I still remember the silence at the dinner table. I had just told my parents that I was going to keep renting for a few more years instead of buying a flat. I wanted to build my emergency fund first, let my investments compound, and stay flexible while my career was still finding its shape. It made perfect sense to me on a spreadsheet. It made no sense at all to them.
“Beta, at your age your cousin already had a house,” he said, not angrily, just heavily, as if I had let down three generations at once. My mother added the line that lands in every Indian home: “What will people say?” (Log kya kahenge?)
About the author: Abhishek Kumar is part of a freefincal’s curated list of fee-only financial advisors and a fee-only India member. He can be contacted via his website, sahajmoney.com.
If you have ever made a money decision in India, you know this scene. It might have been about your wedding budget, the car you bought (or didn’t), the job you left, the gold you refused, or the “safe” life insurance plans that everyone insisted on while you wanted to try mutual funds. Somewhere between your bank account and your choices sits a crowded table of opinions: parents, relatives, neighbours, and that vague, all-seeing jury called “log”.
Learning to manage that pressure isn’t about becoming cold or rebellious. It’s about making room for both your family’s love and your own judgement. Here is the framework that I used to deal with it.
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Understand that the pressure usually comes from love and fear
Before you push back, it helps to understand what you are actually pushing against.
When your father insists on a house, he isn’t trying to sabotage your SIP. He grew up in a world where property was the only wealth that felt real, where equity market scams were rampant, where renting meant instability, and where a home was proof that his child was safe. When your aunt frowns at your “risky” equity investments, she is remembering a relative who lost money in a 1992 scheme.
Most family pressure is fear wearing the costume of advice. Once you see it that way, you stop treating your parents as opponents and start treating them as worried people who love you clumsily. That shift changes your entire tone, and that is half the battle.
Get your own numbers clear before the conversation
Family pressure feels loudest when you are unsure yourself. If a part of you is secretly wondering whether renting is foolish, every jab from a relative will find that soft spot.
So do your homework first. Sit quietly, away from the noise, and get honest about your goals, your income, your timeline, and your risk appetite. Run the actual math. Understand why your choice makes sense for your life and not in vague terms, but in numbers you could defend on paper.
When I finally sat down and calculated that renting plus investing the difference would provide me the flexibility at that point in time in life by making me far more mobile for the next five years, something settled inside me. If the returns were decent in that period, then that would be a bonus. I wasn’t guessing anymore. And a person who knows their own numbers is remarkably hard to rattle at a dinner table.
Remember whose life the decision belongs to
Here is a quiet truth we forget: the people offering the loudest opinions rarely live with the consequences.
The relative who insists you spend fifteen lakhs on a wedding will not be paying off that loan for the next four years. The uncle who mocks your modest car will not feel the freedom of your growing savings. The neighbours whose approval you are chasing will forget your choices by next Diwali as they are far too busy worrying about their own image.
You, however, will live with every rupee of this decision. That doesn’t make family opinions worthless; it simply restores the right weight to them. Advice is input. The decision is yours.
Buy yourself time and never decide under pressure
Some of the worst financial choices are made in the heat of a gathering, when everyone is watching, and you want the discomfort to end. You nod, you agree, you commit to the bigger flat or the fancier function, just to escape the moment.
Learn to say the most powerful sentence in personal finance: “Let me think about it and get back to you.”
This one line breaks the spell. It moves the decision out of the emotional room and into a calmer place where you can weigh things clearly. No genuinely good financial choice expires in an evening. If someone is rushing you, that urgency itself is a warning sign, whether it comes from a salesman or a well-meaning chacha.
Respond with empathy, not a lecture
When you finally explain your decision, resist the urge to win the argument by throwing up a wall of financial jargon. You are not trying to prove your parents wrong; you are trying to help them feel that you are safe and you know what you are doing.
Acknowledge their concern first and then share your reasoning simply, in terms they value: security, family, peace of mind. So I stopped saying “the ROI on equity beats real estate” and started saying “I want to build a strong safety cushion first, so that when I do buy a home, I won’t be drowning in EMIs.” Same decision, but now my father heard caution, not recklessness.
You may not fully convince them. That’s okay. The goal is understanding, not unanimous approval.
Build a small circle of trusted voices
The antidote to a hundred random opinions is a handful of good ones.
Choose two or three people whose judgement you actually respect a level-headed friend, a mentor, perhaps a qualified financial adviser who has no stake in impressing your relatives. Let them be your sounding board. When the wider world offers noise, your small council offers signal.
This matters because “log kya kahenge” draws its power from being everywhere and no one in particular. The moment you replace that faceless crowd with a few real, wise voices, the pressure loses much of its grip.
Make peace with a little disapproval
Finally, accept the price of financial independence: not everyone will be pleased with you, and that is perfectly fine.
If you wait until every relative approves, you will never make a single confident decision in your life. Some disapproval is simply the toll you pay on the road to peace of mind. The uncle who disagrees today will quietly ask for your advice in a few years, once your calm, steady choices have visibly paid off.
Your money is a tool for building the life you value. Listen to your family with love, weigh their wisdom honestly and then, gently but firmly, make the call that you will have to live with. That’s what adults do: “Disagree with each other, without being disagreeable.”

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