The Power of ‘Round-Up’ Investing
The core idea is simple and brilliant: ‘round-up’ investing. Every time you spend, the amount is rounded up to the nearest convenient number (like ₹10 or ₹100), and the difference—the spare change—is set aside for investment. For example, if you buy a coffee
for ₹184, your transaction could be rounded up to ₹200. The extra ₹16 is then automatically swept into an investment account. Psychologically, this is powerful. The amounts are so small that you barely notice them leaving your account, making it a painless way to start saving and investing. It removes the friction and decision fatigue associated with consciously putting money aside, turning your everyday spending habits into a passive wealth-creation engine.
Why This 'Digital Chillar' Matters
It’s easy to dismiss these small amounts. What can ₹16 really do? On its own, not much. But when repeated dozens of times a month and combined with the power of compounding, it becomes a financial superpower. Compounding is the process where your investment returns start earning their own returns. Over time, this creates a snowball effect. Imagine saving just ₹30 a day through round-ups. That’s ₹900 a month, or ₹10,800 a year. Invested in a mutual fund with an average annual return of 12%, that small daily habit could grow to over ₹1.8 lakhs in ten years. The key isn't the size of each individual investment, but the consistency and the time you give it to grow. This method transforms loose change from a forgotten trifle into the foundation of your financial future.
The Automated Route: Apps That Help
In India, a new wave of fintech apps has emerged to automate this process. Platforms like Jar, Spenny, and Deciml connect to your SMS alerts to track your digital spending, including UPI payments. They then prompt you to save the rounded-up amount. Currently, many of these apps channel your savings into assets like digital gold or peer-to-peer lending portfolios. While these are valid investments, the headline promises mutual funds. The direct, fully-automated pipeline from UPI 'change' to a mutual fund of your choice is still a nascent feature. But that doesn't mean you can't achieve the exact same outcome with a simple, smart strategy.
The DIY Method: Your Manual Round-Up System
You can easily replicate this system yourself to invest specifically in mutual funds, giving you more control and choice. This 'do-it-yourself' approach puts you in the driver's seat. It requires a tiny bit of initial setup but instills a powerful sense of financial discipline. All you need is your preferred UPI app and a mutual fund investment platform like Zerodha Coin, Groww, Paytm Money, or others where you already have a KYC-verified account. The process is about making a conscious decision to pay yourself first with the 'change' you're generating.
How to Set It Up in 3 Steps
Ready to start? Here’s a simple, actionable plan. **Step 1: Estimate Your Weekly ‘Change’.** For one week, keep a rough mental or physical note of your UPI transactions. If you spend ₹184, note down ₹16. If you spend ₹42, note down ₹8. At the end of the week, total up this 'digital change'. You'll likely be surprised to find it's a neat sum, perhaps between ₹100 and ₹500. **Step 2: Start a Weekly SIP.** Go to your mutual fund app. Instead of a monthly Systematic Investment Plan (SIP), choose the weekly SIP option. Set the investment amount to your estimated weekly 'change'. For example, set up a recurring weekly investment of ₹200 into an index fund or any other mutual fund that aligns with your risk appetite. Many platforms allow SIPs to start from as low as ₹100. **Step 3: Automate and Forget.** Once the weekly SIP is set, the amount will be automatically debited from your bank account and invested each week. You’ve successfully created a system that mimics round-up investing, directly channelling your spare digital change into a diversified mutual fund portfolio.
















