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What is Net Worth and Why You Should Calculate It Today

By Lakshmi Venkat26 May 20265 min read
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Net worth is the single number that tells you where you stand financially. Learn how to calculate your net worth, what it should be at every age, and how to increase it.

What is Net Worth?

Net worth is the simplest possible measure of your financial health: it's everything you own (assets) minus everything you owe (liabilities). That's it. If you sold everything you have and paid off every debt, the remaining amount is your net worth.

Your net worth can be negative (you owe more than you own), zero (just breaking even), or positive (you have genuine wealth). Most Indians in their 20s and early 30s have low or negative net worth due to education loans and early career investments. By 50, a healthy net worth should be substantial.

How to Calculate Your Net Worth

Net Worth = Total Assets - Total Liabilities

Step 1: List All Your Assets

Include everything of monetary value:

  • Financial Assets: Savings account balance, FD balance, PPF balance, MF holdings, stocks, NPS corpus, EPF balance
  • Real Estate: Current market value of any property you own (minus home loan if still mortgaged, just the equity portion)
  • Vehicles: Current resale value (not purchase price) of cars, bikes
  • Valuables: Jewellery, gold (if significant)
  • Other: Amount owed to you by others (rarely counted, but technically an asset)

Step 2: List All Your Liabilities

  • Home Loan: Outstanding principal (not total EMIs paid)
  • Car Loan: Outstanding principal
  • Personal Loan: Outstanding balance
  • Credit Card Debt: Full outstanding (not just minimum due)
  • Education Loan: Outstanding principal
  • Any Other Debt: Loans from family, moneylenders

Step 3: Subtract

Total Assets - Total Liabilities = Net Worth

What Should Your Net Worth Be by Age?

A common benchmark is the "Multiplying Income" rule: by age 30, your net worth should equal your annual income. By age 40, 3× annual income. By age 50, 6×. By age 60, 10×. This assumes consistent saving and investing throughout your career.

AgeIf Income is ₹10L/yearIf Income is ₹25L/yearIf Income is ₹50L/year
30₹10 lakhs₹25 lakhs₹50 lakhs
40₹30 lakhs₹75 lakhs₹1.5 crores
50₹60 lakhs₹1.5 crores₹3 crores
60₹1 crore₹2.5 crores₹5 crores

Why Positive Net Worth Matters

  • Financial Security: A positive net worth means you're building genuine wealth — not just servicing debt
  • Retirement Readiness: Your net worth, properly invested, funds your retirement
  • Emergency Buffer: Assets can be liquidated in emergencies; liabilities cannot
  • Financial Flexibility: Positive net worth gives you choices — career changes, early retirement, business ventures
  • Peace of Mind: Knowing your financial position objectively reduces money-related stress

How to Increase Your Net Worth

Increase Income

The most powerful lever. Your income is the engine that drives savings, which drives investment, which drives net worth growth. Invest in skills that increase your earning potential — this has the highest ROI of any financial decision.

Reduce Expenses

Spending less than you earn is the foundation. The savings rate (savings ÷ income) is the single most important financial habit. A person saving 30% of income builds wealth significantly faster than one saving 10%.

Reduce Liabilities

Pay off high-interest debt aggressively. Credit card debt at 36% is the most damaging — every ₹1 lakh of credit card debt you carry reduces your net worth by ₹1 lakh and costs ₹36,000 in annual interest.

Invest Wisely

Savings sitting in savings accounts lose to inflation. Invest in a diversified portfolio appropriate for your age and risk tolerance. Equity investments over long periods have historically delivered 12-15% annual returns — the compounding engine of wealth creation.

How Often Should You Calculate Net Worth?

At minimum once a year — at the start of each financial year or on your birthday. Many financial planners recommend twice a year — to coincide with financial planning reviews. Tracking the trend is more important than the absolute number: Is your net worth growing? By how much each year? What's driving the growth — income, investments, or debt reduction?

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I include my home in my net worth calculation?

Yes, but carefully. Your home's value should be included at current market value, and the outstanding home loan should be subtracted to get the equity. The equity is your net worth portion. Note: Your home is a depreciating asset in real terms in many markets — a ₹50 lakh flat bought 20 years ago may still be worth ₹50-60 lakhs in today's money (after inflation adjustment, it's worth less). Don't count unrealised appreciation — only current market value.

My net worth is negative at 30. Is this normal?

In urban India with education loans, a slightly negative net worth at 30 is not unusual. You may have started your career at 23-24 with education loans, and taken time to build savings. However, it should be improving year by year. If your net worth is negative at 35+, it's a warning sign — either your income is too low for your expenses, or your spending is unsustainable. Calculate your exact numbers and create a plan to improve by 10% annually.

Is gold jewellery part of net worth?

Yes, at current market value. However, gold jewellery has making charges (typically 8-15%) that are lost when you sell. So the resale value is the gold weight × current gold rate minus 10-15% making charges. Gold ETFs and sovereign gold bonds are more efficient ways to hold gold for investment — no making charges, easily liquidated, and no emotional attachment.

The Number That Tells the Truth

Your net worth is the single most honest number in your financial life. It doesn't care about your title, your salary, or your lifestyle — it tells the truth about whether you're building real wealth or just running to stand still. Calculate it today. Write it down. Track it every year. If it's not growing, find out why — and fix it. Your financial future depends on it.

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Written by Lakshmi Venkat

Finance writer at FinWiz24, covering personal finance, credit cards, and banking in India.