costs

Example: If a 4-year engineering degree costs ₹10 lakh today and your child is 5 years old, the cost in 13 years (at 10% inflation) will be approximately ₹34 lakh.

Step 2: Determine Your Investment Horizon

Your investment horizon is the number of years until your child needs the money for college. This is crucial because:

  • Longer horizon (10+ years): You can take more risk with equity investments
  • Medium horizon (5-10 years): A balanced approach with equity and debt
  • Short horizon (less than 5 years): Focus on safe, debt-oriented investments

Step 3: Choose the Right Investment Mix

Based on your time horizon, build a portfolio using these instruments:

For Long-Term (10+ years away):

  • Equity Mutual Funds (SIPs): Expected returns of 12-15% over the long term. Best for wealth creation.
  • Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana: 8.2% guaranteed returns, tax-free. Ideal if you have a daughter.
  • PPF: 7.1% tax-free returns. Safe and steady.

For Medium-Term (5-10 years away):

  • Balanced/Hybrid Mutual Funds: Mix of equity and debt for moderate risk.
  • Debt Mutual Funds: More stable than equity, better returns than FDs.
  • National Savings Certificates (NSC): 7.7% returns with tax benefits.

For Short-Term (less than 5 years):

  • Fixed Deposits: Safe and predictable.
  • Short-term Debt Funds: Slightly better returns than FDs with reasonable safety.
  • Recurring Deposits: Disciplined monthly savings with guaranteed returns.

Step 4: Start a Dedicated SIP

A Systematic Investment Plan (SIP) in equity mutual funds is one of the best ways to build a large corpus over time. The power of compounding works best when you start early.

How much SIP do you need?

  • Target: ₹34 lakh in 13 years
  • Expected return: 12% per annum
  • Required monthly SIP: approximately ₹10,000

If you start 5 years later (8-year horizon), you would need approximately ₹21,000 per month for the same target. This shows the massive advantage of starting early.

Step 5: Protect Against Risk

Education planning is incomplete without risk protection:

  • Term Life Insurance: Ensure you have adequate life cover so your child’s education is funded even if something happens to you.
  • Health Insurance: A medical emergency should not derail your education savings.
  • Education Loan as Backup: Even if you plan to fund education fully, keep the education loan option open as a safety net.

Step 6: Review and Rebalance Annually

Review your education fund portfolio once a year:

  • Are your investments on track to meet the target?
  • Has the cost estimate changed?
  • Should you shift some equity to debt as the deadline approaches?

A good rule is to start shifting from equity to debt 3-4 years before the money is needed.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Starting too late: Every year you delay significantly increases the monthly amount needed.
  • Buying child ULIPs: Traditional child insurance plans and ULIPs often have low returns and high charges. Pure investment in mutual funds + term insurance is usually a better combination.
  • Not accounting for inflation: Education inflation at 10-12% is much higher than general inflation. Plan accordingly.
  • Putting all eggs in one basket: Diversify across equity, debt, and government schemes.
  • Mixing education fund with retirement fund: Keep these goals separate to avoid compromising either.

Education Loan: Not a Failure, But a Strategy

Do not feel that taking an education loan is a failure. In many cases, a combination of savings and an education loan is the smartest approach. Education loan interest gets tax deduction under Section 80E, and it can help preserve your retirement savings.

💡 Bachatt Tip: Planning for your child’s education is a long-term commitment that requires consistency and tracking. With Bachatt, you can set education savings goals, track your progress with visual projections, and stay on course — even when your income varies month to month. Download Bachatt and start planning today.

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