SynopsisUrban professionals are increasingly trapped by rising lifestyle costs, not low income, according to Chartered Accountant Nitin Kaushik. He argues that expensive homes, premium schools, and luxury habits create an illusion of wealth, leaving individuals financially fragile. This "Premium Fragility" means a temporary income interruption can lead to collapse, highlighting that true financial freedom lies in reducing dependencies, not just increasing salary.The CA challenged the common belief that a high salary automatically leads to financial freedom. (Istock- Representative image)A bigger salary is often seen as the ultimate sign of success. But what if earning more is quietly making you less financially secure? Chartered Accountant Nitin Kaushik has sparked a conversation on social media by arguing that many urban professionals are trapped not by low income, but by rising lifestyle costs. According to him, expensive homes, premium schools and luxury habits can create an illusion of wealth while leaving people financially fragile behind the scenes.Success or lifestyle dependency?CA Nitin Kaushik took to X and shared his thoughts on what he called a growing financial problem in urban India. He wrote that success has become "a high-stakes hostage situation" where people are no longer worried about poverty but about maintaining the cost of their own expectations.According to him, many professionals appear wealthy on the outside but are "structurally fragile" because their monthly expenses have increased faster than their actual wealth.He illustrated this with an example, saying that if someone needs **Rs 3 lakh every month just to break even**, they are "not successful" but instead heavily dependent on their income. In his view, this kind of lifestyle dependency makes every career decision, business risk and even taking a break far more expensive than it used to be.You Might Also Like:The hidden cost of lifestyle inflationKaushik explained that upgrading one's lifestyle often comes with long-term financial consequences. He pointed out that moving from a Rs 40,000 monthly rent to a Rs 1.2 lakh home EMI is not simply a housing upgrade. Instead, it permanently raises the financial threshold required to sustain that lifestyle.He also argued that people quickly get used to spending more, but adjusting to spending less can take years. As a result, fixed obligations become the biggest financial burden.— Finance_Bareek (@Finance_Bareek) According to Kaushik, discretionary expenses are rarely the real problem. The greater risk comes from recurring commitments such as home loans, premium schooling, club memberships and luxury commuting costs that cannot easily be reduced.You Might Also Like:Why a higher income does not always create more wealthThe chartered accountant challenged the common belief that a high salary automatically leads to financial freedom. He compared someone earning Rs 50 lakh annually while spending Rs 45 lakh to another person earning Rs 10 lakh and spending Rs 5 lakh. Although their incomes differ significantly, he argued that both are creating roughly the same amount of wealth because their savings gap is identical.The major difference, according to him, is that the higher earner faces a much more severe financial crisis if their income suddenly stops.The trap of 'Premium Fragility'Kaushik described this phenomenon as "Premium Fragility." On the surface, it looks like luxury holidays, organic groceries and an upscale lifestyle. Behind the scenes, however, it creates complete dependence on a continuous salary.He warned that if a 90-day interruption in income causes a household to collapse financially, that lifestyle is not true success but "a very well-branded crisis."You Might Also Like:What real financial freedom looks likeAccording to Kaushik, genuine financial power is not measured by how much someone can afford to buy, but by how much they can afford to walk away from.He said financially resilient people optimise for flexibility. They create enough financial breathing room to survive a 50 per cent pay cut, recover from burnout or even build a business without immediately changing their lifestyle. In his concluding message, Kaushik argued that financial independence comes from lowering dependencies rather than constantly increasing one's CTC. He added that people remain "employees of their own lifestyle" until they separate their identity from what they consume, suggesting that the greatest luxury today may simply be needing less.You Might Also Like:Read More News on...morelessRead More News on...moreless