‘₹3 cr dream is dead’: Financial advisor breaks down the harsh reality of retirement in India
The expert dismantles the idea that the traditional ₹3 crore corpus can support a dignified retirement, adding that this does not include medical emergencies, travel, or major one-time expenses that typically rise with age.

- Nov 30, 2025,
- Updated Nov 30, 2025 9:01 PM IST
In a sharply-worded financial reality check, chartered accountant Nitin Kaushik has sparked a fresh debate on India’s retirement planning benchmarks, arguing that the once-aspirational “₹3 crore retirement corpus” is now dangerously outdated.
In a widely shared post on X (formally twitter), Kaushik wrote: “The harsh truth about ‘3 Crore Retirement’ – and why it’s no longer enough.” He illustrates his argument through a hypothetical yet relatable example: Ravi, a 35-year-old earning ₹1 lakh per month today and living a disciplined, comfortable lifestyle.
Lifestyle today vs Retirement reality
Ravi’s present-day monthly expenses look balanced:
- Rent: ₹30,000
- Groceries & utilities: ₹22,000
- Health & insurance: ₹8,000
- Miscellaneous: ₹15,000
- Savings: ₹25,000
But fast-forward 20 years, Kaushik warns, and the numbers balloon dramatically under a modest 6% annual inflation assumption. By 2045, maintaining the same lifestyle could cost:
- Rent: ₹96,000
- Groceries & utilities: ₹70,000
- Health & insurance: ₹26,000
- Miscellaneous: ₹50,000
The total: ₹2.42 lakh per month — just for basics.
“Ravi’s life today will need over twice the income in retirement,” Kaushik notes, adding that this does not include medical emergencies, travel, or major one-time expenses that typically rise with age.
₹3 crore gap
Kaushik dismantles the idea that the traditional ₹3 crore corpus can support a dignified retirement. Even with an “optimistic” 5% safe withdrawal rate, such a corpus yields:
- ₹15 lakh per year, or
- ₹1.25 lakh per month (before taxes)
Against a projected ₹2.42 lakh monthly requirement, this leaves a ₹1 lakh shortfall every month.
“And that’s just for basic living,” he adds. “Health inflation often outpaces general inflation, and most retirement withdrawals — SWP, annuities, some NPS income — are taxable.”
New Target: ₹8-10 crore
Calling for a mindset shift, Kaushik insists that a realistic retirement corpus in today’s India lies between ₹8-10 crore:
-
At 5% annual withdrawal, this yields ₹3.3-4.1 lakh per month, enough to cover rising costs, healthcare shocks, taxes, and lifestyle upgrades.
Even a ₹5-7 crore corpus, he notes, “offers dignity, security, and peace.”
5 rules for a future-proof retirement
He lays down a clear roadmap:
- Start early — compounding is the real wealth creator
- High equity allocation in youth, gradual diversification later
- Step-up SIPs in line with income growth
- Maintain dedicated emergency and health funds
- Stay disciplined and ignore market noise
“Your corpus must last 25-30 years,” he warns. “Treat retirement planning like a marathon — not a sprint.”
Kaushik’s message is blunt: Retirement planning in India requires a reset. “Retirement isn’t about a ‘3 crore dream.’ It’s about freedom, peace of mind, and living comfortably,” he writes. “Start today. Aim higher. Let compounding work for you — the future you will be grateful.”
In a sharply-worded financial reality check, chartered accountant Nitin Kaushik has sparked a fresh debate on India’s retirement planning benchmarks, arguing that the once-aspirational “₹3 crore retirement corpus” is now dangerously outdated.
In a widely shared post on X (formally twitter), Kaushik wrote: “The harsh truth about ‘3 Crore Retirement’ – and why it’s no longer enough.” He illustrates his argument through a hypothetical yet relatable example: Ravi, a 35-year-old earning ₹1 lakh per month today and living a disciplined, comfortable lifestyle.
Lifestyle today vs Retirement reality
Ravi’s present-day monthly expenses look balanced:
- Rent: ₹30,000
- Groceries & utilities: ₹22,000
- Health & insurance: ₹8,000
- Miscellaneous: ₹15,000
- Savings: ₹25,000
But fast-forward 20 years, Kaushik warns, and the numbers balloon dramatically under a modest 6% annual inflation assumption. By 2045, maintaining the same lifestyle could cost:
- Rent: ₹96,000
- Groceries & utilities: ₹70,000
- Health & insurance: ₹26,000
- Miscellaneous: ₹50,000
The total: ₹2.42 lakh per month — just for basics.
“Ravi’s life today will need over twice the income in retirement,” Kaushik notes, adding that this does not include medical emergencies, travel, or major one-time expenses that typically rise with age.
₹3 crore gap
Kaushik dismantles the idea that the traditional ₹3 crore corpus can support a dignified retirement. Even with an “optimistic” 5% safe withdrawal rate, such a corpus yields:
- ₹15 lakh per year, or
- ₹1.25 lakh per month (before taxes)
Against a projected ₹2.42 lakh monthly requirement, this leaves a ₹1 lakh shortfall every month.
“And that’s just for basic living,” he adds. “Health inflation often outpaces general inflation, and most retirement withdrawals — SWP, annuities, some NPS income — are taxable.”
New Target: ₹8-10 crore
Calling for a mindset shift, Kaushik insists that a realistic retirement corpus in today’s India lies between ₹8-10 crore:
-
At 5% annual withdrawal, this yields ₹3.3-4.1 lakh per month, enough to cover rising costs, healthcare shocks, taxes, and lifestyle upgrades.
Even a ₹5-7 crore corpus, he notes, “offers dignity, security, and peace.”
5 rules for a future-proof retirement
He lays down a clear roadmap:
- Start early — compounding is the real wealth creator
- High equity allocation in youth, gradual diversification later
- Step-up SIPs in line with income growth
- Maintain dedicated emergency and health funds
- Stay disciplined and ignore market noise
“Your corpus must last 25-30 years,” he warns. “Treat retirement planning like a marathon — not a sprint.”
Kaushik’s message is blunt: Retirement planning in India requires a reset. “Retirement isn’t about a ‘3 crore dream.’ It’s about freedom, peace of mind, and living comfortably,” he writes. “Start today. Aim higher. Let compounding work for you — the future you will be grateful.”
