A year-old interview with a Bengaluru-based software consultant is currently going viral again, and has sparked a discussion about salaries and savings on X. Last year, Surya spoke to mutual fund consultant Anshuman Sharma about his major expenses and lifestyle inflation, seeking advice on maximising his investments.The Bengaluru-based techie claimed that he is not able to meet his savings goal every month. (Representational image/Gemini AI generated)He claimed that despite earning ₹45 lakh per annum, he feels broke at the end of the month.The conversation was shared on YouTube and was recently reposted on X, where it has reignited the debate around how much one should save.(Also read: Bengaluru techie earning ₹3.5 lakh monthly says he struggles to save ₹50,000: ‘Living in constant anxiety’)“I don’t have anything left”During the course of the conversation, Surya told Sharma that he has lived in Bengaluru for the last 14 years and is currently working as a software consultant. His salary is ₹45 lakh per annum, while his take-home pay is ₹2,45,000 per month ( ₹2.45 lakh).Despite this very respectable paycheck, Surya struggles to save.“Right now the challenge that I’m facing is that at the end of the month, I don't know where my money is going. I usually don't have anything left at the end of the month,” he said.He explained that he lives with his wife and their 3.5-year-old child. “After I got married and we had a child, the expenses caught up and I couldn’t significantly increase my SIPs,” he said.A breakdown of expensesSurya elaborated on his expenses, saying the biggest chunk of his salary went to home loan EMIs every month. He pays ₹63,000 as EMI, which mutual fund advisor Anshuman Sharma called a good number as it is less than 30% of his income.A breakdown of his expenses shows that he also pays ₹11,000 per month as school fee for his son. Food and groceries take up ₹12,000, while miscellaneous expenses eat up another ₹20,000.On shopping, trips and eating out, Surya spends roughly ₹32,000 per month. This was the part of his expenses breakdown that sparked a conversation online.Bengaluru techie’s expenses spark debateIndia has more of an issue of poor financial planning than inflation💰🇮🇳“India has more of an issue of poor financial planning than inflatio. Take this guy from Bengaluru who has an in-hand salary of ₹2.45L pm (post tax). He pays ₹11k fee for his only son's nursery fee (+3L admission fee)... He has a home loan EMI of 63k but spends 32k on shopping + trips every month,” wrote an anonymous X account while reposting the clip.“There's no financial planning issue here. He's still saving 25% of his income. God forbid a man wants to send his kids to good schools and spend some money on fun things for himself,” another X user countered.“He is taking care of his parents and grand mom, still manages to save 26% of his income, don’t see a problem here. In some way house EMI is a nature of saving,” X user Sahil Mehra agreed.(Also read: 'Is ₹40 LPA enough anymore?': Man raises question about Bengaluru's rising cost of living)
Bengaluru techie earning ₹45 lakh says he feels broke every month: ‘I don’t know where my money is going’
A Bengaluru software consultant claimed that despite earning ₹45 lakh per annum, he feels broke at the end of the month. | Trending
Tech consultant earning ₹45 lakh annually in Bengaluru spends entire monthly take-home; discretionary spending (₹32k) rivals home loan EMI (₹63k). Signals financial planning crisis among high-earning tech professionals; poor cash management despite premium salaries suggests need for employer financial literacy programs.







