Sir ,
I have loan close to 26 lakh and my monthly emi is 65000. My total monthly income is 84000. My other expenses includes son fees , house rent, medicine of parents and other expenses which is close to 20000.
End on the day I don't have any money in hand and some times had habit of taking credit from credit cards.
Kindly help
Ans: You are earning Rs. 84,000 per month.
Your loan EMI is Rs. 65,000.
Your regular family expenses are Rs. 20,000.
This totals to Rs. 85,000, but you earn only Rs. 84,000.
You are short by Rs. 1,000 or more every month.
You also depend on credit cards at times.
This is a very stressful situation.
But with a practical plan, we can bring stability.
Let us now go step by step and fix it.
Understanding the Core Problem
You are paying more than your income allows.
EMI is too high for your income level.
Your living expenses are necessary and non-negotiable.
Son’s fees, parents’ medicine, and rent cannot be delayed.
Credit card is being used for survival, not luxury.
This will lead to a debt trap if not managed soon.
Core Goals of This Financial Plan
Reduce EMI burden immediately.
Stop credit card usage completely.
Keep basic expenses running without breaks.
Bring emotional peace and avoid financial stress.
Create breathing space in monthly cash flow.
Step 1: Analyse Loan and Find Alternatives
You have a Rs. 26 lakh loan.
EMI is Rs. 65,000 which is extremely high.
This means your interest rate is high or your loan tenure is short.
Check if your loan tenure can be extended to 15–20 years.
Even 5 extra years can reduce EMI by Rs. 10,000 to Rs. 15,000.
Visit your bank and request for tenure extension or restructuring.
Even ask for a temporary EMI moratorium if possible.
You can also try converting it into a step-up or step-down EMI plan.
Look at balance transfer only if you get better tenure and lower EMI.
Do not blindly go for a new loan without checking total cost.
Avoid top-up loans unless they are used for closing expensive debts.
Step 2: Stop Credit Card Usage Immediately
Credit card is not income. It is a costly debt.
Interest rate is 36% to 42% annually.
Using it for regular expenses is a warning signal.
Stop using credit card for any expense.
If credit card has outstanding dues, request bank for EMI option.
Pay through EMI and close card usage.
Cancel all auto-debit or subscription payments on card.
Step 3: Create Emergency Cushion with Help from Family
Speak with close family or friends for Rs. 50,000 to Rs. 1 lakh.
Use this to cover current credit card and manage short-term expenses.
This is not a long-term loan. This is an emergency bridge.
Promise them repayment in 6 to 12 months.
Don’t feel ashamed. It's okay to ask help when needed.
Step 4: Restructure Monthly Budget
List fixed expenses: Rent, school fees, parents' medicines.
Separate them from variable ones: groceries, electricity, etc.
For 3 months, reduce all variable expenses by 30%.
Cancel OTT, mobile upgrades, travel, and other non-essential spends.
Shift to generic medicines for parents if possible.
Speak with doctor for low-cost options.
Buy in bulk from online or wholesale for groceries.
Step 5: Explore Part-Time or Extra Income Sources
You are earning Rs. 84,000. That’s not bad.
But with EMI and expenses, it is not enough.
Explore extra freelance or weekend work.
Teach students online. Offer services in your field part-time.
Ask spouse (if not working) to explore part-time work.
Even Rs. 5,000 per month extra income makes a difference now.
Step 6: Avoid Taking Personal Loan or Gold Loan
You may feel tempted to take another personal loan.
Or even use gold loan. Please avoid both.
It will only increase your EMI and stress.
Solve the problem from root, not by adding new EMI.
Step 7: Surrender Non-Performing Policies
Do you hold any LIC, ULIP, or endowment policies?
If they are more than 3 years old, you can surrender them.
Take the money and use it to reduce high-interest debts.
Then switch to monthly SIP in debt mutual funds later.
Only surrender if they are not linked to insurance needs.
Step 8: Start a Very Small SIP After 6 Months
Once EMI is restructured and cash flow improves, start SIP.
Start with Rs. 1,000 in a low-risk debt or conservative hybrid mutual fund.
Use regular funds via MFD and CFP only.
Avoid direct funds. You won’t get any guidance or support.
Your goal is stability, not return maximization now.
Regular fund will give you handholding and clarity.
Step 9: Work with Certified Financial Planner
You need a complete cash flow plan.
You also need discipline and an outside guide.
A Certified Financial Planner can help with budgeting, debt control, and plan building.
They don’t just sell products. They provide 360-degree solutions.
Step 10: Emotional and Family Communication
Sit with family. Explain the current situation honestly.
Involve your spouse in financial tracking.
Track every rupee for the next 3 months.
Even small savings matter in this phase.
Ask son’s school if fees can be paid in monthly mode instead of quarterly.
Special Tip: Avoid Any Real Estate or Investment Suggestion
You may get tempted with “investment” ideas to solve the debt.
Avoid all real estate investments now.
Do not join chit funds or MLM plans.
Focus on cleaning debt and improving monthly surplus.
What to Do Immediately (Today and Tomorrow)
Call your bank. Ask for loan tenure extension.
Note down all credit card dues. Ask for EMI conversion.
Speak with family for one-time emergency help.
Stop using credit card today itself.
Cut all unnecessary spending this week.
Create a new budget on paper or excel.
Finally
Your situation is tough but can be reversed.
Focus on lowering EMI and improving cash flow.
Avoid credit cards, personal loans, and emotional spending.
Small changes today will lead to peace in 6 months.
Be patient. Be strong. You are not alone.
Many people bounce back stronger. You will too.
Discipline, planning, and action are the three pillars for you now.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment