If you have spent any time reading about mutual funds, you have probably come across the terms SIP, SWP, and STP. They sound similar. They all have the word Systematic in them. And they all involve mutual funds. So it is easy to get confused.
But here is the thing — each of these three plans serves a completely different purpose. One is for building wealth. One is for spending it. And one is for moving it around smartly. Once you understand the difference, you will know exactly which one applies to your situation.
Let us break each one down in plain language — no jargon, no confusion.

1. SIP – Systematic Investment Plan
Think of a SIP like a recurring deposit, but for mutual funds. You commit to investing a fixed amount of money at regular intervals — usually every month — and the money automatically gets invested into a mutual fund of your choice.
So if you decide to invest Rs.5,000 every month in an equity mutual fund, that amount will be deducted from your bank account on a fixed date and used to buy units of the fund at that day’s price (called the NAV, or Net Asset Value).
Why SIP is so popular
The beauty of SIP is that it removes two of the biggest problems that investors face: the pressure to time the market and the need for a large lump sum to start.
With a SIP, you invest the same amount regardless of whether the market is up or down. When markets are low, your Rs.5,000 buys more units. When markets are high, it buys fewer. Over time, this averages out your cost of buying — a concept called Rupee Cost Averaging. It means you do not need to stress about market timing.
The second superpower of SIP is compounding. When your mutual fund earns returns, those returns get reinvested. Over time, you start earning returns on your returns. It is a snowball effect — small to begin with, but powerful over the long run.
A quick example
Imagine you invest Rs.5,000 every month starting at age 25. By the time you are 55, assuming a 12% annual return, you could have accumulated over Rs.1.76 crore — even though your total investment was only Rs.18 lakh. That is the power of 30 years of compounding.
Who should use SIP?
- Salaried individuals who want to invest a portion of their income every month
- Young investors who are starting their wealth-building journey
- Anyone who wants a disciplined, stress-free way to invest
- People saving for long-term goals like retirement, children’s education, or buying a home
Key facts about SIP
- You can start with as little as Rs.100 per month
- You can pause, increase, decrease, or stop your SIP anytime
- Most mutual fund platforms allow you to set up a SIP in minutes
- You can have multiple SIPs running at the same time in different funds
2. SWP – Systematic Withdrawal Plan
Now let us flip the script. If SIP is about putting money in regularly, SWP is about taking money out regularly. It is the reverse of SIP — and it is incredibly useful for people who have already built a corpus and now need a steady income from it.
Here is how it works: You invest a large amount (a lump sum) into a mutual fund. Then you instruct the fund to pay you a fixed amount every month (or quarter). The fund sells the required number of units to give you that cash, and the rest stays invested and continues to grow.
A practical example
Say you have retired with a corpus of Rs.50 lakh. You put this in a balanced or debt mutual fund and set up a SWP to pay you Rs.25,000 every month. Each month, the fund redeems just enough units to pay you Rs.25,000 and the remaining corpus continues to earn returns.
If your fund earns at least 6–7% per year, your corpus might sustain itself for many years, or even grow while you withdraw. This makes SWP a smarter alternative to simply keeping your money in a savings account or fixed deposit.
Why SWP is better than just withdrawing manually
You might wonder — why not just redeem money when you need it? The answer is discipline and tax efficiency. SWP automates the process so you do not accidentally spend more than planned. And because only a portion of each withdrawal is profit (the rest is your original capital), you often pay less tax compared to putting money in a fixed deposit and paying tax on the full interest.
Who should use SWP?
- Retirees who need a monthly income from their investments
- Anyone who has received a large sum (inheritance, bonus, property sale proceeds) and wants to convert it into a steady income stream
- Investors who want to fund regular expenses like EMIs, children’s school fees, or household costs
- People who want to preserve their capital while still withdrawing from it
Types of SWP
- Fixed Amount SWP: You withdraw a set amount every period (e.g., Rs.20,000/month)
- Appreciation SWP: You only withdraw the profit/gains, leaving your original investment untouched
- Fixed Units SWP: You redeem a fixed number of units each time, regardless of the NAV
3. STP – Systematic Transfer Plan
STP is a little different from the first two. It does not involve your bank account at all. Instead, it is about moving money between two mutual funds within the same fund house — automatically and at regular intervals.
Think of STP as a bridge between funds. You park your money in a safer fund (like a liquid or debt fund) first. Then, over time, you gradually move it into another fund (like an equity fund) in smaller chunks.
Why would you want to do this?
Let us say you receive a year-end bonus of Rs.5 lakh and you want to invest it in an equity mutual fund. But equity markets are volatile — putting all Rs.5 lakh in at once means if the market drops right after, you immediately lose money.
STP solves this problem. You invest the full Rs.5 lakh in a liquid fund first (which is low-risk and still earns 5–7%). Then you set up a STP to transfer Rs.50,000 per month into your equity fund. Over 10 months, your entire bonus moves into equities gradually — while earning returns in the liquid fund in the meantime.
This gives you the benefit of Rupee Cost Averaging (just like a SIP) without leaving your lump sum sitting idle.
STP is essentially a SIP with existing funds
The key difference from a SIP is the source of money. In a SIP, money comes from your bank account. In a STP, money comes from another fund you already own. The destination (equity fund) does not care — it receives regular investments either way.
Who should use STP?
- Investors who receive a large lump sum and want to reduce market risk
- People shifting from conservative to aggressive investments as their risk appetite changes
- Investors who are nearing a goal and want to move from equity to debt gradually (reverse STP) to protect their gains
- Anyone who wants the benefits of a SIP but is starting with a lump sum
Types of STP
- Fixed STP: A fixed amount moves from one fund to another each time
- Capital Appreciation STP: Only the profits from the source fund get transferred, keeping the principal safe
- Flexible STP: The transfer amount varies based on market conditions — more units transferred when markets are low, fewer when high
SIP vs SWP vs STP
| Feature | SIP | SWP | STP |
| Full Name | Systematic Investment Plan | Systematic Withdrawal Plan | Systematic Transfer Plan |
| What it does | Invests money regularly into a fund | Withdraws money regularly from a fund | Moves money from one fund to another |
| Purpose | Build wealth over time | Generate regular income from corpus | Shift investments between fund types |
| Direction | Money flows IN | Money flows OUT | Money moves BETWEEN funds |
| Best for | Young earners, wealth builders | Retirees, income seekers | Lump sum investors, risk managers |
| Typical frequency | Monthly / Weekly | Monthly / Quarterly | Monthly / Quarterly |
| Tax on gains? | Yes, on redemption | Yes, on each withdrawal | Yes, each transfer is a redemption |
Tax Implications
All three plans have tax implications, and it helps to understand them upfront.
SIP Taxation
Each SIP instalment is treated as a separate investment. When you redeem, each instalment’s holding period is calculated individually. For equity funds, gains held for more than 12 months are taxed at 12.5% (Long Term Capital Gains on amounts above Rs.1.25 lakh per year). Gains held for less than 12 months are taxed at 20% (Short Term Capital Gains). For debt funds, all gains are taxed as per your income tax slab.
SWP Taxation
Every SWP withdrawal redeems units from your fund. Only the profit portion is taxed — the part that represents your original investment is returned tax-free. The same LTCG and STCG rules apply depending on how long the fund has been held. This often makes SWP more tax-efficient than bank FDs, where the entire interest income is taxable.
STP Taxation
This one catches many investors off guard. Every transfer in an STP is treated as a redemption from the source fund. So if your liquid fund has made gains, those gains are taxable every time a transfer happens. The good news is that liquid funds held for over 3 years qualify for indexation benefits (for debt funds under old tax rules) — though recent tax changes mean debt fund gains are now taxed at your slab rate. Always consult a tax advisor for your specific situation.
Which One is Right for You?
The answer depends entirely on where you are in your financial life:
Choose SIP if: You are earning a regular income and want to build wealth steadily over time. SIP is the most popular entry point into mutual fund investing, and for good reason — it is affordable, flexible, and incredibly powerful over the long run.
Choose SWP if: You have already accumulated a corpus and want to convert it into a regular income. SWP is ideal for retirees or anyone who needs predictable cash flow without liquidating all their investments at once.
Choose STP if: You have a large sum to invest but are nervous about putting it all into equities at once. STP lets you start safe, earn something on the waiting money, and gradually shift into higher-growth assets.
The Smart Move
Here is the thing — SIP, SWP, and STP are not competitors. They are different tools for different phases of life. And a well-rounded financial plan often uses all three:
- In your 20s and 30s: Use SIP to steadily build your wealth
- When you receive a lump sum: Use STP to deploy it into equities smartly
- In your 50s and beyond: Gradually shift from SIP to SWP as your focus moves from wealth creation to income generation
Think of it as a financial journey: SIP helps you climb the mountain, STP helps you navigate tricky terrain, and SWP lets you enjoy the view from the top — sustainably.
Final Thoughts
The words systematic and plan in all three names are there for a reason. All three strategies reward discipline and consistency. None of them require you to be a market expert or watch stock prices every day.
Whether you are just starting out with a Rs.500 monthly SIP, deploying a bonus through an STP, or living off decades of savings through a SWP — the key is to start, stay consistent, and let time do its work.








