How a couple navigate their finances through travel, life and long-term plans

Published: April 21, 2025 at 6:00 am

We are back again with our fourth yearly audit of our financial health (the first three parts are linked below). A huge thanks to the numerous yearly audits posted on freefincal – we were also motivated to document ours, at least once a year. Thankfully, we are doing this for the fourth year in a row – and we would like to continue in years to come.

Our previous audits

  1. How a young couple is trying to balance travelling and investing
  2. How a young couple tries to balance their personal and financial aspirations
  3. How a couple reached their desired asset allocation after starting late

Before we begin, a very brief background about us: I (Arka) and my wife (Rupali) got married in 2020 (just before the pandemic). I am currently 37, and we started our financial planning seriously only after our marriage, which was in 2020. I work in IT Consulting, and Rupali is in Tax Consulting. We have surely started late, but we are trying to ramp up the investments to cover it while managing our huge love for travel.

About this series: I am grateful to readers for sharing intimate details about their financial lives for the benefit of readers. Some of the previous editions are linked at the bottom of this article. You can also access the full reader story archive.

Opinions published in reader stories need not represent the views of freefincal or its editors. We must appreciate multiple solutions to the money management puzzle and empathise with diverse views. Articles are typically not checked for grammar unless it is necessary to convey the right meaning and preserve the tone and emotions of the writers.

If you would like to contribute to the DIY community in this manner, send your audits to freefincal AT Gmail dot com. You can publish them anonymously if you wish.

Please note: We welcome such articles from young earners who have just started investing. See, for example, this piece by a 29-year-old: How I track financial goals without worrying about returns. We also have a “mutual fund success stories” series. See, for example, how mutual funds helped me achieve financial independence.

One major update in our financial planning this year was consulting a fee-only financial planner. It was of great help, to say the least. The single-pane-of-glass view he helped us with was something missing from our planning.

Since we were primarily planning for retirement only to date, we realised we have other upcoming goals (house purchase, kids (yet to happen though), etc. ) that need a holistic professional view. It was a great decision to consult him. However, since we finished our consultation only in March 2024, not much of this year’s audit is impacted, but it will be from the next one. Now let’s dive in.

Basics:

First things first, let’s review our basics as of March 2024

Emergency Cash

4 months of current mandatory expenses (in case where both of us stopped earning) and not to be touched upon (in case the higher earning person stopped earning). 

The runway in the scenario of “both of us stopped working” decreased one month compared to last year. Due to increased savings towards house down-payment. However we may plan to increase this a bit or include 6 months home loan EMI to it when we purchase the house

Health Insurance: 

  • 10L base + 50L Super Top Up (Self and Wife) 
  • 10L base + 15L Super Top up (Parents)

Both of these are taken outside office health insurance and parents are not added in office health insurance. 

Term Plan

  • 6 years of current annual income (self)
  • 5 years of current annual income (wife)

Income distribution: Below is the monthly distribution in different buckets of investments and expenses as a percentage of monthly earnings and how it has changed over the years.

Akra and Rupali's monthly distribution in different buckets of investments and expenses as a percentage of their monthly earnings and how it has changed over the years
Akra and Rupali’s monthly distribution in different buckets of investments and expenses as a percentage of their monthly earnings, and how it has changed over the years

Key observations compared to last year

 

  • Expenses in each bucket more or less remained same – family commitments have increased a bit due to some native house maintenance work 
  • Insurance premium includes term and medical insurance (both us and parents)
  • The extra earning is primarily channelized for investments and house downpayment funds.
  • Travel is one of our primary expense buckets, as both of us like to travel, hence keep a significant amount to fulfill our travel dreams. To compensate for that, we minimize discretionary spending like shopping and eating outs throughout the year and consider this travel corpus as our extended emergency bucket. We document our travel in our website and YouTube channel. Would love it if you have a look. Last year we took my father to one of his dream destinations, Masai Mara. 

You can read it here : Masai Mara from India under INR 75k

Goal: Coming to the goals we have the following ones as on date

  • Retirement Goal (Considering another 18 years away). Don’t mind working till our mid 50s (if possible !!). 

However, we will try to achieve financial independence (FI) before that. As of now the target is to reach 40 years of expense as corpus 

  • Buying a house – Here things have again changed from last year. Until last year our house purchase goal was almost 5-7 years away, but we decided to preponed it. Hence for the last few months jacked up the investments towards the downpayment. We may need to sell some part of our other investments if the downpayment fund doesn’t suffice – thanks to our financial planner, got a great visibility here
  • Currently don’t have any kids and will plan as and when the situation changes

Investments:

  • For emergency fund, 100% is in savings accounts (including FD) 
  • For retirement, asset allocation is as follows.

The aggressive investment in equity has increased the equity percentage from 56% in March 2023 to 65% in March 2024 and the it remained same in March 2025 as well.

However from this year onwards – we are adding up more liquid debt investments and wish to maintain the balance between 60 to 65% of equity and rest in debt

As of now below is the portfolio composition of mutual fund (which constitutes 53% of the retirement corpus) and direct equity (which constitutes 12% of the retirement corpus)

Akra and Rupali's MF portfolio April 2025
Akra and Rupali’s MF portfolio April 2025

Direct Equity investment has not performed really well this year, hence the percentage in overall corpus remains same. The expectation from direct equity is to create a stable source of dividend income over the years. Currently dividends are getting reinvested.

Performance:

  • The first and the most important parameter of the performance is the retirement corpus. As of March 2024 it was close to 5.5 years – it remained kind of same this year also due to underperformance of equity market, extra saving towards house downpayment fund and some recalculation of Retirement expenses
  • Below is the XIRR for equity MFs. . The stock portfolio is at a absolute return is close to 10% (way underperforming for now
Akra and Rupali's portfolio XIRR April 2025
Akra and Rupali’s portfolio XIRR April 2025

Plan for 2025-26:

  • Planning to close the house downpayment fund and keep it ready for any good house we like. At the same time keep contributing maximum possible for retirement funds and just right for other goals.
  • From a personal goals perspective, just trying to remain healthy with less eating out, regular exercise, remaining active and having enough water and sleep.

In the end, I want to thank Pattu sir for the opportunity and the amazing FB group of AIFW – my one stop solution for finance, career related things. Even for a passive member like me, just by reading posts, comments, analysis – it has been immensely fulfilling. 

I hope this group grows bigger and wiser !!

Reader stories published earlier:

As regular readers may know, we publish a personal financial audit each December – this is the 2023 edition: Portfolio Audit 2023: The Annual Review of My Goal-Based Investments. We asked regular readers to share how they review their investments and track financial goals.

These published audits have had a compounding effect on readers. If you would like to contribute to the DIY community in this manner, send your audits to freefincal AT Gmail. If you so desire, you can publish them anonymously.

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About The Author

Pattabiraman editor freefincalDr M. Pattabiraman(PhD) is the founder, managing editor and primary author of freefincal. He is an associate professor at the Indian Institute of Technology, Madras. He has over ten years of experience publishing news analysis, research and financial product development. Connect with him via Twitter(X), Linkedin, or YouTube. Pattabiraman has co-authored three print books: (1) You can be rich too with goal-based investing (CNBC TV18) for DIY investors. (2) Gamechanger for young earners. (3) Chinchu Gets a Superpower! for kids. He has also written seven other free e-books on various money management topics. He is a patron and co-founder of “Fee-only India,” an organisation promoting unbiased, commission-free investment advice.
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