🎓 Goal Planning

Planning for Your Child's Education: A Complete Guide

By Mahesh Jain · 10 min read · Updated 22 May 2026

Of all the financial goals a parent has, funding a child's education is the one that cannot be postponed and cannot be compromised. A retirement can be modest. A car can wait. But when your child is ready for college, the fees are due, in full, that year. The good news is that education planning is very manageable if you start early. This guide shows you how.

Why education planning needs special attention

Education is a unique goal for three reasons, and each one argues for starting early.

That third point is the one most parents underestimate, so it deserves a closer look.

Education inflation: the number that changes everything

General inflation in India runs around 6 percent. Education inflation has historically run higher, often 8 to 10 percent or more. Over the 15 or 18 years between a child's birth and college, that higher rate compounds into a startling figure.

What education inflation does

A course that costs ₹20 lakh today, with education inflation at 9 percent, will cost about ₹73 lakh in 15 years and about ₹1.2 crore in 20 years. The course did not change. The price simply compounded. A parent who plans around today's ₹20 lakh figure will fall short by tens of lakhs.

Watch out

The single biggest mistake in education planning is targeting today's fees. You must plan for the future cost. Always run the number forward with education inflation. Our education planning calculator does this automatically.

Step 1: Estimate the future cost

Start by deciding, roughly, what you are planning for. A domestic engineering or medical degree, a management course, an overseas education? Each has a very different price tag. You do not need precision. A reasonable estimate of today's cost is enough.

Then project it forward. Take today's cost, apply a sensible education inflation rate, and the number of years until your child starts the course. The result is your real target. Our education planning calculator does this and then tells you the monthly investment needed.

Try this

Open the education planning calculator. Enter today's cost of the course you have in mind, your child's current age, the age they will start college, and 9 percent education inflation. The future cost it shows may surprise you. That number, not today's fees, is what you are planning for.

Step 2: Decide how to invest, based on time

How you invest for education depends entirely on how many years are left, exactly as with any goal-based plan.

If college is more than 10 years away

You have a long runway, so equity is the right engine. A long-term equity mutual fund SIP gives the best chance of beating that high education inflation by a wide margin. Time lets you ride out market falls comfortably.

If college is 5 to 10 years away

Still mostly equity, but begin to add some stability. Hybrid funds or a mix of equity and debt are sensible as the goal moves closer.

If college is less than 5 years away

Now capital protection matters more than growth. Money needed within a few years should sit largely in debt funds or fixed deposits, where a market fall cannot damage it.

Step 3: Glide to safety as college approaches

This step protects everything you have built. Imagine investing diligently for 15 years, and then, in the year before college, the market falls 25 percent. Years of effort dented at the worst possible moment.

The fix is to glide gradually to safety. In the last three to four years before the fees are due, steadily move the accumulated corpus from equity into safe debt funds or fixed deposits. By the time college arrives, the money is fully protected and simply waiting to be used. You give up a little potential growth at the end in exchange for certainty, and for this goal certainty is worth far more.

Step 4: Use both a SIP and any lump sums

The backbone of an education plan is a monthly SIP, ideally a step-up SIP that rises with your income. But also use lump sums when they appear. A bonus, a gift from family at the child's birth, a maturing investment, all of it can be directed into the education fund to accelerate progress.

Keep the education money in a clearly separate folio or account, mentally and practically labelled for that purpose. Money with a clear label is far less likely to be spent on something else.

A few more practical points

The calm way to fund a big goal

Funding a child's education sounds daunting because the final number is large. But broken into a monthly SIP started early, it becomes one of the most achievable goals there is. The parents who struggle are usually the ones who started late and planned around today's fees. The parents who manage it comfortably are the ones who started early and planned for the real, inflated future cost.

You cannot choose when your child will need their education funded. You can only choose when you start preparing for it. Choose now.

Estimate your number today with the education planning calculator, start a SIP for whatever amount you can manage, raise it each year, and glide it to safety as college nears. Your future self, and your child, will be glad you began early.

Frequently asked questions

How much should I save for my child's education?

It depends on the type of course and how many years away it is. Estimate today's cost of the course you have in mind, then project it forward using education inflation of around 8 to 10 percent. An education planning calculator turns that future cost into the monthly investment you need.

What is education inflation?

Education inflation is the rate at which the cost of education rises. In India it has historically been higher than general inflation, often 8 to 12 percent a year. Over 15 to 20 years this compounds steeply, so planning must always use the future, inflated cost rather than today's fees.

Where should I invest for my child's education?

It depends on the time left. If college is more than 10 years away, equity mutual fund SIPs are best, as they can beat education inflation over the long term. Within 5 years of the goal, shift to debt funds or fixed deposits to protect the money from market falls.

When should I start planning for my child's education?

As early as possible, ideally from the child's birth. An 18-year runway keeps the monthly investment small and lets compounding do most of the work. Every year of delay significantly raises the monthly amount needed.

Should I use my retirement savings for my child's education?

No. You can borrow for education through an education loan, and your child has a long earning life ahead. You cannot borrow for retirement. Fund both goals separately, and never raid your retirement corpus for education.

How do I protect the education fund as college approaches?

Glide gradually to safety. In the last three to four years before the fees are due, steadily move the corpus from equity into debt funds or fixed deposits. This protects years of accumulated savings from a market fall just before you need the money.

This article is for general education only and is not personalised investment, tax or legal advice. Mutual fund investments are subject to market risks. Read all scheme related documents carefully before investing. Tax rules are stated for the financial year 2025-26 and may change. Please consult a qualified adviser before acting on any information here.