Summary of this article
Today's parents grew up watching their own families fund higher education through last-minute loans and property sales. They do not want to repeat that script.
Starting early is the right instinct. Starting through the wrong product is where years of compounding leak away.
Financial parenting is one of the healthier shifts in Indian household behaviour. The corpus will not care how good the intention was. It will only respect the discipline that built it.
Walk into any financial planning conversation today, and you will hear the same opening line from young parents – “We want to start something for the child.” Sometimes the child is two years old. Sometimes the parents are still expecting. The instinct has shifted in the last five years, and the data backs it up.
1 Finance research shows Indian households spent Rs 1.8 lakh crore on education in FY12. By FY24, that number had jumped to Rs 8.43 lakh crore. A 4.6x rise in twelve years. School fees at premium schools in Mumbai, Pune, Hyderabad and Bengaluru are now climbing from 10 to 15 per cent every year, well above the headline Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation. A foreign undergraduate degree that cost Rs 50 to 60 lakh a few years ago is now Rs 75 lakh to over Rs 1 crore. Parents do this math once and cannot unsee it.
What is driving the shift? “Awareness, mostly. Today's parents grew up watching their own families fund higher education through last-minute loans and property sales. They do not want to repeat that script. Add social media peer pressure at playgroups and creeping global aspirations even in middle-income households,” says Anooj Mehta, Partner at 1 Finance, a personal finance platform.
Here is where most parents lose ground. Starting early is the right instinct. Starting with the wrong product is where years of compounding leak away. Young couples are still seen selling child Unit Linked Insurance Plans (ULIPs) and endowment plans branded as "guaranteed education corpus", returning barely above a fixed deposit. Insurance is not goal investing. A term policy on the earning parent protects the child's future. A packaged child plan mostly profits from inertia.
“A simpler structure works. A diversified equity SIP (Systematic Investment Plan) in the parent's name for the long horizon, with a portion routed into the child's name. Once the child turns 18, they are independently assessed for tax. The basic exemption, combined with the Rs 1.25 lakh equity Long-Term Capital Gains (LTCG) exemption, can shelter close to Rs 5.25 lakh of gains tax-free in a year if the child has no other income. Done right, that is a clean and legal way to cut tax leakage on a sizeable education corpus,” informs Mehta.
Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana (SSY) is the obvious conservative anchor for a girl child. 8.2 per cent, fully tax-free, EEE (Exempt-Exempt-Exempt), twenty-one-year maturity. It aligns naturally with the education timeline.
For NPS Vatsalya, the account can be exited from age 18, with up to 80 per cent available as a lump sum and a 20 per cent annuity mandated once the corpus crosses Rs 8 lakh. Partial withdrawals for education are also allowed. That said, the forced annuity portion, the 75 per cent equity cap, and tax leakage beyond the 60 per cent exemption still make Vatsalya a complementary discipline tool, not the primary education engine.
“Term cover on the earning parent. Equity SIP for growth. SSY/ PPF/ NPS Vastsalya for stability. A deliberate glide path into debt three years before the goal,” says Mehta.
Financial parenting is one of the healthier shifts in Indian household behaviour. The corpus will not care how good the intention was. It will only respect the discipline that built it.
FAQs
1. How early should parents start investing for their child’s education?
It’s never too early to start investing for your child. If you start right when your child is born, you have more time for your money to compound and you will also have to save less every month.
2. Is it ideal to invest in child plans for education planning?
Not necessarily. Most financial advisors recommend parents to go for a combo of term insurance plan and equity SIPs.
3. What are the common child investment plans in India?
Equity mutual fund SIPs, Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana (SSY), PPF and NPS Vatsalya are some of the popular investment plans for your child’s long-term goals like education.
















