Monthly Budget Planner
Master the 50/30/20 Rule & Track Your Cash Flow
Your exact in-hand salary or business income after taxes.
Rent, Groceries, Electricity, School Fees, Insurance.
Dining out, Movies, Shopping, Vacations, Subscriptions.
Car loan, Home loan, Credit card bills, Personal loans.
Total Monthly Savings
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📊 50/30/20 Budget Breakdown
Your baseline cash flow for the month.
Target: 50%. These are mandatory survival expenses. If this crosses 60%, you are living beyond your means.
Target: 30%. Discretionary spending. This is usually where the biggest “money leaks” happen.
Money going to banks. High EMIs actively destroy your ability to save and invest.
Needs + Wants + Debts combined.
The money you actually kept for your future self.
Target: Minimum 20%. The higher this percentage, the faster you will reach financial freedom!
💡 Budgeting Masterclass
1. The 50/30/20 Rule: The world’s most successful budget template. Allocate 50% of your income to Needs (rent, food), 30% to Wants (entertainment, shopping), and at least 20% to Savings/Investments.
2. Pay Yourself First: Most people do: Income – Expenses = Savings. This is why they never save enough! Flip the formula: Income – Savings = Expenses. The moment your salary arrives, transfer 20% to an investment account, and spend only what is left.
3. Beware of Lifestyle Creep: When your salary increases, do not automatically upgrade your car or apartment. Keep your “Needs” fixed, and channel the extra income directly into your savings!
4. Build an Emergency Fund: Before investing in risky stocks, use your monthly savings to build an Emergency Fund equal to 6 months of your “Needs + EMIs”. Keep this in a safe Liquid Mutual Fund or FD.
📊 Budget Planner —
Decode Where Your Money Actually Goes
Most people get their salary on the 1st, feel rich for a week, and by the 25th, they are staring at their bank app wondering who stole their money. Stop wondering where your money went. Start telling it exactly where to go.
A Budget is a Financial GPS, Not a Cage
The word “budget” usually triggers anxiety. People think a budget means they can never order a cappuccino, never buy new shoes, and must live a life of extreme deprivation. This is completely false.
A budget is simply a spending plan. Without a plan, your money falls victim to the modern world’s countless micro-traps: Swiggy, Zomato, Amazon sales, and automatic subscriptions you forgot to cancel. You leak money silently until your account is empty.
Most amateurs use a flawed math equation: Income – Expenses = Savings. They spend whatever they want all month and hope something is magically left over on the 30th. (Spoiler: Nothing is ever left). Using a Budget Planner forces you to flip the equation: Income – Savings = Expenses.
A budget gives you permission to spend without guilt. When you have already safely locked away 20% of your salary into investments on the 1st of the month, you can spend the rest of the money on dining out or movies with zero financial anxiety.
The Golden Standard: The 50/30/20 Rule
You don’t need a PhD in accounting to manage your money. You just need the 50/30/20 rule. Popularized by Senator Elizabeth Warren, this framework splits your Net Take-Home Salary (after taxes) into three simple buckets.
| Category | Percentage Limit | What exactly goes here? | The Mindset |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Needs (Survival) | Maximum 50% | House Rent, Groceries, Electricity bill, Medical Insurance, School fees, Basic transport. | “I absolutely cannot survive this month without paying for these.” |
| 2. Wants (Lifestyle) | Maximum 30% | Dining out, Netflix/Spotify, Vacations, Gym memberships, Designer clothes. | “I want these to make life fun, but I won’t die if I cancel them.” |
| 3. Wealth (The Future) | Minimum 20% | Mutual Fund SIPs, clearing Credit Card debt, PPF, Emergency Fund savings. | “I am paying my future self so I don’t have to work until I am 65.” |
In Tier-1 cities like Mumbai or Bangalore, keeping “Needs” under 50% is extremely difficult because rent alone eats up 30-40% of a starting salary. If your Needs hit 60%, do not reduce your 20% Wealth bucket. You must sacrifice your 30% “Wants” bucket until your income grows.
How Does the Budget Calculator Work?
The calculator forces you to adopt a method called Zero-Based Budgeting. This means every single rupee of your salary is given a specific job until there is exactly ₹0 left unassigned.
Input Your Net Income:
Enter the exact amount of cash that hits your bank account. Do not use your CTC. If you have side-hustle income, average it out over the last 3 months and add it here.
Pay Yourself First (The 20%):
The calculator immediately secures 20% of your income for wealth creation. This is non-negotiable. You must automate this deduction to happen on the 2nd of every month via SIPs.
List Fixed vs. Variable Expenses:
You categorize your expenses. Fixed expenses (Rent, EMI) stay the same. Variable expenses (Swiggy, Fuel) fluctuate. The calculator flags if these total more than 50% of your income.
Identify the “Leaks”:
Whatever is left is your “Wants” bucket. If you notice you are spending 45% on lifestyle and only 5% on investing, the calculator has just diagnosed your exact financial disease.
The 3 Villains Wrecking Your Budget
Why do budgets fail? It is rarely because of one massive purchase. Budgets fail because of thousands of tiny, invisible cuts to your bank account.
The First 30 Days of Budgeting
Budgeting FAQ (12 Critical Questions Answered)
Creating a budget is easy; sticking to it is the hard part. Here are the 12 most practical questions answered to keep you on track.
📊 Take Your Power Back
Money is an excellent servant but a terrible master. Scroll up, plug your numbers into the Budget Planner Calculator, find your leaks, and build a financial life you don’t need a vacation from.
* The calculations generated by this Budget Planner are based on the standard 50/30/20 financial rule of thumb. This ratio is highly adaptable; if you have aggressive debt or FIRE (Financial Independence) goals, you may need to increase the savings bucket to 40% or 50%. The tool is designed for educational purposes to help visualize cash flow and identify spending leaks. Unity Wealth Capital encourages maintaining a strict, separate 6-month Emergency Fund before deploying the ‘Wealth’ bucket into volatile equity markets.