You Do Not Need ₹15 Crore to Retire Comfortably: How Bonds Can Build Predictable Retirement Income
Forget the daunting ₹15 crore retirement myth. For a couple retiring in their early 50s with ₹1 lakh monthly expenses, a ₹4-5 crore corpus can suffice. This involves a smart split: bonds for income, index funds for growth, and emergency funds. Hig...

But retirement comfort is not only about the size of the corpus. It is about lifestyle, monthly expenses, dependents, city of residence, and how the money is structured.
For a couple in their late 40s planning to retire in their early 50s and live comfortably, the absurd retirement numbers of ₹15 crore or more could cause undue stress. Let’s put the retirement arithmetic into perspective for a couple looking to retire in the coming five years.
A retirement corpus of ₹4 to ₹5 crore can be enough for a couple who wish to retire in their early to mid-50s and have a life expectancy of 30 more years. The assumption here is that the couple have a monthly expense of Rs. 1 lakh. But if the same couple lives in Mumbai or Bengaluru, or wants a premium lifestyle, and spends around ₹2 lakh a month, the required corpus may move closer to ₹8 crore to ₹10 crore. In both cases, the flat ₹15 crore number doesn’t make sense.
So, the real question is not “Do I need ₹15 crore?” It is “How much income should my retirement portfolio generate every month?”
Retirement needs income and growth
First, it should generate regular income for household expenses, medical costs, utilities, insurance, travel, and daily needs.
Second, it should continue growing, because retirement can last 25 to 30 years or more.
This is where bonds and index funds can work well together. Bonds can provide periodic income, while index funds can stay invested for long-term growth. One supports today’s expenses. The other supports tomorrow’s inflation.
Let us take the example of a couple retiring in their early 50s, with no dependent children and monthly expenses of around ₹90,000 to ₹1 lakh. For them, a ₹4 crore retirement corpus can be split into three buckets.
Since this is retirement money, the assumptions should remain conservative.
In this structure, the bond portfolio can cover regular expenses. The index fund portfolio does not need to be touched every month and can continue to grow. The emergency bucket provides comfort during medical events, repairs, family needs, or market downturns.
When ₹4 crore may not be enough
A ₹4 crore corpus is not a universal answer. It works only when expenses are reasonable.
This is why retirement planning should start with expenses, not fear-driven benchmarks. A ₹15 crore target may be relevant for some, but it is not the default requirement for every household.
Why bonds work well for retirement income
Bonds bring predictability to retirement planning. Investors know the coupon, expected cash flow, and maturity date. This helps create a clearer income plan.
For example, if a retired couple needs around ₹90,000 a month, a ₹1.3 crore bond portfolio earning 9% can generate about ₹97,500 a month before tax. That can cover regular expenses without forcing the investor to sell equity funds during a market correction.
This is the value of a bucket-based approach. Bonds handle income. Index funds handle growth. Liquid funds handle uncertainty.
OBPP platforms are making bonds easier to access
Earlier, bonds were seen as products for institutions, HNIs, or investors with large ticket sizes. That is changing. SEBI-registered Online Bond Platform Providers such as Jiraaf have made bonds more accessible to individual investors through listed bond opportunities, relevant disclosures, and a digital investment experience.
For retirement investors, this access matters. They need visibility on yield, rating, maturity, issuer quality, and repayment profile before investing.
However, investors should not chase the highest yield blindly. Bonds carry credit risk, liquidity risk, interest-rate risk, and reinvestment risk. Research, diversification, and guidance from qualified investment advisers are important, especially when the money is meant for retirement.
The goal is financial calm
The purpose of retirement planning is not to scare investors with impossible numbers. It is to create a system where monthly expenses are covered, emergencies are planned for, and long-term wealth continues to grow.
For a couple with moderate expenses and no dependent children, ₹4 crore to ₹5 crore can be a workable retirement corpus if structured well. For a premium lifestyle in high-cost cities, the number may be much higher.
The point is simple: you do not need to chase ₹15 crore blindly. You need a retirement portfolio that matches your lifestyle, generates predictable income, and keeps growing with time.
In that journey, bonds can become the income engine, while index funds remain the growth engine. Together, they can help investors retire with more confidence and less anxiety.
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