Hyundai Creta
Purchase price: ₹15,00,000 — what is it really costing your future?
If you invested the EMI instead at 12% CAGR for 30 years:
₹8,99,98,682
That is what your hyundai creta is silently destroying. The EMI is not a payment — it is a permanent withdrawal from your compounding engine.
How ₹25,496/month compounds over time
After 10 years
₹59,23,717
at 12% CAGR, annuity-due
After 20 years
₹2,54,74,275
at 12% CAGR, annuity-due
After 30 years
₹8,99,98,682
at 12% CAGR, annuity-due
Every redirected rupee is modeled as a monthly SIP invested at month-start — the same convention used by professional wealth calculators in India.
Buy It vs. Invest It
Buy the Hyundai Creta
Invest the EMI Instead
Opportunity Cost
₹8,99,98,682
What you could have had if every EMI rupee was compounded instead.
Assumption: The ₹8,99,98,682 figure assumes you continue investing the equivalent EMI amount as a monthly SIP for the full 30-year horizon — not just during the EMI tenure. For the 60-month-only scenario, the corpus at month 60 is ₹21,03,072 (shown above), which then compounds at 12% CAGR to ₹3,57,52,359 over the remaining 25 years if left untouched.
Run your own number
What does YOUR ₹25,496/month leak cost over 30 years? Try the PaisaProof calculator to find out.
Open the calculatorFrequently Asked
What is the real cost of hyundai creta on EMI?
After interest and depreciation, the net loss is ₹10,79,760. If that same EMI was invested at 12% CAGR, it would grow to ₹8,99,98,682 in 30 years.
Should I buy hyundai creta or start a SIP?
If wealth compounding is your priority, the SIP outperforms by orders of magnitude. The decision depends on whether the utility of owning the asset outweighs a ₹8,99,98,682 opportunity cost.
What is the real cost of this purchase on EMI?
Beyond the sticker price, you pay interest, face depreciation, and lose the compounding potential of your capital.
Should I buy this or start a SIP?
Investing the EMI amount into an SIP will always yield far greater wealth over a 30-year horizon than buying a depreciating asset.
How much will this asset depreciate?
Most vehicles and electronics lose 50-80% of their value within 5 years.
Why is the opportunity cost so high?
Because EMI payments drain your monthly cash flow, removing capital that could have been compounding for decades.
