FinWiz24 Logo
Personal Finance

How to Create a Monthly Budget — Indian Household Guide

beginner
12 min read6 February 2026Updated 25 May 2026

Budgeting is the foundation of financial success. This guide covers practical budgeting techniques adapted for Indian households, including tracking expenses and saving goals.

Creating a realistic monthly budget is the single most impactful financial habit an Indian household can develop. With diverse income sources, family obligations, and investment goals, Indian budgeting requires a tailored approach that accounts for cultural and economic realities. ## Understanding the Indian Household Financial Landscape Indian households typically have multiple income streams — primary salary, rental income, side businesses, or family contributions. Fixed commitments like school fees, EMIs, insurance premiums, and family obligations consume a significant portion of household income before discretionary spending begins. The first step is tracking every rupee spent for one full month without attempting to change any spending patterns. This exercise, though tedious, reveals the true picture: many families discover their restaurant spending exceeds their investment contributions, or their children's tuition fees are twice what they estimated. ## The 50-30-20 Rule Adapted for India The classic 50-30-20 rule allocates 50% of income to needs, 30% to wants, and 20% to savings. For Indian households, this often needs modification. Housing costs in metros can consume 40-50% of income alone, leaving less for other needs. A modified approach might allocate: 50% to needs (housing, groceries, utilities, education, healthcare, insurance), 20% to wants (dining out, entertainment, vacations, luxury purchases), and 30% to savings and investments (PPF, mutual funds, emergency fund, debt repayment). ## Tracking and Categorizing Expenses Use apps like Walnut, Money Manager, or even a simple Excel sheet to categorize spending. The 6 essential categories for Indian households are: Groceries and Kitchen (kirana stores and supermarket combined), Housing (rent or EMI, maintenance, property tax), Healthcare (insurance premiums, medicines, doctor visits), Education (school fees, tuition, books), Transport (fuel, maintenance, public transport, school bus), and Family (festive expenses, gifts, family events). Savings should be further divided into emergency fund (3-6 months expenses), short-term goals (vacation, gadget purchase within 1 year), and long-term goals (retirement, children's education, house purchase). ## Implementing Budget Discipline The envelope system — allocating cash for each category and spending only from the designated envelope — works well for household categories like groceries and personal expenses. Once the envelope is empty, no more spending in that category until next month. For couples, monthly budget meetings on the 1st of each month to review previous month's spending and plan the current month's priorities prevents misunderstandings and ensures both partners are aligned on financial goals.