‘₹3 cr dream is dead’: Financial advisor breaks down the harsh reality of retirement in India

‘₹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. 

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Calling for a mindset shift, he insists that a realistic retirement corpus in today’s India lies between ₹8-10 crore.Calling for a mindset shift, he insists that a realistic retirement corpus in today’s India lies between ₹8-10 crore.
Business Today Desk
  • 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retirement planning benchmarks, arguing that the once-aspirational “₹3 crore retirement corpus” is now dangerously outdated.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. 

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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: 

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  • ₹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: 

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  • 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.”

Union Budget 2026 Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman is set to present her record 9th Union Budget on February 1, amid rising expectations from taxpayers and fresh global uncertainties. Renewed concerns over potential Trump-era tariff policies and their impact on Indian exports and growth add an external risk factor the Budget will have to navigate.
Track live Budget updates, breaking news, expert opinions and in-depth analysis only on BusinessToday.in

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. 

Advertisement

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: 

Advertisement
  • ₹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: 

Advertisement
  • 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.”

Union Budget 2026 Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman is set to present her record 9th Union Budget on February 1, amid rising expectations from taxpayers and fresh global uncertainties. Renewed concerns over potential Trump-era tariff policies and their impact on Indian exports and growth add an external risk factor the Budget will have to navigate.
Track live Budget updates, breaking news, expert opinions and in-depth analysis only on BusinessToday.in
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