How to Save ₹10,000 Every Month on a ₹30,000 Salary (Real-Life Example)

Saving ₹10,000 per month on a ₹30,000 salary may sound difficult, but it is 100% possible with smart planning and discipline. Many salaried people in India believe savings are only for high-income earners—but the truth is, habit matters more than income.

Let’s understand this with a real-life example of a common salaried person and a practical monthly budget.


Real-Life Example: Ramesh, a Private Office Employee

Ramesh is a 28-year-old office executive working in a private company in Guwahati.
His monthly salary is ₹30,000, credited to his bank account after deductions.

Like many middle-class earners, Ramesh lives on rent, travels daily to work, and supports his family partially. Despite this, he successfully saves ₹10,000 every month.

Here’s how he does it.


Step-by-Step Monthly Budget Breakdown

  1. Fixed Savings First – ₹10,000

Ramesh follows the “Pay Yourself First” rule.

₹5,000 → Recurring Deposit (RD)

₹3,000 → Mutual Fund SIP

₹2,000 → Emergency fund (Savings account)

✅ Total Savings: ₹10,000

He sets auto-debit so the money gets saved as soon as salary is credited.


  1. Monthly Expenses – ₹20,000

Now let’s see how he manages the remaining ₹20,000.

🏠 Rent – ₹7,000

Shared room accommodation to reduce rent cost.

🍚 Food & Groceries – ₹5,000

Home-cooked meals

Limited outside food (only weekends)

🚍 Travel – ₹2,000

Public transport instead of daily cab

Monthly bus pass

📱 Mobile + Internet – ₹600

Budget prepaid plan with WiFi at home.

💡 Electricity & Utilities – ₹1,200

Controlled electricity usage.

👕 Personal & Miscellaneous – ₹2,200

Clothing

Small outings

Emergency minor expenses

✅ Total Expenses: ₹20,000


Key Habits That Help Him Save ₹10,000 Monthly

  1. Avoids Lifestyle Inflation

Even after a salary hike, Ramesh doesn’t immediately increase expenses.

  1. Tracks Every Expense

Uses a simple notes app to record daily spending.

  1. Limits Online Shopping

No impulse buying during sales unless necessary.

  1. No Credit Card Debt

Uses UPI or debit card only, spends what he has.

  1. Fixed Savings Goal

Savings is non-negotiable, not optional.


What Happens in One Year?

If Ramesh saves ₹10,000 every month:

Monthly Saving: ₹10,000

Yearly Saving: ₹1,20,000

Plus returns from SIP & RD

This amount can be used for:

Emergency needs

Higher education

Marriage expenses

Down payment for a bike or home


Final Thoughts

Saving ₹10,000 on a ₹30,000 salary is not about sacrificing happiness—it’s about smart spending and clear priorities. Even small lifestyle changes can create big financial security over time.

If Ramesh can do it, you can too.

Start small, stay consistent, and let your money work for you.

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