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Budget Planner — 50/30/20

Plan monthly spending with the 50/30/20 rule. Customise the split.

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📘 What is the Budget Planner — 50/30/20?

This calculator applies the well-known 50/30/20 budgeting framework to your specific income — 50% toward needs, 30% toward wants, and 20% toward savings — along with two emergency fund targets (3 and 6 months of income) so you have concrete rupee figures to plan against, not just percentages.

⚙️ How Budget Planner is calculated

The 50/30/20 split explained

Needs (50%) covers non-negotiable expenses like rent, groceries, utilities, and loan EMIs. Wants (30%) covers discretionary spending like dining out and entertainment. Savings (20%) covers everything building your future — investments, debt payoff beyond minimums, and emergency fund contributions.

Why this split may need adjusting for Indian metro costs

In expensive cities, housing alone can consume 35–50% of income, making the strict 50% needs ceiling unrealistic. Many people adapt this to a 60/20/20 split instead, treating the original framework as a flexible starting template rather than a fixed law.

Emergency fund sizing

This calculator shows both a 3-month and 6-month emergency fund target based on your income — a reasonable range depending on job stability, with less stable income (freelance, commission-based) generally warranting the larger 6-month target.

50/30/20 split

Needs = income × 50%, Wants = income × 30%, Savings = income × 20%

🧮 Worked examples

Example — ₹60,000 monthly income

A standard 50/30/20 split applied to a ₹60,000 monthly income.

Needs ≈ ₹30,000, Wants ≈ ₹18,000, Savings ≈ ₹12,000. Emergency fund target: ₹1,80,000 (3 months) to ₹3,60,000 (6 months)

Example — adjusting for high rent

Same ₹60,000 income, but rent alone is ₹25,000 (over 40% of income).

The needs category alone may already exceed the standard 50% target — signalling that a 60/20/20 adaptation may fit better than the original framework

💡 Original insights & how to use this calculator

Using this as a starting template, not a strict rule

If your needs genuinely exceed 50% of income due to high local housing costs, adjust the wants percentage downward to compensate, while protecting the savings percentage — the order of priority matters more than hitting the exact original percentages.

Automating the savings portion first

Many people find success treating the savings figure from this calculator as a fixed automatic transfer on salary day, rather than waiting to see what is "left over" at month end — removing the decision tends to produce more consistent results.

Revisiting the split as income changes

Recalculate after any significant raise, and consider directing a larger share of the increase toward savings rather than letting wants and needs both expand proportionally — this is one of the most effective ways to raise your savings rate over time.

💡 Expert Tips

1

Automate savings on payday — save first, spend what is left.

Frequently Asked

Does 50/30/20 suit everyone?

It is a starting point. Adjust for your cost of living and income.

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Example 1 — Lump sum, no contributions

A = 1,00,000 × (1.10)^10 ≈ ₹2,59,374 — more than 2.5× growth

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