I am earning a salary of 55 K per month but savings nothing please guide
Ans: Understanding Your Current Situation
You earn Rs.55?000 per month.
You save nothing currently.
You feel stuck in a cycle of spending.
This is common and fixable.
Recognising the problem is a strong first step.
Breaking Down Your Monthly Expenses
List all monthly expenses first.
Include rent, groceries, bills, transport.
Include any small expenses like tea or snacks.
Also include entertainment and subscriptions.
Add all EMIs or debt payments if any.
This gives clarity on where money is going.
Identifying Spending Leaks
Check for impulsive spends like eating out often.
See if high grocery bills can be optimised.
Identify subscriptions you don’t use.
Spot small daily spends that add up.
This lets you free up money easily.
Creating a Budget You Can Stick To
Allocate money for:
Needs: rent, food, bills
Wants: leisure, eating out
Savings: start small now
A 50?30?20 split works well:
50% for needs (~Rs.27?500)
30% for wants (~Rs.16?500)
20% for savings (~Rs.11?000)
Adjust percentages based on your situation.
Starting Your Savings Plan
First, build a small habit of saving.
Even Rs.1?000 monthly is a start.
Move this to a savings account or liquid fund.
This builds discipline and confidence.
Increase savings gradually each month.
Building an Emergency Fund
Aim to save at least six months of expenses.
With Rs.55?000 income, that is ~Rs.3?00?000.
Keep it in a liquid debt fund or savings account.
This fund protects against job loss or emergency.
Do not touch it for regular needs.
Paying Off Debt (If You Have Any)
Prioritise high?interest debts first.
Credit card and personal loan are most costly.
Pay more than minimum EMI if possible.
Keep home loan at normal pace for tax benefit.
Aim to clear all personal loan balance quickly.
Building a Goal?Focused Investment Strategy
Short?Term Goals (1–3 years)
Emergency fund is first priority.
Second is saving for vacation, gadgets, etc.
Keep this in low?risk debt funds or recurring deposit.
Medium?Term Goals (3–8 years)
Goals like marriage, higher education, etc.
Use actively managed balanced or hybrid funds.
You get better risk?return balance than index funds.
Long?Term Goals (10+ years)
Goals like retirement or child’s future.
Invest in actively managed equity mutual funds.
Blend of large?cap, mid?cap and flexi?cap is ideal.
This mix gives growth and some stability.
Why Actively Managed Funds Are Better for You
Index funds just follow the market.
They do not protect during market setbacks.
Active funds have managers who can shift strategy.
This helps reduce losses and boost gains.
In India, active funds often outperform indices.
Cost is slightly higher, but value is larger.
You benefit from disciplined planning by CFP.
Why Regular Plans through MFD + CFP Are Better Than Directs
You won’t get hand?holding in direct funds.
CFP helps you avoid panic during market drops.
Helpful when choosing between funds.
CFP ensures alignment with your goals.
Regular funds include a small distributor fee.
It gives value through guidance and monitoring.
That small cost is worth professional support.
Asset Allocation Tailored to Your Age and Income
Ideal allocation when income is Rs.55?000/month:
40–50% in equity funds
30–40% in debt or hybrid funds
10–20% in liquid funds/emergency
As your income grows, shift more to equity.
Adjust allocation with your financial goals in mind.
Step?By?Step Monthly Plan
Transfer Rs.1?000 into a savings account on salary day.
Add Rs.1?000 next month if comfortable.
After three months, start Rs.2?000 SIP in a debt fund.
Pay off any small personal loans aggressively.
Then start a Rs.3?000 monthly equity SIP.
Keep adding to both SIPs each year.
Stop unnecessary expenses as savings grow.
Reviewing and Rebalancing Periodically
Review your budget monthly.
Track where money leaks occur.
Adjust categories if needed.
Review investment portfolio twice a year.
Check returns, risks, and fund performance.
Rebalance if allocation drifts from target.
Monitoring Goal Progress
Track corpus for each goal regularly.
Use cost inflation estimates to gauge target.
If short, increase monthly SIPs.
If surplus, shift more to long?term goals.
Keep goals separated and measurable.
Building Financial Awareness
Read financial articles or watch videos by CFP.
Understand basics of equity, debt, and hybrid funds.
Learn to read fund factsheets and performance charts.
This builds confidence in managing money.
Protection: Health and Term Insurance
Buy health insurance with Rs.5–10 lakh cover.
This protects you and your family.
Term insurance is essential at your age.
Choose a cover 10–15x your annual income.
Avoid ULIP, money?back or endowment policies.
If you own them, surrender and reinvest.
Focus on pure commitments: Term + health.
Tax?Saving Steps You Can Take
Use PPF, ELSS or home loan interest for tax benefit.
Claim Rs.1.5 lakh under section 80C.
Also claim section 24 for home loan interest.
Plan equity fund redemptions smartly after gain.
Over Rs.1.25 lakh LTCG taxed at 12.5%.
STCG taxed at 20%.
Debt fund gains taxed as per your slab.
Plan fund withdrawal over years to save tax.
Behavioural Changes That Matter
Always “pay yourself first” before spending.
Avoid impulse spending urges.
Use cash?only for some expenses.
Cancel unused subscriptions.
Avoid EMI for small gadgets.
Save first, then spend consciously.
Enjoy a disciplined approach to money.
Increasing Income and Investments
Think of side?income options like freelancing.
Use annual bonuses to increase SIPs.
Don’t increase lifestyle with salary hike.
Funnel increments into investment and goals.
Family Involvement in Planning
Discuss budget with your family.
Keep them informed about savings plan.
This builds commitment and teamwork.
Encourage children to learn money basics early.
Final Insights
Your income is enough to generate savings.
You need discipline, direction and goals.
Start small but start right now.
Build savings habits first, then grow slowly.
Goal?wise SIPs keep your money purposeful.
Guided help from a CFP gives stability and insight.
Active funds will serve you well.
Avoid risky SCAMS like ULIP or index-only options.
With time, your savings will build slowly.
Over long term, you will see real results.
Keep reviewing, learning and adjusting.
A healthy financial future is waiting for you.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment