
Raj got a 30% hike last April. ₹45,000 became ₹58,500. He was thrilled.
He moved to a bigger flat. Upgraded his bike. Started ordering from Swiggy Gold instead of the canteen. Got an Apple Watch because, well, he deserved it.
Twelve months later, Raj's savings are about the same as before his hike. Maybe even less.
This is lifestyle inflation — and it's the single most common reason educated, well-earning Indians still feel financially stuck.

Lifestyle inflation (also called "lifestyle creep") is when your spending increases as your income increases — so your savings stay flat or even decline despite higher earnings.
The math is brutal. If you earn 30% more but also spend 30% more, you've made zero financial progress. You just upgraded your current life instead of building your future.
Why It's So Hard to Avoid
Because it feels right. You worked hard for that hike. You deserve better things. Treating yourself is healthy.
All of that is true — in moderation. The trap is when the entire raise disappears into lifestyle, leaving nothing for wealth-building.
Plus, it's socially reinforced. Friends who also got hikes are upgrading. Instagram shows a curated feed of aspirational living. The pressure is real.
The Rule Raj Should Have Used
When you get a raise, split the extra amount 50-50:
50% can go into improved lifestyle (yes, enjoy the hike!)
50% goes directly into savings/investments — automatically, on day 1
On Raj's ₹13,500 hike:
₹6,750 for lifestyle upgrades
₹6,750 into a SIP or emergency fund
Do this every time your income increases, and your savings rate grows with your income. This is how wealth compounds.

Your savings percentage hasn't changed despite multiple raises
You feel like you "need" things you never needed a year ago
Your bank balance on the 25th of the month looks the same as when you earned less
You can't describe what happened to last month's salary
Not at all. The goal isn't to live like a monk. The goal is to make sure each raise makes your future better, not just your present more comfortable.
At a minimum, 20% of in-hand income. If you're under 30, try to push for 25–30%. Your future self will be very grateful.
This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Please consult a SEBI-registered advisor before making investment decisions.
"Investments in securities market are subject to market risks. Read all the related documents carefully before investing."
November 18, 2025
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