
Budgeting for expenses, savings and investment: I asked ChatGPT to create a monthly budget that ensures retirement by 55, with enough savings to support myself and my parents, buy a home, and build a good retirement corpus with ₹12 lakh annual salary.
I am 30 and earn an annual salary of ₹12 lakh and want to invest as per the 50-30-20 rule. Please help plan a monthly budget that accounts for ₹91,000 monthly income divided for rent ( ₹33,000 in Mumbai), groceries and utilities, transportation, leisure (movies and restaurants on weekends), and investment for home purchase, emergency fund, health fund, retirement corpus. My annual bonus is ₹1 lakh. I have parents in their 70s to support and I want to retire by 55, so need best advice to maximise retirement and leverage home loan costs.
According to the AI, with net monthly income of ₹91,000, and annual bonus of ₹1 lakh (around ₹8,300/month), with goal to retire at 55, the 50-30-20 (needs-wants-investments) budget strategy has to be adjusted to a 45-25-30 split after taking into account all financial responsibilities. Here's the breakdown:
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A 30-year-old earning ₹12 lakh CTC can adjust the 50-30-20 budget rule to a 45-25-30 split. This involves allocating 45% for needs, 25% for wants, and 30% for investments, including retirement, emergency fund, home purchase, and health funds.
For a retirement corpus, the strategy includes investing in equity mutual funds via SIP, Public Provident Fund (PPF), and National Pension System (NPS), aiming for 10-12% annual returns. It's also advised to increase SIPs by 8-10% annually and invest bonuses consistently.
An annual bonus of ₹1 lakh can be strategically allocated as follows: 40% to retirement corpus, 30% to a home down payment, 20% to an emergency fund, and 10% for guilt-free leisure spending.
A realistic and practical retirement corpus goal for a large part of the Indian middle class is around ₹2 to 3 crore. This number is considered achievable and sustainable, unlike much larger, often unrealistic, targets promoted by some influencers.
To calculate a FIRE number, consider annual expenses and use a multiplier of 30-35 times. For example, with ₹6.5-7 lakh in annual expenses, a realistic FIRE range would be ₹2 to 2.5 crore, accounting for inflation and longer retirement periods.
This is to be used strategically and not for everyday spending, as follows:
40% → Retirement ( ₹40,000)
30% → Home down payment ( ₹30,000)
20% → Emergency fund ( ₹20,000)
10% → Leisure guilt-free ( ₹10,000)
1. Rent is high: At ₹33,000 it is 36% of income and this is acceptable, but further lifestyle upgrade must be avoided, and relocation (to a cheaper city) can be considered if job allows.
2. Early Retirement (55): Needs a inflation adjusted corpus between ₹3–5 crore corpus. This requires increase SIP by 8–10% annually, consistent investment of bonus, and avoidance of lifestyle inflation.
3. Biggest Risk: Under-investing with dependents, plus early retirement goal, 20% savings is not enough, hence this has been buffed to 30% allocation.
Disclaimer: This story is for educational purposes only. The views and recommendations made above are not of Mint. We advise investors to check with certified experts before making any investment decisions.