A middle-class family in Gurgaon appeared financially stable from the outside. With respectable jobs and a combined monthly income of Rs 1.2 lakh, they seemed to have everything under control. Yet, beneath the surface, they were overwhelmed. Each month ended in stress, with constant worry about meeting obligations while believing that saving or investing was an impossible dream.
Their financial advisor, Chartered Accountant Nitin Kaushik, recalls how they felt stuck in survival mode despite steady earnings. Every rupee seemed committed—between loan payments, rent, daily needs, and school fees, nothing was left for wealth creation.
Mapping Out the Expenses
To find a solution, their finances were broken down in detail. The couple’s monthly outgo looked like this:
Though the distribution seemed balanced, the absence of a system left them with no clarity. The priority was to replace uncertainty with structure.
Building a Structured Financial Plan
The couple’s journey to a money makeover began by creating a disciplined, step-by-step strategy:
Emergency Fund Creation
₹5,000 per month was directed into a liquid mutual fund to build a six-month reserve of around ₹5 lakh. This fund became their safety net for unforeseen expenses.
Securing the Child’s Future
₹7,000 each month was allocated to a mix of Public Provident Fund (PPF) and balanced mutual funds, ensuring long-term growth and safety for their child’s education.
Retirement Planning
₹8,000 monthly was invested into the National Pension System (NPS) and index funds. Since employee provident fund alone was insufficient, this provided additional retirement security.
Wealth Creation
₹15,000 per month was channelled into flexi-cap and mid-cap mutual funds. This consistent investment encouraged gradual asset growth beyond liabilities.
Gold as a Backup
₹5,000 monthly went into Sovereign Gold Bonds (SGBs), offering protection against inflation without the hassle of physical storage.
From Chaos to Clarity
Through this structure, the couple discovered that wealth-building was possible even with existing commitments. What mattered was discipline and planning, not waiting for higher salaries or the “perfect time.”
The lesson was clear: financial success rarely depends solely on income. Instead, it lies in creating a framework where money stops leaking and begins compounding.
Their financial advisor, Chartered Accountant Nitin Kaushik, recalls how they felt stuck in survival mode despite steady earnings. Every rupee seemed committed—between loan payments, rent, daily needs, and school fees, nothing was left for wealth creation.
Mapping Out the Expenses
To find a solution, their finances were broken down in detail. The couple’s monthly outgo looked like this:
- Home loan EMI: ₹20,000
- Rent: ₹18,000
- Groceries and utilities: ₹10,000
- Child’s education: ₹7,000
- Fuel and transport: ₹5,000
- Health and insurance: ₹6,000
- Family support: ₹8,000
- Miscellaneous buffer: ₹6,000
💥 “My client earns ₹1.2L per month… Yet they were stressed, juggling EMI, rent, kid’s school, and still thought investing was impossible. Here’s how we fixed it…”
— CA Nitin Kaushik (@Finance_Bareek) August 21, 2025
A real middle-class money makeover story 🧵👇#stockmarketscrash #finance #nifty #investingtips pic.twitter.com/NmJBzuByQd
Though the distribution seemed balanced, the absence of a system left them with no clarity. The priority was to replace uncertainty with structure.
Building a Structured Financial Plan
The couple’s journey to a money makeover began by creating a disciplined, step-by-step strategy:
Emergency Fund Creation
₹5,000 per month was directed into a liquid mutual fund to build a six-month reserve of around ₹5 lakh. This fund became their safety net for unforeseen expenses.
Securing the Child’s Future
₹7,000 each month was allocated to a mix of Public Provident Fund (PPF) and balanced mutual funds, ensuring long-term growth and safety for their child’s education.
Retirement Planning
₹8,000 monthly was invested into the National Pension System (NPS) and index funds. Since employee provident fund alone was insufficient, this provided additional retirement security.
Wealth Creation
₹15,000 per month was channelled into flexi-cap and mid-cap mutual funds. This consistent investment encouraged gradual asset growth beyond liabilities.
Gold as a Backup
₹5,000 monthly went into Sovereign Gold Bonds (SGBs), offering protection against inflation without the hassle of physical storage.
From Chaos to Clarity
Through this structure, the couple discovered that wealth-building was possible even with existing commitments. What mattered was discipline and planning, not waiting for higher salaries or the “perfect time.”
The lesson was clear: financial success rarely depends solely on income. Instead, it lies in creating a framework where money stops leaking and begins compounding.
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