Your 30s are the most financially consequential decade of your life. The decisions you make between 30 and 40 — about retirement savings, insurance, home buying, and career — compound for 20–30 years. Getting them right or wrong creates wildly different outcomes.
This guide covers the 10 moves that have the highest impact on long-term wealth in your 30s.
You're likely earning significantly more at 32 than at 25. But lifestyle inflation often absorbs the entire raise. Institute a rule: every salary hike, increase SIP by 50% of the increment. If salary increases by ₹10,000/month, SIP increases by ₹5,000/month. This single discipline can add ₹1–2 crore to your retirement corpus.
If you haven't bought term insurance yet, do it before your 35th birthday. Premiums increase 5–8% for every year of age. A ₹1 crore, 30-year term plan at 30 costs approximately ₹800–1,000/month. At 38 it costs ₹1,500–1,800/month. Coverage should be 10–15x your annual income.
In your 20s, ₹50,000 emergency fund was enough. In your 30s — with a mortgage, children, aging parents — you need 6–9 months of total expenses. For most 30-something urban Indians, that's ₹3–8 lakhs. Keep it in a liquid mutual fund, not a savings account (earn 6.5% vs 3%).
The pressure to buy a home in your 30s is immense — from family, peers, and yourself. But the decision has to be financial, not emotional. Buy when: your EMI is under 35% of take-home income, you have 20%+ as down payment saved, your job is stable, and you plan to stay in the city for 7+ years. Rushing into a home loan with 80% LTV and stretched EMIs is the #1 financial mistake of Indian 30-somethings.
Have a specific, clearly labelled retirement portfolio. It does not get touched for anything except retirement. This psychological separation prevents the "I'll borrow from retirement and pay it back" trap that almost never works. Include: EPF (automatic), NPS Tier 1 (for 80CCD tax benefit), and a dedicated SIP in an index fund labelled "retirement."
Even if you don't plan to retire at 40, knowing your FIRE number (25x your annual expenses) gives you a concrete wealth target. Most 30-something Indians are surprised to find their FIRE number is ₹3–6 crore — more achievable than they thought. Knowing the target changes investing behaviour immediately.
Your employer's group health policy disappears the moment you resign or are laid off — exactly when you may need it most. Buy a personal family floater policy: ₹25–50 lakh coverage for a family of 3–4 costs ₹15,000–25,000/year. Top-up plans add ₹50 lakh more coverage for ₹5,000/year. Don't rely solely on employer health insurance.
Most Indians in their 30s have at least one of: endowment policy, ULIP, traditional insurance plan bought in their 20s. These products typically give 4–6% returns while locking capital for 15–20 years. Calculate the surrender value now versus continuing — in most cases, surrendering after 5–7 years and moving to mutual funds is mathematically better even after penalties.
Stop doing tax planning in March as a panic exercise. Structure it from April: fully deploy 80C by July (ELSS SIP running, EPF contributing), declare HRA for exemption, use 80D for health insurance, and evaluate NPS 80CCD(1B) for the extra ₹50,000 deduction. Systematic tax planning saves ₹1–3 lakhs annually.
You have accumulated assets — EPF, mutual funds, potentially property. Without a will, these assets go through intestate succession, causing delays and family conflicts. A basic will costs ₹5,000–15,000 through a lawyer. Ensure nominee designations are updated on all accounts. This takes one afternoon but protects years of wealth building.
Enter your monthly expenses to see the exact corpus needed for financial independence.
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