BigBasket monthly
Weekly pantry stock-up — what is it really costing you?
If invested at 12% CAGR over 30 years:
₹2.1 Crore
A recurring ₹6,000 monthly spend on BigBasket orders compounded at 12% CAGR over 30 years illustrates the quiet cost of frictionless grocery shopping.
That is 3.3 years of your working life.
How ₹6,000/month becomes ₹2.1 Crore
After 10 years
₹13,94,034
at 12% CAGR, annuity-due
After 20 years
₹59,94,888
at 12% CAGR, annuity-due
After 30 years
₹2,11,79,483
at 12% CAGR, annuity-due
This assumes every rupee you spend on bigbasket monthly was instead invested at the start of each month — the same compounding convention used by mutual fund SIPs in India.
Continue vs. Redirect
Continue This Habit
Redirect to SIP
Opportunity Cost
₹2.1 Crore
What you could have had if this habit was compounded instead.
Years saved
You reach ₹5 Crore3.3 years faster
Run your own number
What does YOUR ₹6,000/month leak cost over 30 years? Try the PaisaProof calculator to find out.
Open the calculatorFrequently Asked
What is the opportunity cost of bigbasket monthly?
Investing that same amount at 12% CAGR for 30 years results in approximately ₹2.1 Crore, making the true cost far higher than the sticker price.
How does PaisaProof calculate this?
We use the same monthly annuity-due compounding convention as professional SIP calculators. Every rupee not spent is modeled as being invested at month-start for 30 years.
What is the true opportunity cost of this habit?
While the daily cost seems small, the compound interest lost over 30 years means you are sacrificing years of potential financial freedom.
Should I eliminate this habit entirely?
Not necessarily. The goal is intentionality. Once you know the true cost, you can decide if the present value is worth the future sacrifice.
What happens if I only cut this habit in half?
You still recapture 50% of the opportunity cost, which could easily amount to tens of lakhs over your working life.
Can small daily expenses really add up to crores?
Yes. Due to the exponential nature of compound interest, time is the biggest multiplier of even small capital amounts.
