What Happens to Your Money If You Never Invest It — The Real Cost of Not Investing

cost of not investing salary India compounding savings

A friend of mine — Sameer — has been working for nine years. Good company, decent increments. His CTC went from ₹6 lakh to ₹22 lakh over that time.

Last year he turned 34. I asked him how much he had saved and invested.

There was a pause. A longer one than I expected.

“Eight… maybe nine lakhs. It’s in a savings account somewhere.”

Nine years of a rising salary. A savings account that he wasn’t entirely sure of the balance on.

Sameer isn’t bad with money. He doesn’t gamble. He pays his bills on time and he’s never taken a personal loan. He just never got around to investing because life kept happening — the apartment upgrade, the car, the wedding, the EMI that came after. There was always something more urgent.

The problem is that not investing isn’t a neutral choice. It’s an active decision with a price tag attached to it. And that price compounds, invisibly, every single month.

This article is about what that price actually looks like — in rupees.

Your savings account is losing you money right now

I know that sounds wrong. The balance goes up every month — how is that a loss?

Because of inflation.

SBI and HDFC — where most salaried Indians receive their salary — both offer 2.50% per annum on savings accounts as of June 2025. That’s your interest earned. Meanwhile, India’s CPI inflation stood at 3.48% in April 2026 (MOSPI data), and the RBI has projected it at 4.6% for FY 2026-27 (RBI Monetary Policy Statement, April 2026). India’s long-term inflation average since 2012 has been 5.63%.

Run those numbers together:

₹1 lakh sitting in your savings account earns ₹2,500 in a year. Inflation at 4.6% erodes ₹4,600 from its real purchasing power. You’re quietly losing around ₹2,100 per lakh, per year — without spending a single rupee.

Think about what your grocery bill looked like three years ago. What school fees were. What a cab ride cost. The money isn’t going anywhere, but it’s buying less with every passing year. That’s what idle savings look like in practice.

This also shows up in what you pay in tax. Savings account interest above ₹10,000 per year is taxable as income. FD interest is fully taxable. So your already-low returns shrink further the moment tax comes in.

How four options stack up against inflation

Here’s a side-by-side comparison of where most salaried Indians keep their money — and whether any of it actually beats inflation:

Where your money sitsGross return (p.a.)Post-tax return (30% slab)Beats FY27 inflation (4.6%)?
SBI / HDFC savings account2.50%~1.75% (after tax on interest)No — loses ~2.85% per year in real terms
SBI Fixed Deposit (1–2 yr)6.25–6.40%~4.37–4.48% (after 30% tax)Barely — near breakeven, negative in bad years
PPF7.10% (FY 2025-26)7.10% (EEE — fully tax-free)Yes — but locked in for 15 years
Nifty 50 index fund (SIP)~12.48% (20-yr CAGR, NSE data)~11.3% (10% LTCG on gains above ₹1.25 lakh/yr)Yes — by a wide margin over long term

FD rates: SBI general public rates effective July 2025. PPF rate: Ministry of Finance, FY 2025-26. Nifty 50 CAGR: NSE Indices historical data, 20 years to May 2026. Inflation: RBI FY27 projection, April 2026. Post-tax returns assume 30% income tax slab for FD/savings interest and 10% LTCG for equity gains above ₹1.25 lakh per year.

The only instrument that meaningfully beats inflation over the long term is the Nifty 50 index fund. You don’t need to pick stocks, call a broker, or time the market. You need a SIP in an index fund, set up once, running automatically.

What one delayed year actually costs in rupees

Let’s make this concrete.

Arjun is 27. He earns ₹48,000 a month. He can comfortably invest ₹7,000 a month — he knows this, and he’s been saying he’ll start “next month” for two years.

What has that two-year delay actually cost him?

If he’d started two years ago with ₹7,000 per month in a Nifty 50 index fund (20-year historical CAGR ~12.48% per NSE Indices data, May 2026):

  • Amount he would have invested: ₹1,68,000
  • Estimated value today at 12% annualised: approximately ₹1,92,000
  • Return already lost: ₹24,000

That ₹24,000 stings a little. But it’s not the real number.

The real number is what those ₹1,68,000 would have compounded to if left untouched for the next 30 years.

₹1,68,000 invested today and left alone for 30 years at 12% p.a. becomes approximately ₹50 lakh.

The two-year delay didn’t just cost Arjun ₹24,000 in returns today. It potentially cost him close to ₹50 lakh in future wealth. That’s the actual price of “next month.”

And this is just ₹7,000 a month. The math scales with whatever you actually invest.

The compounding gap — ₹2 crore difference, same monthly SIP

Compare two people. Same monthly SIP. Same return. One starts ten years earlier.

 Person A — starts investing at 25Person B — starts investing at 35
Monthly SIP₹5,000₹5,000
Invests until age60 (35 years)60 (25 years)
Total amount invested₹21 lakh₹15 lakh
Corpus at 60 (at 12% p.a.)~₹2.9 crore~₹94 lakh
DifferencePerson A invested ₹6 lakh more — but ended up with ₹1.96 crore moreWaited 10 years. Lost nearly ₹2 crore of future wealth.

All calculations at 12% p.a. annualised, consistent with Nifty 50 20-year historical CAGR (NSE Indices, May 2026). Figures are illustrative. Actual returns will vary.

Person A invested ₹6 lakh more total. But ended up with ₹1.96 crore more.

That difference isn’t about discipline or intelligence or picking the right fund. It’s purely about when the money started compounding. Ten years of extra compounding did nearly ₹2 crore of additional work.

Ten years. Nearly ₹2 crore. That is the price of waiting.

And unlike money — which you can earn back — time cannot be recovered. Not one day of it.

“I’ll start when my salary is higher” — why this almost never works

This is the reason I’ve heard most often, and it sounds completely reasonable. More salary means more to invest.

Except it doesn’t work that way.

Neha is 29. When she was earning ₹32,000 a month, she told herself she’d start investing when she hit ₹50,000. She crossed ₹50,000. She’s now at ₹62,000 and still hasn’t started — because her rent went up, she switched phones, she took a holiday, and she’s now waiting to sort out some credit card dues first.

This isn’t a character flaw. It’s lifestyle inflation. It happens to almost everyone, almost automatically, because spending expands to meet income. The person at ₹30,000 waits for ₹50,000. The person at ₹50,000 is waiting for ₹80,000. By ₹80,000, the EMIs are bigger, the lifestyle is more expensive, and the goalposts have moved again.

The ₹2,000 SIP you could have started at 24 does more for your retirement than the ₹8,000 SIP you plan to start at 34. Not because ₹2,000 is a meaningful amount of money on its own — it isn’t. It’s because every year of compounding you miss is permanent. It doesn’t restart when you finally do begin.

Even starting small matters. A step-up SIP that begins at ₹2,000 and increases 10% each year reaches ₹5,000 by year 10 automatically — without you having to remember to increase it.

The habit is the asset. The amount comes later.

Fixed deposits — better than savings, but are they enough?

Yes — FDs are meaningfully better than a savings account. SBI’s FD rate for 1–2 year tenures sits at 6.25–6.40% per annum for general public customers (effective July 2025).

That’s more than double the savings account rate. If you’re not investing yet, moving idle savings to an FD is better than leaving them in a savings account.

But there’s a catch that most people miss: FD interest is fully taxable as income.

If you’re in the 30% tax slab, a 6.40% FD gives you an effective post-tax return of about 4.48%. Against RBI’s projected FY27 inflation of 4.6%, that barely breaks even — and in a year where inflation runs higher, your FD is losing you money in real terms.

FDs are the right home for your emergency fund and for money you’ll genuinely need in 1–3 years. For long-term wealth — the retirement corpus, the children’s education fund — they simply don’t do the job.

If you want a tax-efficient fixed-income option, PPF gives 7.10% for FY 2025-26, and the entire return is tax-free (EEE status). The downside: a 15-year lock-in. It’s not liquid. ELSS funds give you both market-linked returns and Section 80C deduction, with a much shorter 3-year lock-in.

The three things “doing nothing” actually costs you

1. Inflation erosion — the silent tax

At India’s long-term average inflation of ~5.6%, ₹10 lakh today has the purchasing power of roughly ₹5.9 lakh in 10 years. You didn’t spend it. You didn’t gamble it away. Inflation quietly removed ₹4.1 lakh of value while the bank balance stayed unchanged.

2. Lost compounding years — the permanent loss

Money that doesn’t start compounding today misses every year of growth permanently. The ₹5,000 SIP you didn’t start in June 2024 is one full year of Nifty 50 compounding you’ll never get back. Not next year. Not ever. Time is the one resource in personal finance that cannot be refunded, borrowed, or bought.

3. The habit cost — the hardest one to fix

The longer you don’t invest, the more normal it feels to not invest. Spending becomes your default. Investing feels optional — something you’ll get to eventually.

By 40, when the panic about retirement hits, you’re not just catching up financially. You’re fighting 15 years of a deeply ingrained spending-first mindset. That’s a much harder problem than not having enough money. Habits are harder to change than portfolios.

The good news: starting small breaks the habit pattern immediately. Even ₹500 a month set up as an auto-debit on salary day — before you can spend it — builds the reflex. Once that’s in place, scaling up is just changing a number. This is also why your salary slip matters — understanding your take-home salary clearly helps you identify exactly how much you can automate before lifestyle inflation swallows it.

What to do this week — a simple starting plan

You don’t need to research ten funds, open a demat account, or call a financial advisor. Here’s the minimum effective starting point, executable in one evening:

  1. Download Groww or Zerodha Coin — both are free, SEBI-regulated, and straightforward to use.
  2. Complete KYC — Aadhaar + PAN. Takes 10–15 minutes online, entirely paperless.
  3. Search for a Nifty 50 index fund — UTI Nifty 50, SBI Nifty 50, or HDFC Nifty 50 are all fine. Pick one with an expense ratio under 0.2%. Check expense ratio before confirming — it matters more than it looks.
  4. Set up a monthly SIP — start with whatever amount you’re genuinely comfortable losing in the worst case. ₹500, ₹2,000, ₹10,000 — all of these work. The amount can be changed anytime.
  5. Set the SIP date to 2–3 days after salary credit — money moves before you can spend it. This one step eliminates 90% of the self-discipline problem.
  6. Enable step-up SIP at 10% annual increase — most apps support this. Your SIP grows automatically with your salary, without you remembering to increase it.
  7. Don’t check it for 12 months — the market will fall. Your portfolio will turn red. That is normal. The SIP continues regardless. The only way to lose money in a Nifty 50 index fund long-term is to sell when it’s red.

If you’re also trying to reduce your tax outgo while investing, look at Section 80C deductions — ELSS funds count under 80C and give you market-linked returns with just a 3-year lock-in. And if you haven’t picked your tax regime yet, that decision interacts directly with how much of your salary you actually keep — here’s a comparison of the old vs new tax regime that will help.

One last thing about Sameer

I ran his numbers after that conversation. If Sameer starts investing ₹18,000 a month from age 34 at 12% average returns, he’ll have around ₹3 crore by 60. That’s a solid retirement corpus.

But if he’d started at 25 with just ₹6,000 a month — a third of what he can now afford — he would have had ₹3.7 crore at 60. With less invested each month. Just because of nine extra years of compounding.

He didn’t lose those nine years to a bad market or a financial crisis. He lost them to inertia. To ‘I’ll sort it out later.’

The exact price of “later”, for Sameer, was roughly ₹70 lakh.

Later is expensive. Start now — even with whatever you have this week.

Related reading on The Salary Investor

Kunal Kundu
Follow me

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *