Introduction
Saving money every month sounds simple, yet most people struggle to do it consistently. Despite earning a regular income, savings often disappear due to unplanned expenses, lifestyle inflation, and lack of tracking.
The good news? Saving money is not about earning more — it’s about building the right system and habits. In this article, we’ll break down a simple, practical approach to monthly savings that actually works — with a real example you can relate to.
Why Most People Fail to Save Money
Before learning how to save, it’s important to understand why saving fails:
- No clear tracking of income and expenses
- Saving whatever is “left at the end of the month”
- Emotional spending and impulse buying
- No defined savings goals
Saving money is behavioral, not purely mathematical.
Step 1: Know Where Your Money Is Going
The first step to saving money every month is expense tracking.
If you don’t know:
- how much you earn,
- how much you spend,
- where you spend,
you can never improve your savings.
Action Tip:
Track expenses under simple categories:
- Rent / EMIs
- Food & groceries
- Transport
- Utilities / bills
- Subscriptions
- Entertainment
- Savings & investments
What gets measured, gets managed.
Step 2: Pay Yourself First
Most people save like this:
Income – Expenses = Savings ❌
Wealth builders save like this:
Income – Savings = Expenses ✅
The moment you receive your salary, move a fixed amount to savings or investments first.
Even if it’s a small amount, consistency matters more than size.
Step 3: Set a Monthly Savings Target
A vague goal like “I should save more” rarely works.
Instead, decide:
- Save 20–30% of income, or
- Start with 10% and increase gradually
Let’s understand this with a real example:
📊 Example: ₹1,00,000 Monthly Income (Pan-India Average)
Imagine someone earning ₹1,00,000 per month. Here’s how their expenses might look (approx. average):
| Category | Example Spend | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Rent / EMI | ₹25,000 | Big cities tend to be higher |
| Food & groceries | ₹12,000 | Daily meals + groceries |
| Transport | ₹5,000 | Fuel / rides / metro |
| Utilities, Internet, Mobile | ₹4,000 | Electricity, data, OTT |
| Subscriptions | ₹2,000 | OTT / apps |
| Health & Fitness | ₹3,000 | Gym / medical |
| Entertainment | ₹4,000 | Movies, events, lifestyle |
| Miscellaneous | ₹5,000 | Unexpected/day-to-day |
| Total Spend (Approx) | ₹60,000 | |
| Savings Goal @30% | ₹30,000 | Automatic savings |
| Remaining for Investment / Extra Goals | ₹10,000 | Emergency fund / SIP |
What This Means:
- If you automate ₹30,000 savings first, you are already building good financial habits.
- With ₹60,000 normal monthly expenses, your cost of living is balanced.
- The remaining ₹10,000 can be used for emergency buffer, SIP, or future goals.
This simple structure puts you in control, not your expenses.
Step 4: Control Lifestyle Inflation
As income rises, many expenses quietly rise too — this is called lifestyle inflation.
Common examples:
- Frequent eating out
- Premium subscriptions
- Gadget upgrades
Avoid lifestyle inflation by consciously deciding before spending. Ask:
“Does this contribute to my long-term goals?”
Step 5: Use a Simple Monthly Money Plan
A structure most people can follow:
- 50% – Needs (rent, food, bills)
- 30% – Wants (lifestyle, entertainment)
- 20% – Savings & investments
In the ₹1,00,000 example above:
- ₹60,000 / ₹1,00,000 (60%) = Needs
- ₹10,000 / ₹1,00,000 (10%) = Wants
- ₹30,000 / ₹1,00,000 (30%) = Savings
You can adjust, but having a structure prevents overspending.
Step 6: What to Do With Your Savings
Saving money alone is not enough. Money should work for you.
Options include:
- Emergency fund (3–6 months living expenses)
- Fixed Deposits / Recurring Deposits
- Mutual Fund SIPs
- Long-term investments (equity, index funds)
We’ll cover these in detail in upcoming articles.
The Biggest Truth About Saving Money
Saving isn’t about deprivation — it’s about freedom, discipline, and preparation.
Small, consistent actions repeated over time create long-term wealth.
Final Thoughts
You don’t need complex strategies to save money.
You need:
- Awareness
- A simple system
- Consistency
Start small, track each month, and improve gradually.
Savings are the foundation. Investing builds the future.
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