Wednesday, February 11, 2026

Fixed Deposits, Inflation, and the Illusion of High Interest

Fixed deposits (FDs) are among the most trusted investment instruments in India. They promise safety, predictability, and assured returns. A double-digit interest rate like 12% per annum sounds especially attractive. But the real question investors should ask is not “How much interest will I earn?”—it is “How much will my money actually be worth?”

That’s where inflation enters the picture.

Inflation silently erodes purchasing power. Even though your FD balance grows on paper, the real value of both your interest income and principal keeps shrinking over time.

Let’s break this down with numbers.

Key Assumptions

To keep the analysis realistic and consistent, we’ll assume:

  • Principal (FD investment): ₹1,00,00,000 (₹1 crore)
  • FD interest rate: 12% per annum (simple annual interest paid, principal unchanged)
  • Annual interest income: ₹12,00,000
  • Average inflation rate: 6% per annum (close to India’s long-term CPI average)
  • Time horizon: 30 years
  • Interest is withdrawn each year (not reinvested)

Understanding “Real Value”

To adjust any future amount for inflation, we use:

Real Value after n years

= Nominal Amount/[(1 + Inflation)^years]

Here, inflation = 6% = 0.06

Inflation-Adjusted Annual Interest Income

Your annual interest stays ₹12 lakh nominally, but its purchasing power declines every year.

Year Nominal Interest (₹) Real Value after Inflation (₹)
1 12,00,000 11,32,075
5 12,00,000 8,97,000
10 12,00,000 6,70,000
15 12,00,000 5,01,000
20 12,00,000 3,74,000
25 12,00,000 2,79,000
30 12,00,000 2,08,000

What this means

By Year 30, your ₹12 lakh annual interest has the buying power of just about ₹2.1 lakh today.

That’s an 83% loss in real income, despite “earning” 12% every year.

Inflation-Adjusted Principal Value

Your principal remains ₹1 crore in nominal terms—but inflation doesn’t care.

Year Nominal Principal (₹) Real Value after Inflation (₹)
1 1,00,00,000 94,34,000
5 1,00,00,000 74,70,000
10 1,00,00,000 55,80,000
15 1,00,00,000 41,70,000
20 1,00,00,000 31,20,000
25 1,00,00,000 23,30,000
30 1,00,00,000 17,40,000

What this means

After 30 years, your ₹1 crore principal is worth only about ₹17–18 lakh in today’s money.

In real terms, you have lost over 80% of your capital’s purchasing power.

The Big Picture

Even with a seemingly generous 12% FD rate:

  • Inflation at 6% cuts your real returns dramatically
  • Interest income becomes weaker every year
  • Principal preservation is an illusion in long-term fixed-income investing

This is why:

  • FDs work well for short-term stability
  • They are poor long-term wealth creators
  • They are best used as a portfolio stabilizer, not the core growth engine

Final Takeaway

A fixed deposit protects your money from volatility, not from inflation.

If your goal is:

  • Retirement planning
  • Long-term wealth preservation
  • Maintaining purchasing power across decades

Then relying heavily on FDs—even at high interest rates—can quietly leave you poorer in real terms.


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Fixed Deposits, Inflation, and the Illusion of High Interest

Fixed deposits (FDs) are among the most trusted investment instruments in India. They promise safety, predictability, and assured returns. ...