Plan your monthly budget with the 50/30/20 rule or a custom allocation. See overspending alerts, savings rate, and a full visual breakdown.
Enter your income and spending — all fields update the analysis
Popularised by Senator Elizabeth Warren. Allocate 50% of take-home pay to Needs (essentials), 30% to Wants (lifestyle), and 20% to Savings or debt repayment. A simple, proven framework for balanced personal finance.
The percentage of your income you save or invest each month. A 20% savings rate is the 50/30/20 minimum. Financial independence researchers suggest 30–50%+ for early retirement. This single metric predicts long-term wealth more than income level.
Needs are non-negotiable — rent, food, utilities, insurance. Wants are optional — dining out, Netflix, holidays. The distinction matters because overspending on wants is the most common budget leak. Classify honestly.
Every rupee/dollar gets a job — income minus all allocations equals zero. This doesn't mean spending everything; leftover money is assigned to savings or investments. It prevents "unconscious" spending on untracked categories.
3–6 months of expenses in a liquid account. This is the financial safety net that prevents a single crisis from destroying your budget. Build this before investing. Keep it separate from your main account to reduce temptation.
Monthly debt payments ÷ monthly gross income. Lenders want this below 36%. A high DTI means most of your income is committed before you even start spending — the most dangerous position in personal finance.
My friend Deepa earns ₹90,000 a month in Hyderabad — a salary most people would call comfortable. Yet by the 22nd of every month, she's texting her sister for a "small loan till payday." She isn't irresponsible. She isn't buying luxury items. She just never had a clear picture of where her money was going. When she finally sat down and tracked every category for one month, she discovered she was spending ₹11,400 on food delivery alone — nearly 13% of her income, gone before she even noticed.
That's exactly the problem a monthly budget planner solves. Not by restricting you, but by making the invisible visible. This free budget planner uses the globally trusted 50/30/20 rule as a benchmark while letting you build a fully custom allocation. It flags overspending in real time, shows your savings rate, generates visual charts, and even converts everything to USD for NRIs and expats comparing costs across countries.
A monthly budget planner is a tool that helps you allocate your take-home income across spending categories — housing, food, transport, entertainment, savings — and then compares your actual allocation against a recommended framework to reveal gaps, overspending, and missed savings opportunities.
This planner specifically uses the 50/30/20 rule as its benchmark: 50% of net income toward needs (rent, food, bills), 30% toward wants (dining, travel, hobbies), and 20% toward savings and debt repayment. It's the most widely recommended personal finance framework in the world — simple enough to stick to, flexible enough to adapt to any income level or lifestyle.
Takes about 4 minutes the first time. Here's what each step means:
Choose your local currency — INR, USD, GBP, AED, and 50+ others. Then pick your mode: 50/30/20 Auto-fill pre-populates all fields proportionally based on your income (great for first-timers), or Custom Allocation lets you enter your actual real spending numbers.
This is your net salary — the amount that actually hits your bank account after taxes and PF/EPF deductions. Don't use gross/CTC. If you're self-employed or freelance, use your average monthly net income over the past 3 months.
Housing/rent, utilities and bills, groceries, transport, and insurance/healthcare. These are non-negotiable monthly expenses. Be honest — include everything from internet bills to gym memberships you actually use regularly.
Dining out, shopping, subscriptions (Netflix, Spotify, apps), and travel savings. These are lifestyle choices, not survival. The 30% limit isn't a judgment — it's a guardrail that leaves room for both enjoying life and building wealth.
Emergency fund contributions, SIP/mutual fund investments, and any loan EMIs (personal loans, credit card dues). This 20% is the most important row — if it's empty or near zero, everything else needs to shift.
You'll see your savings rate, unallocated balance, overspending alerts for each category, a donut chart of spending split, and a bar chart comparing your actual allocation vs the 50/30/20 targets. Use the USD conversion for cross-border comparisons.
The 50/30/20 rule applies to your net (take-home) income, not gross salary. Here's the breakdown:
Arjun just got his first job at ₹75,000/month in-hand. He selects INR, enters ₹75,000 income, switches to Custom mode, and enters his actual rent (₹22,000), utilities (₹4,000), food (₹8,000), transport (₹3,500), and so on. The planner instantly shows him his Needs are at 58% — 8 points over the 50% target. The culprit: ₹22,000 rent that alone consumes 29% of income. He can now see clearly that finding a roommate or moving slightly farther from the office would unlock ₹6,000/month in breathing room.
Meena and Kiran together earn ₹1,80,000/month but feel perpetually broke. They use the planner to combine their income and enter all shared expenses. The chart reveals their Wants bucket is at 41% — far above the 30% target. The breakdown shows subscriptions (7 active streaming services), weekend dining (₹18,000/month), and an underused gym membership accounting for the gap. Cutting just the unused subscriptions and reducing dining out by 30% frees up ₹14,000/month — enough to start a proper SIP.
Vikram earns AED 18,000/month in Dubai and wants to compare his cost of living against what equivalent expenses would look like back in India. He uses the AED currency option to build his Dubai budget, then hits the "Convert to USD" button to get a neutral reference point. He then opens the planner in a second tab in INR and runs the same exercise for his parents' household. The USD view makes the comparison clean and immediate — a financial exercise that used to take hours in Excel now takes under 10 minutes.
Set up an auto-transfer to your savings or investment account on the day you get paid — before you pay any other bill. What hits your spending account is what you actually have. Savings that require willpower rarely happen; savings that are automatic always do.
The average Indian urban professional pays for 4–6 subscriptions they barely use. Spotify, Netflix, Prime, Hotstar, a news app, a fitness app — together ₹1,500–₹2,500/month or ₹18,000–₹30,000/year. Cancel anything you haven't actively used in the last 30 days.
If your rent alone crosses 30% of take-home pay, you're housing-poor — the rest of your budget will always be squeezed. Consider a roommate, a slightly longer commute, or negotiating rent at renewal. This single change often unlocks ₹5,000–₹15,000/month.
Before investing a single rupee in equity or mutual funds, build 3–6 months of expenses in a liquid savings account. Without it, one medical emergency or job loss forces you to break investments at the worst time. Target ₹1,50,000–₹3,00,000 for most urban households.
Every rupee gets a job. Income minus all allocations should equal zero — meaning leftover money is explicitly assigned to savings or a specific goal, not left floating to be spent unconsciously. The "Unallocated" figure in this planner is money without a job — assign it before month-end.
Zomato and Swiggy make it dangerously easy to spend ₹500–₹800 per order without thinking. Three such orders a week = ₹6,000–₹10,000/month vanished. Cook 4 days a week, use delivery on the remaining 3. That one habit alone can save ₹4,000–₹6,000 monthly.
Log credit card spending in this budget as if the money left your account the same day — because effectively it has. Treating it as "next month's problem" is how balances spiral. If your credit card bill regularly exceeds what you budgeted for Wants, the card is working against you.
Budgets that are set once and never revisited stop working within 3 months as life changes. Spend 15 minutes on the 1st of each month re-entering your actual numbers from last month. Look at what went over, adjust one or two categories, and recalculate. That's all it takes to stay on track all year.
In high-cost metros like Mumbai, Bangalore, or Delhi, housing alone can eat 30–35% of take-home income, making the 50% Needs target tight — but still achievable. The key is to view it as a benchmark to work toward, not a rigid rule. If your Needs are at 60%, identify which specific item is bloated (usually housing or transport) and make one structural change. Even getting Needs from 60% to 55% over 6 months while growing income is progress. The planner shows you exactly which category is over — that's where to focus, not the rule itself.
Always use your net take-home (in-hand) salary — not CTC or gross. CTC includes employer PF contributions, gratuity, and other components that never reach your bank account. In India, the difference between CTC and in-hand can be 20–35% for salaried employees. Budgeting on CTC will make every category look affordable until you run out of money 3 weeks into the month. If you're a freelancer or business owner with variable income, calculate the average of your last 3–6 months and use that as your baseline income.
The 50/30/20 minimum sets the savings rate at 20% of take-home income. In India, this is achievable for most urban salaried professionals, especially since employer EPF contributions are additional. A genuinely good savings rate for long-term wealth building in India is 25–35% of take-home pay. If you're targeting early financial independence (FIRE), you'd aim for 40–60%. For context: saving ₹15,000/month at 12% annual return for 20 years gives you approximately ₹1.5 crore. The same ₹15,000 started 5 years earlier gives ₹2.7 crore — the starting time matters more than the rate of return.
For variable income, use a two-step approach: first, identify your "floor" income — the minimum you can reliably expect even in a bad month. Build your Needs and minimum savings allocations around this floor. Then, when a good month comes in above the floor, allocate the surplus using a fixed rule (example: 50% to savings, 30% to investments, 20% to wants). This prevents lifestyle inflation from creeping in during good months while ensuring bills are always covered. Enter your floor income in this planner to build your baseline budget.
Loan EMIs are split depending on the type. Home loan EMI is typically classified under Needs (it's replacing rent, an essential). Personal loan and credit card repayments go in the Savings/Debt bucket — they're repaying past spending. Car loan EMIs are a grey area: if the car is necessary for work, it's a Need; if it's a lifestyle choice, it belongs in Wants or the Debt bucket. The general rule: total debt payments (excluding home loan) should not exceed 15% of take-home pay. If they do, it indicates you're over-leveraged and the planner will show this clearly in your 50/30/20 band breakdown.
Once your budget is set, use this to calculate how long it takes to hit a specific savings target — laptop, vacation, emergency fund, or tuition — with compound interest.
Plan a Goal →Take your savings rate from this budget and plug it into the FIRE calculator to find your Financial Independence date. See exactly how your current budget maps to early retirement.
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