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The 50-30-20 Budget: What Works (And What Does Not) in India

Personal Finance

4 min read

- By Priyesh Mishra

The 50-30-20 Budget: What Works (And What Does Not) in India

The 50/30/20 rule (needs/wants/savings) is the best personal-finance framework ever written on a napkin. And it assumes a Western salary structure. In India, variable bonuses, HRA tied to metro rents, and parents-as-expenses break the rule unless you adapt it. The fixed version most people get wrong is fixable.

By the end, you will have three ratios that work for an Indian income. Bonus-inclusive, EMI-aware, family-aware. And know when each should bend.

The original and its Indian blind spots

The classic 50/30/20: 50% of take-home on needs (rent, groceries, utilities, insurance, EMIs), 30% on wants (dining, travel, subscriptions), 20% on savings. It assumes a steady salary, no parental obligations, no annual bonus forming a big share of income. Indian salaries often violate all three assumptions.

The Indian-adapted split

  • Essentials (including dependents + EMIs): 55-60% of take-home
  • Wants: 20-25%
  • Savings + investment + emergency fund: 20% (minimum floor)
  • Bonus / variable pay: 70% to savings, 30% to one big-ticket goal (trip / upgrade / parents). Never treated as lifestyle

The rule behind the rule

Whatever ratios you pick, automate them. If 20% goes to savings on the 2nd of the month before you see the balance, you save 20%. If it goes on the 28th out of whatever is left, you save 2%.

EMIs > 40% of take-home

If total EMIs (home + car + personal) exceed 40% of take-home, the 50/30/20 math breaks. Treat the excess as a structural problem to solve before optimising the rest. Prepayment, refinancing, or downsizing.

Variable-pay earners

Sales, consulting, or freelance income where 40%+ comes from variable pay: use the rule on the *base* and treat every variable rupee as a savings-first tranche. Lifestyle inflation on a Rs. 5L quarterly bonus is the single biggest wealth-destroyer in Indian middle-class households.

Key Takeaways

  • Shift the original 50/30/20 to 55-60 / 20-25 / 20 for Indian reality.
  • Bonus money: 70% savings, 30% one goal. Not lifestyle.
  • EMIs > 40% of take-home is a structural issue, not a budgeting one.
  • Automate savings on payday. Willpower is a terrible allocator.
  • Track for 3 months to see your actual split before you pick a target split.

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