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Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |11136 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Mar 24, 2026

Ramalingam Kalirajan has over 23 years of experience in mutual funds and financial planning.
He has an MBA in finance from the University of Madras and is a certified financial planner.
He is the director and chief financial planner at Holistic Investment, a Chennai-based firm that offers financial planning and wealth management advice.... more
Asked by Anonymous - Mar 12, 2026Hindi
Money

I am 52 years man, myvfinancial lifecis k8nd of jropardised; i ean rs. 35000 per month as salary and i have a hl of 26 lakhs, 4 l pl .90l crdtccard bill and total emies accumulates to rs. 55k. My wifecalso works and she helps me every month of my shortfalls but then i became exhusted to maintain dailyvcordes; now i reached a point for selling my ancestral land for 30l- no w plz advise me if i should clear all my debts,or i should utilise thiscfund to esrn arround rs 50k addly prr month to esse my burden- plz help what should i do and how i should do it!

Ans: You are taking a very honest and brave step by thinking deeply about this decision. Many people delay such decisions and the stress increases. You are trying to solve the problem now. That is the right direction.

Your situation shows one clear issue: monthly EMI is higher than your income capacity. This must be corrected first before thinking about creating extra income from investments.

» Your current financial position needs urgent correction

– Your salary is Rs.35,000 per month
– EMI total is Rs.55,000 per month
– Credit card outstanding is very high
– Personal loan interest is high
– You are depending on your wife every month
– Mental pressure is increasing

This situation cannot continue for long. First goal must be stability.

» Can Rs.30 lakh generate Rs.50,000 monthly income?

This is a very important question.

– To generate Rs.50,000 monthly, investment must produce around Rs.6 lakh yearly
– That means very high return expectation
– Safe investments cannot give this income
– Even moderate-risk investments cannot reliably give this income

So depending on Rs.30 lakh to generate Rs.50,000 monthly is not practical and not safe.

Trying this may create another financial problem.

» Best use of Rs.30 lakh in your situation

Priority should be reducing debt pressure.

Suggested order:

Step 1

– Close credit card outstanding immediately
This is the highest interest burden

Step 2

– Close personal loan of Rs.4 lakh
This also carries high interest

Step 3

– Reduce home loan principal partly
This reduces EMI burden

After doing this:

– Your monthly EMI will fall sharply
– Dependence on your wife reduces
– Stress level reduces
– Financial control returns

This is the strongest move at your age of 52.

» Why clearing loans is better than investing now

Currently:

– Loan interest is higher than investment return
– Cash flow is negative every month
– Retirement is approaching
– Risk-taking capacity is limited

So loan closure gives guaranteed benefit.

Investment for income works only when:

– Loans are under control
– Monthly expenses are stable
– Emergency fund exists

Right now priority is correction, not income creation.

» One more important step after clearing loans

Keep small emergency reserve from the land sale amount

Example:

– Keep around 3 to 6 months expenses separately
This prevents future credit card usage again

» Role of your wife’s income

Your wife supporting you monthly is a strong strength in your family financial system.

After loan reduction:

– Her support requirement reduces
– Household stability improves
– Future savings become possible

This is very valuable.

» Finally

Selling ancestral land is an emotional decision. But if the land sale removes high-interest debt and reduces EMI burden, it becomes a powerful financial reset for your life.

In your situation:

– Do not use Rs.30 lakh to generate monthly income
– Use it to close credit card and personal loan fully
– Reduce home loan significantly
– Keep emergency reserve

This will immediately reduce pressure and improve your financial life.

If you share:

– Home loan EMI amount
– Interest rate
– Remaining tenure

I can guide how much exactly should be prepaid and how much should be kept aside for stability.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in

https://www.linkedin.com/in/ramalingamcfp/
DISCLAIMER: The content of this post by the expert is the personal view of the rediffGURU. Users are advised to pursue the information provided by the rediffGURU only as a source of information to be as a point of reference and to rely on their own judgement when making a decision.
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Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |11136 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jul 16, 2024

Asked by Anonymous - Jul 16, 2024Hindi
Listen
Money
Dear Sir, I am 44 years old. With a total family salary income of 2.2 Lakhs/Month after tax, and I get a yearly one time bonus of Rs. 1.5 Lakhs. Below is my financial position. 1. Combined Family PF Accumulation - 50 Lakhs 2. Own individual house with no Loan(i.e. 20 years housing loan closed in 4 Years) 3. A empty commercial plot in a busy area in a First grade municipal town worth 1.6 Crores 4. A empty commercial land of area 32000 Sq.ft. on a busy National Highways worth 2 Crores 5. Gold Jewels - 2.1 Kg 6. Some ancestral houses and 7 acres agricultural lands from which I get 20K Per month excluding our(mine + wife) salary. 7. LIC Endowment Policies from which I can get Rs. 10 Lakhs if I surrender pre-maturely now. No FD, Mutual Funds and Shares. Debt: 1. 900 grams of gold to my close relative which I borrowed at Rs. 5500/gram in 2023, also has to return only as gold. 2. 35 Lakhs cash at Bank FD rate of interest from my Mom. 3. Gold Pledged for Rs. 18 Lakhs at a nationalized bank 4. Personal loan of Rs. 10 Lakhs, EMI Rs. 27000/month(Approx). - 50 Months remaining. Two daughters studying 11th and 6th respectively. Please guide me to come out of my debt as early as possible.
Ans: Your income and assets are strong. You have Rs. 2.2 lakhs monthly income and a Rs. 1.5 lakh yearly bonus. Your PF accumulation is Rs. 50 lakhs. You own a house with no loan. Your commercial properties are worth Rs. 3.6 crores. Your gold jewels weigh 2.1 kg. Your ancestral property provides Rs. 20,000 monthly.

Debt Analysis
You have some debts. You owe 900 grams of gold to a relative. You have Rs. 35 lakhs debt to your mother at FD interest rates. You have pledged gold for Rs. 18 lakhs at a bank. You have a personal loan of Rs. 10 lakhs with a Rs. 27,000 monthly EMI.

Liquidity Management
Consider surrendering your LIC endowment policies. This can provide Rs. 10 lakhs immediately. Use this amount to reduce high-interest debts. Prioritize paying off the personal loan and pledged gold loan first.

Debt Repayment Strategy
Focus on repaying high-interest loans. Use your bonus and part of your monthly income for this. Repay your personal loan early. This will save on interest costs.

Gold Loan Repayment
Repay the gold loan at the bank. Use part of your income and savings. This will free up your pledged gold. Return the borrowed gold to your relative as soon as possible.

Family Debt Clearance
Repay your mother’s debt with a structured plan. Consider paying a fixed amount monthly. This will reduce your financial burden over time.

Future Investment Planning
Start investing in mutual funds. Use a SIP to invest regularly. This will help grow your wealth. Actively managed funds are better than index funds. They can provide higher returns.

Education Planning for Daughters
Set up an education fund for your daughters. Invest in equity and debt funds. This will ensure their future expenses are covered.

Insurance Review
Review your insurance needs. Ensure you have adequate life and health insurance. This protects your family in case of emergencies.

Professional Guidance
Seek advice from a Certified Financial Planner (CFP). They can provide a tailored financial plan. Professional guidance will help you achieve your financial goals efficiently.

Final Insights
Focus on debt repayment first. Invest regularly for future growth. Secure your family’s financial future with proper planning.

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in

..Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |11136 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jun 05, 2025

Money
I am 39 years old. I have a loan of 2 lacks @ 8 percent interest. My salary is 35000. I have 2 kids whom study expanses is 10000 per month. I have a family of 5 to feed. How can i plan so that i become debt free and save some money. I have no bank balance not even 1 rs. I have 1 Acre of land at my village and home to stay in city. My CIBIL is 500. What do i do now? Should i live or die battleing. Guide me if you can sir
Ans: Your situation is very tough. But you are not alone. You are brave to ask for help. Let me appreciate your courage. You are standing tall even in pain. That’s a big first step. Let’s work on your full financial life. We will fix debts, expenses, credit score, and savings. We will move one step at a time. A 360-degree view is needed. Let us go deep now.

Immediate Emotional and Mental Well-Being
You are not your financial situation. Your life is more valuable than money.

Please talk to someone close. Sharing brings relief. Speak to your spouse, a friend, or a counsellor.

You are strong. But even strong people need support. Never feel ashamed to ask.

Let’s Understand Your Current Position Clearly
Monthly income is Rs. 35,000.

Monthly children’s education cost is Rs. 10,000.

Loan outstanding is Rs. 2,00,000 at 8% interest.

No savings at all. CIBIL is 500. That’s very low.

You own 1 acre of land in the village. You have a house in the city to stay.

Let Us First Handle the Emotion of Debt
Debt makes you feel helpless. But debt is not permanent.

Many families had high loans and still became stable over time.

We will make a plan to reduce the loan. You will be debt free.

Budgeting Is the Starting Point
Write down every expense for a month. Even small ones.

Prioritise spending. Stop any non-essential spending for now.

Essentials include food, education, and basic bills. Avoid luxury, eating out, online shopping.

Try to bring your household costs (including education) under Rs. 25,000.

That gives you Rs. 10,000 space monthly to manage loan and savings.

Fixing the Loan
Rs. 2,00,000 loan at 8% is manageable. But you need discipline.

Start by paying Rs. 5,000 per month. Increase it later when income improves.

Avoid taking any new loan now. Not even for emergency.

Once your credit score improves, you may get lower interest later.

Emergency Fund Is a Must
Start saving Rs. 500 per month. Increase slowly to Rs. 1,000 or more.

Keep this amount in a savings account or a recurring deposit.

Don’t touch this fund unless it is a medical or life emergency.

Rebuilding Your CIBIL Score
Low score blocks your future. We must fix it gradually.

Start paying EMIs on time. Never delay even by one day.

Don’t apply for new loans or credit cards now.

Check your credit report every six months. Dispute any errors.

In 18–24 months, your score will start improving.

Use the Land as a Strategic Resource
Don’t sell the land in a hurry. Land value can go up later.

If there’s no income from land, consider leasing it for farming.

If any family member in village can manage it, ask for help.

Try to earn small rent or crop-sharing from it.

Income Improvement Is the Game-Changer
Rs. 35,000 salary is tight for a family of five with kids.

Look for part-time or weekend jobs if possible. Even Rs. 2,000–5,000 more will help.

If your spouse can earn even part-time, it can reduce stress.

Can you use any skill (typing, cooking, tuition) to earn side income?

Children’s Education Is Sacred
Continue to support their studies. Don’t compromise on this.

Speak to their school. Ask for any fee discount or monthly plan.

Some NGOs support students. Explore such help with dignity.

Try reducing tuitions unless necessary. Try to teach them yourself if possible.

What Not To Do
Don’t borrow more to pay off loan. It becomes a debt trap.

Don’t use chit funds or informal finance. Risk is too high.

Don’t trust people who offer loans to fix CIBIL for a fee.

Long-Term Financial Planning – Step by Step
Once debt is cleared, start regular savings of Rs. 1,000–2,000 monthly.

Prefer investing through a certified mutual fund distributor who is also a CFP.

Don’t go for direct mutual funds. You miss expert support and handholding.

Regular mutual funds through CFPs help in review and correction.

With your busy life, professional help saves time and avoids mistakes.

Avoid These Investment Products
Don’t invest in insurance-cum-investment policies now. Not suitable for your case.

Don’t go for annuities or long lock-in products.

Don’t fall for get-rich schemes. Risk is high and returns are false.

Stay away from index funds. They don’t give personalisation and human guidance.

Actively managed funds have real experts. They change strategy as per the market.

Basic Protection Must Be In Place
You must have a term insurance cover. It protects your family if anything happens.

Don’t buy insurance with returns. Just get simple term plan.

Try for government health schemes if budget is low.

Any medical emergency without insurance can kill savings and push into new loans.

Slowly Build Retirement Plan
Once debts are cleared, start saving Rs. 500 monthly for retirement.

Over 20 years, it will become a large amount. Start small, but stay consistent.

Emotional Strength is Your Biggest Asset
You are not weak. You are responsible and brave. That’s your strength.

Focus on progress, not perfection. Even Rs. 500 saved is a big step.

No situation is fixed. Every year your position can improve.

Keep faith in your own discipline and your family’s support.

Finally
Make a spending list. Cut what you don’t need.

Use Rs. 5,000 per month for loan. In 3–4 years, you can be debt free.

Build Rs. 500 per month emergency fund.

After loans are cleared, shift to saving Rs. 2,000 monthly into mutual funds.

Always invest through a certified mutual fund distributor with CFP. Avoid direct plans.

Never feel alone. Seek guidance when stuck.

A secure life is possible. You just need focus and consistent action.

Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment

..Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |11136 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Jul 29, 2025

Asked by Anonymous - Jul 06, 2025Hindi
Money
Hi Sir, I am 37 years old and have a monthly income of 2.5lakhs.. I have a home loan of 79lakhs with emi of 66k and 17 years remaining. Also have a home improvement loans of 10 lakhs with emi of 10k with 14 years remaining. I have 2 kids with monthly school fees coming to 32k. Monthly household expenses come to 40k-50k. I have a sip of 50k per month which is now 4 lakhs. A paid up ULIP which is 6 lakhs now. A piece of land which is around 50lakhs. I am confused and not sure about the way forward. Please help
Ans: – You are earning Rs. 2.5 lakhs per month. That gives good planning potential.
– You are managing EMIs, school fees and SIPs. That shows discipline.
– You are also aware of your confusion. That is a sign of maturity.

? Current Financial Snapshot
– You have two loans: Rs. 79 lakhs home loan and Rs. 10 lakhs improvement loan.
– Total EMI is Rs. 76,000 per month.
– School fees come to Rs. 32,000 monthly.
– Household expenses are Rs. 40,000–50,000 per month.

– You are investing Rs. 50,000 per month via SIPs.
– SIP corpus is Rs. 4 lakhs now.
– You also have a paid-up ULIP worth Rs. 6 lakhs.
– You own a land worth Rs. 50 lakhs.

? Assessing Loan Exposure
– Home loan tenure is 17 years.
– Improvement loan tenure is 14 years.
– Long tenures keep interest payout high.
– It also affects future flexibility and peace of mind.

– You are paying nearly 30% of income as EMI.
– That is acceptable, but not ideal.
– A more efficient plan can reduce this pressure.

? School and Household Commitments
– Rs. 32,000 per month for school is high.
– Kids' education is an important responsibility.
– You are meeting that well. That’s a good sign.

– Household expenses are within range.
– Total fixed outgo is around Rs. 1.5 lakhs.
– You are left with Rs. 1 lakh monthly.

– This is a strong position to build future wealth.
– It allows space for structured and secure investments.

? SIP and Mutual Fund Review
– You are investing Rs. 50,000 monthly in SIP.
– SIPs are a strong tool for long-term wealth.
– Your existing corpus is Rs. 4 lakhs.
– You have started well, but more consistency is needed.

– Please ensure funds are regular plans, not direct.
– Direct plans lack handholding and behavioural guidance.
– Regular plans via MFD with CFP support offer full-service engagement.
– Portfolio gets rebalanced, reviewed, and corrected periodically.

– Avoid index funds. They do not suit Indian markets well.
– Actively managed funds have better flexibility and expertise.
– Indian markets are still evolving, needing active stock picking.

– Stay invested with long horizon.
– Don’t redeem early unless for clear goal.
– Add goal-wise SIPs going forward.

? Regarding the Paid-Up ULIP
– ULIPs are low-return, high-cost products.
– Insurance and investment should not be mixed.
– A paid-up ULIP is often stagnant in returns.

– Surrender the ULIP if lock-in is over.
– Reinvest proceeds in goal-based mutual funds.
– That will improve long-term returns.

– Use a regular mutual fund route.
– Connect with a Certified Financial Planner to guide fund selection.

? Real Estate Holding: Rs. 50 Lakhs Land
– Land as an asset is illiquid.
– It does not generate monthly income.
– Also, price discovery and resale is unpredictable.

– Please do not depend on this for retirement.
– Use it only for lifestyle needs or family use.
– Do not use it as a core investment pillar.

? Short-Term Priorities to Focus
– Maintain an emergency fund of Rs. 3–6 lakhs.
– That protects against health or income disruption.
– Right now, this fund is not mentioned. Please prioritise it.

– Review insurance. You need term life cover.
– Should be 15–20 times your annual income.
– Health insurance must cover family and self adequately.

– Avoid depending on employer coverage only.
– Personal policies are more stable and independent.

– Avoid new loans. That can spoil the cash flow.
– Instead, build liquid financial reserves.

? Optimising Loan Management
– Consider prepaying small chunks of improvement loan.
– Start with Rs. 1–2 lakhs yearly part prepayment.
– This will reduce tenure significantly.

– Home loan can continue with EMI for tax benefits.
– But in future, any surplus should reduce principal.
– That builds ownership faster and saves interest.

– Avoid investing aggressively while loan interest is high.
– Balance is the key.

? Financial Goals Clarity Needed
– List short-term and long-term goals.
– Child education, higher studies, retirement and family security.
– Each goal needs a clear cost and time estimate.

– Link SIPs to these goals.
– For example: Rs. 20,000 for retirement, Rs. 15,000 for education.
– This creates a focused investment plan.

– Add step-up SIP every year.
– As income increases, SIPs should increase too.

– This helps stay ahead of inflation and life costs.

? Risk Protection Measures
– Term insurance is essential. Check current coverage.
– Get separate health insurance for family.
– Evaluate accidental and critical illness policies too.

– Insurance gives peace and financial backup.
– Don’t rely on investment-based policies for protection.

? Kids’ Education and Future Planning
– Plan for two stages: school and higher education.
– Higher education will cost 20–40 lakhs per child in future.
– Use mutual funds for this.

– Start SIPs in equity mutual funds for long term.
– Goal should be 10–12 years away.
– Use 70–80% equity and balance in debt or hybrid.

– Use STP (systematic transfer plan) to shift funds before usage.

? Retirement Readiness and Strategy
– At 37, retirement may be 20+ years away.
– But planning must start now.
– Use a dedicated SIP for this purpose.

– EPF, PPF, and NPS can be support tools.
– But main retirement corpus should be in mutual funds.

– Revisit every 3 years with a Certified Financial Planner.
– Use goal reviews to stay aligned.

? Tax Planning Optimisation
– Continue claiming home loan interest and principal benefits.
– Also claim school fees for 2 kids under Section 80C.

– Invest in ELSS funds via regular plans.
– That gives tax benefit and long-term growth.

– Avoid tax-saving insurance plans or annuity options.
– They lock money and offer poor returns.

? Behavioural and Cash Flow Discipline
– Don’t withdraw SIPs for lifestyle use.
– Avoid lump sum investments without a goal.
– Invest only through verified MFD under CFP guidance.

– Review expenses every 6 months.
– Keep credit card use minimal.
– Track monthly budget and set targets.

– Spend only after saving, not before.

? Action Steps from Here
– Maintain Rs. 3–6 lakhs emergency fund immediately.
– Review and surrender ULIP. Reinvest amount in mutual fund.
– Rebalance SIP portfolio with goal-wise approach.

– Start small annual part-prepayment on improvement loan.
– Take adequate term and health insurance cover.
– Work with Certified Financial Planner regularly.

– Prepare a goal sheet with year-wise and amount-wise layout.
– Add step-up in SIP each year by 10%.
– Stick to mutual funds only for wealth creation.

? Finally
– You are already doing many things right.
– You are earning well, investing steadily, and aware of debt.
– With proper alignment and professional guidance, growth is assured.

– Avoid mixing investment and insurance.
– Focus on liquidity, flexibility, and clear goal-based investing.
– Follow this structured approach to stay stress-free and wealthy.

Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment

..Read more

Ramalingam

Ramalingam Kalirajan  |11136 Answers  |Ask -

Mutual Funds, Financial Planning Expert - Answered on Apr 01, 2026

Asked by Anonymous - Mar 12, 2026
Money
I am 52 years man, my financial life is kind of jeopardised; i earn rs. 35000 per month as salary and i have a hl of 26 lakhs, 4 l pl & 0.90l crdt card bill and total emies accumulates to rs. 55k. My wife also works and she helps me every month of my shortfalls but then i became exhusted to maintain daily corses; now i reached a point for selling my ancestral land for 30l- now plz advise me if i should clear all my debts at atime or i should utilise this fund to earn arround rs 50k addly per month to esse my burden and keep my fund intactly invested- plz help what should i do and how i should do it!
Ans: You have shared your situation very honestly. It takes courage to face financial pressure and ask for guidance. The good point is this: you still have a strong asset of ancestral land worth about Rs 30 lakhs. That gives you a real opportunity to reset your financial life in a safe way. ????

Your question is very important — whether to clear debts fully or invest the money to generate Rs 50,000 monthly income.

» Understanding your present financial pressure

Right now the biggest issue is not income shortage alone. The real issue is high debt burden compared to income.

– Monthly salary: Rs 35,000
– Total EMI: Rs 55,000
– Credit card dues also present
– Personal loan also present
– Wife supporting monthly shortfall

This means your monthly structure is already under stress. This situation cannot continue for long safely. It can affect peace of mind and family stability. ??

So first priority must be reducing pressure, not creating investment income immediately.

» Can Rs 30 lakhs generate Rs 50,000 monthly income?

Practically, generating Rs 50,000 monthly from Rs 30 lakhs safely is not realistic without taking high risk.

If someone tries to generate that much income:

– capital risk becomes high
– income may not be stable
– market fluctuations can affect returns
– stress may increase instead of reducing

At this stage of life (age 52), protecting capital is more important than chasing aggressive income.

So using this fund only for income generation is not the correct first step.

» Why clearing loans first is the smarter decision

Your loans are already costing you heavily every month.

Especially:

– personal loan interest is high
– credit card interest is very high
– home loan EMI is adding pressure

If you clear high-interest loans first:

– your EMI burden reduces immediately
– monthly stress reduces
– dependence on spouse income reduces
– mental peace improves
– future investment becomes possible again ????

Debt removal itself acts like a guaranteed return.

» Suggested practical strategy for using the Rs 30 lakhs

A balanced approach is better than either extreme decision.

You may consider:

Close entire credit card dues immediately
Close entire personal loan immediately
Reduce home loan partially using remaining amount

After this:

– your EMI may reduce sharply
– monthly survival becomes easier
– savings capacity can restart

This creates a strong foundation again.

» After debt reduction – how to create monthly support income

Once EMI pressure reduces:

remaining amount (if any) can be invested carefully in a combination of:

conservative hybrid mutual funds
monthly withdrawal strategy from mutual funds
short-term debt-oriented investments
emergency reserve creation

This can create supportive monthly cash flow.

But first step must be debt reduction, not income creation.

» Important emotional and family angle

Your wife is already supporting monthly shortage. That shows strong family strength. That support must now be respected by reducing risk quickly.

Selling ancestral land is a serious decision. If it is done, it should solve the biggest problem permanently — which is debt pressure.

Otherwise selling land without solving loans fully may create regret later.

» What a Certified Financial Planner would normally prioritise here

Priority order should be:

remove high-interest loans
reduce EMI stress
build emergency fund
restart structured investments
then create income support strategy

This order protects both finances and peace of mind.

» Finally

Trying to earn Rs 50,000 monthly from Rs 30 lakhs now is risky.

Clearing expensive loans first will give you stronger control, lower stress, and better future choices. After that, we can safely build income support step-by-step.

You are still in a recoverable position because you have an asset to correct the situation. Many people do not have that advantage. Use it wisely. ????

Best Regards,

K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,

Chief Financial Planner,

www.holisticinvestment.in

https://www.linkedin.com/in/ramalingamcfp/

..Read more

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Nayagam P

Nayagam P P  |11011 Answers  |Ask -

Career Counsellor - Answered on Apr 19, 2026

Career
Sir,My son got 144 in BITS and 86percentile in Jee, what will be the best availabilty/option for engineering institute for CS, Mechanical & Electrical
Ans: Rachna Madam, with a BITSAT score of 144, admission to the CSE, Electrical, or Mechanical branches at all three BITS campuses is effectively not possible. Recent official cutoffs have been much higher—for example, Hyderabad closed at CSE 284/319/270, EEE 251/262/239, and Mechanical 218/192/214 in 2023/2024/2025, respectively, with Goa and Pilani cutoffs even higher.

Through JoSAA, with an 86 percentile in JEE Main, admission to CSE in NITs/IIITs is generally unlikely, and getting Mechanical or Electrical in mainstream NITs is also difficult under the open category. Chances improve mainly with home-state quota, reserved categories, female-only seats, or in lower-demand GFTIs and self-financed institutes accepting JEE Main scores.

Please check JoSAA’s official opening and closing rank archives year-wise before filling choices. Your son can focus on mid-tier or newer NITs and IIITs and state-level colleges and should also consider 4-5 reputed private universities as backup options instead of relying solely on BITS or JoSAA. ALL the BEST for Your Son's Prosperous Future!

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Nayagam P

Nayagam P P  |11011 Answers  |Ask -

Career Counsellor - Answered on Apr 18, 2026

Career
Sir, My son has appeared in Class X ICSE Exam and results are awaited. So far , he has been an average performer academically. I believe he is capable and he can do great if he puts in the hard work. His performance in subjects like History/Geography etc has always been better than in Maths/science. I personally never wanted to force him to choose any stream for higher studies. He also is not sure about it. While discussing I suggested him to go for Commerce or humanities stream and then for MBA from a reputed institution. However, he is more concerned about job opportunities and wanted to go for science. Hence, after a lot of discussion, we have got him admitted in Science stream in Delhi and also got him enrolled in Allen for JEE Coaching. We thought if he adapts well and gets going, then may be he can achieve good result. Otherwise, we may decide to change stream after Class XII. What is your opinion? Request for your suggestion please
Ans: Shyam Sir, I have thoroughly reviewed your son’s background. You haven’t mentioned whether he is continuing with the ISC board or has enrolled in the CBSE board with Allen-JEE coaching for this 11th/12th Grade. Firstly, I recommend a psychometric test for your son to gain a rough idea of the most suitable career options for him.

Secondly, job opportunities exist across domains, but to be competitive, your son must have passion and interest in his chosen field and continuously upgrade both technical and soft skills relevant to that domain.

Thirdly, besides understanding suitable career options through the psychometric test, ask him what types of problems he is interested in solving in the future.

Fourthly, since you mentioned his performance is better in History and Geography than in Science and Maths, Allen-JEE coaching would be suitable only if he is truly interested in Maths and Science. If not, his performance may fall short of expectations, leading to demotivation.

My suggestion is to consider enrolling him in the Arts/Humanities stream with a focus on Geography-centric subjects. Later, he can pursue civil services, media, law, or management studies. Reassess his progress after about a year (by December 2026), focusing on his interest, mental health, and realistic performance rather than perceived job security alone.

Before he completes 11th grade (by February 2026), you both can collectively decide and start preparing for entrance exams in law, media, or management (CUET, CLAT, IPMAT, NPAT, SET etc.) based on his interests and future plans. ALL the BEST for Your Son's Prosperous Future!

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