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Finance 5 min read

How to save money every month on a small salary in India

If your salary disappears before the month ends, you're not bad with money — you just don't have a system. Saving on a small income isn't about earning more first; it's about giving every rupee a job before it slips away. Here's a simple approach that works on ₹15,000 a month or ₹50,000 a month, because the percentages scale either way.

1. Pay yourself first — even if it's ₹500

The day your salary arrives, move a fixed amount to savings BEFORE you spend anything. Most people save 'whatever is left' at month-end — and nothing is ever left. Flip it: save first, spend what remains. Start with an amount that doesn't hurt (even 5% of your salary) and let it become automatic. A small amount saved every single month beats a big amount saved 'someday'.

2. Track every rupee for 30 days

You cannot fix a leak you can't see. For one month, write down every expense — the ₹20 chai, the ₹200 delivery, the ₹49 subscription. Almost everyone is shocked by where 20–30% of their money actually goes. You don't need a bank account or UPI history for this; a simple expense tracker on your phone is enough. Rupix's free Budget & Expense Tracker does this in seconds per entry and keeps the data on your device — no bank linking, no signup. Awareness alone usually cuts spending by a tenth.

3. Find the silent leaks

After a month of tracking, the patterns are obvious: subscriptions you forgot, daily small buys that add up, impulse orders. Cancel one unused subscription and you've funded next month's savings. The goal isn't to stop enjoying life — it's to stop paying for things you don't even notice.

4. Use the 50/30/20 rule as a loose guide

Aim for roughly 50% of income on needs (rent, food, bills, travel), 30% on wants, and 20% on savings and goals. On a tight salary the savings slice may start smaller — that's fine. The rule is a direction, not a cage. As your income grows, keep the savings percentage steady instead of inflating your lifestyle to match.

5. Make it automatic and boring

Willpower fails; systems don't. Automate the 'pay yourself first' transfer, keep tracking until it's a 5-second reflex, and review once a month. Boring, repeatable habits are exactly what build a savings cushion. You can start today, for free, with a tracker that works fully offline and keeps your money data private — download Rupix Budget & Expense Tracker on Google Play and log your first expense in under a minute.

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