XIRR Calculator
Use this XIRR calculator to estimate annualized return for SIPs, mutual funds, staggered investments, withdrawals and irregular cash flows based on actual transaction dates. This page also includes cash flow analysis, planning highlights, formula explanation, examples, comparison tables and practical interpretation guidance.
Last updated: April 2026 • For informational and educational use only
Calculate XIRR
Enter your cash flow dates and values to estimate XIRR, net gain, total invested amount, inflow value and annualized return. Use negative values for investments and positive values for redemption, withdrawals or current portfolio value.
| # | Date | Type | Amount | Action |
|---|
XIRR result explained
The XIRR shown above is the annualized return implied by the dated cash flows entered in the calculator. In simple terms, it tells you what yearly compounded rate best connects your staggered investments and inflows when real calendar timing is considered.
- Higher XIRR usually means stronger annualized return across the dates entered.
- Lower or negative XIRR means the current value or inflows have not yet produced a strong annualized result.
- Total invested and net gain should be read along with XIRR, not in isolation.
This makes XIRR useful when comparing SIP outcomes, mutual fund returns, staggered portfolio entries and irregular cash flow patterns that CAGR cannot represent properly.
XIRR planning highlights
These highlights turn the calculator output into a simpler planning summary so users can understand how invested amount, inflows, timing and annualized return work together.
Annualized return implied by the dated cash flow series entered in the calculator.
Simple difference between total inflow value and total invested amount.
Total negative cash flow amount entered as investments.
How many times total inflow value stands against the invested amount.
Invested amount vs current value chart
This chart gives a quick visual view of how much of the current or realized value comes from the money invested and how much comes from gain generated over time.
Time and cash flow view
This timeline shows how long the cash flow series spans and how the money multiple sits against the dated investment pattern.
XIRR cash flow schedule
This table shows the dated cash flow schedule used in the XIRR calculation. Investments are treated as negative cash flows and inflows, withdrawals or current value are treated as positive cash flows.
| Step | Date | Type | Cash flow | Days from first cash flow | Role in XIRR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Calculation will appear here. | |||||
XIRR comparison insights
This comparison chart shows how the same invested amount can produce different annualized return outcomes when the final value changes across the same approximate cash flow period.
What does XIRR mean?
Extended Internal Rate of Return, or XIRR, represents the annualized return generated by a series of cash flows occurring on different dates. It is especially useful when investments are not made in one lump sum and when withdrawals or value updates happen at irregular intervals.
In financial analysis, XIRR is widely used to measure SIP return, mutual fund performance, PMS cash flow efficiency, staggered investing outcomes and portfolio return where timing matters. It is one of the most practical ways to compare irregular investment patterns on a common annual basis.
Why XIRR matters
XIRR is useful because total return alone can be misleading when money is invested gradually. For example, comparing outcomes using a SIP calculator or evaluating staggered investments through a mutual fund returns calculator becomes more practical when results are converted into an annualized XIRR format.
- Useful for SIPs, top-ups, withdrawals and staggered investments
- Helpful for annualized comparison when dates are irregular
- Widely used as the right measure where CAGR is too simplistic
What XIRR does not show
XIRR converts a cash flow pattern into one annualized number. It does not fully show volatility, tax impact, expense ratio effect, category risk or whether the timing pattern was sustainable.
- Does not replace broader portfolio analysis
- Does not reflect interim market volatility in detail
- Can look unusually high when the period is short and the gain is sharp
XIRR formula and calculation
This XIRR calculator uses the standard irregular cash flow discounting approach to convert actual dated cash flows into an annualized return estimate.
| Formula | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Σ [ Cash Flow ÷ (1 + r) ^ ((Date - First Date) ÷ 365) ] = 0 | This formula finds the annualized rate r at which the present value of all irregular dated cash flows becomes zero. |
Step-by-step XIRR calculation
- List every investment, withdrawal, redemption or current value with its actual date
- Treat investments as negative cash flows and receipts as positive cash flows
- Measure the time gap from the first cash flow date
- Find the annualized discount rate that balances all dated cash flows to zero
How to use this result
Use XIRR when you want to compare returns across real-world cash flow patterns. It works especially well for SIP investing, staggered mutual fund investing, portfolio top-ups and withdrawals.
If there is only one beginning value and one ending value with no interim cash flows, a CAGR calculator is usually more straightforward because the investment path is simpler.
XIRR examples
Examples make annualized return easier to understand and help answer common search intent around how to calculate XIRR in practice.
| Scenario | Calculation view | Approximate XIRR |
|---|---|---|
| ₹10,000 invested monthly for 6 months, current value ₹64,800 | SIP style mutual fund example | Approx. 16% to 18% |
| ₹1,00,000 invested, ₹50,000 top-up after 8 months, value ₹1,92,000 after 2 years | Lump sum plus staggered top-up example | Approx. 13% to 15% |
| Partial withdrawal in between, followed by final portfolio value | Irregular inflow and outflow example | Depends on actual dates used |
| Portfolio value updated on today’s date without redemption | Current value-based annualized estimate | Works as live XIRR estimate |
What is a good XIRR?
There is no universal perfect XIRR. What counts as good depends on asset class, time period, volatility, market cycle and category benchmark. Still, a simple interpretation table helps users read the number in context.
| XIRR Range | General Interpretation | Why this helps |
|---|---|---|
| Below 0% | Negative annualized return | Usually indicates the current value or inflows have not yet recovered the investment timing pattern well |
| 0% to 8% | Low to modest annualized return | Can still matter depending on risk taken and the length of the holding period |
| 8% to 15% | Healthy annualized range | Often considered a practical long-term return range in many diversified growth contexts |
| 15% and above | High annualized return | Can look attractive but should be checked against period length, volatility and sustainability |
* In simple terms, a good XIRR is one that compares favorably with available alternatives over the same time period and risk level.
* For example, a 12% XIRR on staggered investments is often more informative than a simple total return because XIRR already reflects the impact of dates and compounding.
XIRR vs other return measures
A short comparison helps users understand when XIRR is the right return measure and when another method may be more useful.
| Measure | What it shows | Where it helps most |
|---|---|---|
| XIRR | Annualized return for irregular dated cash flows | SIPs, staggered investments, redemptions and withdrawals |
| CAGR | Annualized compounded growth rate between one start and one end value | Single start value and single ending value comparisons |
| Total return | Overall percentage change from invested amount to final value | Understanding the full-period gain without converting it into a yearly rate |
| Absolute gain | Difference in money terms between inflow value and investment outflow | Reading the raw increase or decrease in value |
Common XIRR calculation mistakes
These are some of the most common mistakes people make while using XIRR. Avoiding them can make the final result easier to interpret and more useful for planning.
| Common mistake | What users often assume | Better way to think about it |
|---|---|---|
| Using only total invested and final value | Users often assume dates do not matter. | XIRR depends heavily on actual cash flow timing, so each dated entry matters. |
| Using the wrong sign | Some people enter everything as positive amounts. | Investments should be negative and receipts or current value should be positive. |
| Ignoring withdrawals or interim inflows | The final value gets all the attention. | All meaningful cash movements should be entered for a more accurate XIRR estimate. |
| Comparing XIRR without context | Some users compare two XIRRs without considering risk, period and benchmark. | A more useful comparison includes time horizon, market context and cash flow pattern. |
Where XIRR is used
XIRR is not limited to mutual fund SIP returns. It is also used across portfolio analysis, business cash flow review and investment tracking where users want one annualized return rate for irregular dated cash flows.
Investment analysis
- SIP return evaluation
- Mutual fund performance comparison
- Portfolio top-up and withdrawal tracking
- Annualized wealth review for irregular contributions
For staggered investing, XIRR often gives a cleaner annualized comparison than total return alone. It can be used alongside tools like the Lumpsum Calculator, SIP Calculator and Mutual Fund Returns Calculator to compare different return styles.
Cash flow analysis
- Irregular project cash flow review
- Portfolio withdrawal planning
- Capital top-up and value tracking
- Personal investment performance review
Users comparing single-entry investments may also find the CAGR Calculator and SWP Calculator useful for broader planning and interpretation.
Frequently asked questions
What is XIRR in simple terms?
XIRR is the annualized return of an investment when money is invested or received back on multiple dates rather than in one single transaction.
Does this calculator show exact portfolio performance?
No. It provides an annualized estimate based on the dates and amounts entered. Real-world performance may also include taxes, expenses, volatility and transaction-specific effects.
Can I use XIRR for mutual funds and SIPs?
Yes. XIRR is commonly used for mutual funds, SIPs, staggered investments, partial withdrawals and other irregular cash flow-based return analysis.
Can I use XIRR for lump sum investing?
You can, but if there is only one beginning value and one ending value, CAGR is often simpler and easier to interpret.
Can XIRR be negative?
Yes. If the current value or total inflows are not strong enough compared with the timing of your investments, XIRR can be negative and represent an annualized loss.
How do you calculate XIRR manually?
To calculate XIRR manually, list each cash flow with its exact date, treat investments as negative and inflows as positive, then solve for the annualized rate that makes the present value of all dated cash flows equal to zero.
Is XIRR better than CAGR?
XIRR is better when there are multiple cash flows on different dates. CAGR is better when there is one start value and one ending value without interim cash movements.
