Most Bangalore professionals with ₹20 lakhs to invest face the same three options: put it in mutual funds, buy gold (physical or sovereign bonds), or consider an alternative asset. Increasingly, a fourth option — managed farmland in Coorg — is entering that conversation. Here is an honest, data-driven comparison.
Mutual Funds: The Default Choice
Equity mutual funds are the most common investment choice for salaried professionals in the 30–50 age group. The case for them is well-known: diversification, professional management, liquidity, and strong long-term average returns of 12–15% CAGR for diversified equity funds over 10-year periods.
The downsides are equally well-known: full market correlation (your portfolio falls when the market falls), long-term capital gains tax of 10% above ₹1 lakh per year, short-term capital gains tax of 15%, and the psychological challenge of holding through 30–40% drawdowns that characterise every major market correction.
A ₹20 lakh investment in an equity mutual fund, growing at 12% CAGR over 10 years, becomes approximately ₹62 lakhs — before tax on gains.
Gold: The Emotional Anchor
Gold is deeply embedded in Indian financial psychology, functioning simultaneously as an investment, a cultural asset, and an emergency reserve. Sovereign Gold Bonds (SGBs) are the most efficient form — offering 2.5% interest per year plus capital appreciation, with full capital gains tax exemption on maturity after 8 years.
Gold has returned approximately 10–12% CAGR in INR terms over the past decade, driven partly by global gold price appreciation and partly by INR depreciation against the US dollar.
The limitations: gold produces no operational income beyond SGB interest, is purely a store of value rather than a productive asset, and the physical form has storage and insurance costs. SGBs are excellent but have limited issuance windows.
A ₹20 lakh SGB investment over 8 years at 11% CAGR becomes approximately ₹45 lakhs at maturity, tax-free on the capital gain.
Farmland in Coorg: The Physical Alternative
A ₹20 lakh investment in managed farmland in Coorg (approximately 3–4 acres in Madikeri) delivers returns from two simultaneous sources: land appreciation and crop income.
Land appreciation in Coorg has been running at 12–15% per year in recent years. At 12% CAGR, ₹20 lakhs of farmland is worth approximately ₹62 lakhs after 10 years — before crop income. Annual crop income of 8–12% of investment value means ₹1.6–2.4 lakhs per year, all tax-free as agricultural income. Over 10 years, cumulative tax-free crop income of ₹16–24 lakhs. Combined value at year 10: ₹62 lakhs (land) + ₹20 lakhs (accumulated crop income) = ₹82 lakhs — with zero income tax paid on the crop income component.
The Tax Comparison
This is where farmland decisively outperforms for high-bracket investors. Mutual fund gains are subject to 10–15% capital gains tax. Gold SGB capital gains are tax-free at maturity but the 2.5% interest is taxable as income. Agricultural income from farmland is 100% exempt from income tax — no ceiling, no sunset clause.
For a 30% bracket taxpayer, ₹2 lakhs of annual farm income is worth ₹2 lakhs. The equivalent gross salary to net ₹2 lakhs in hand is ₹2.86 lakhs. The tax advantage compounds significantly over a 10-year holding period.
Liquidity: The Honest Tradeoff
This is where farmland is at a genuine disadvantage. Mutual fund units can be redeemed in 1–3 working days. SGBs are listed on exchanges (though liquidity is thin). Farmland typically takes 3–6 months to sell, requires a buyer, and involves registration costs and stamp duty.
For investors who may need to access their money urgently, farmland should not represent their only investment. It is best positioned as the illiquid, long-term anchor of a diversified portfolio — complementing, not replacing, more liquid instruments.
The Portfolio Recommendation
For a Bangalore professional with ₹20 lakhs available and a 10-year horizon: some portion in equity mutual funds for liquidity and market exposure, some in SGBs for gold exposure and tax efficiency, and a meaningful allocation — ₹10–15 lakhs — in managed farmland in Coorg for tax-free income, genuine asset appreciation, and portfolio diversification into an uncorrelated physical asset.
The exact split depends on your liquidity needs, risk tolerance, and time horizon. But the case for including farmland as part of a diversified portfolio has never been stronger.
