Financial Wellness

Your Financial Health Score:
What It Measures and Why It Matters

Your credit score tells banks how reliable you are. Your financial health score tells you how financially secure you actually are.

Credit Score vs Financial Health Score

India is obsessed with credit scores. Most professionals check their CIBIL score monthly. But your CIBIL score measures one thing: how reliably you repay debt. It says nothing about your savings rate, insurance coverage, tax efficiency, or retirement readiness.

Your financial health score is the complete picture. You could have a CIBIL of 800 (excellent credit) but a financial health score of 38 (dangerous financial fragility) — high debt utilization, no emergency fund, wrong tax regime, zero retirement savings.

The 6 Dimensions of Financial Health

1. Savings Rate (25 points)

Are you saving enough? Benchmark: 20%+ of take-home = excellent. Below 10% = red flag. Many professionals earning ₹15-30L save less than 5% because lifestyle inflation outpaces salary growth.

2. Emergency Fund (20 points)

Do you have 3-6 months of expenses in liquid assets? Most professionals have 0-1 months. If you lose your job tomorrow, how long can you sustain your lifestyle without income? That number — in months — is your emergency fund score.

3. Debt-to-Income Ratio (20 points)

Your total EMIs should not exceed 30-35% of take-home. Home loan + car loan + personal loan EMIs eating 50%+ of income means you have zero financial resilience.

4. Insurance Coverage (15 points)

Do you have adequate term cover (minimum 10x annual income)? Health insurance above ₹5 lakh per family member? Most professionals are underinsured by 50-60% of their actual requirement.

5. Wealth Building (10 points)

Are you investing consistently in wealth-building assets (equity, mutual funds, NPS)? A savings rate above 20% means nothing if all savings sit in an FD earning 7% while inflation runs at 6%.

6. Tax Efficiency (10 points)

Are you on the right tax regime? Using all deductions? Contributing to NPS? Most professionals overpay ₹20,000-50,000 in tax annually due to passive regime decisions.

Score 80-100
Excellent
Score 60-79
Good
Score 40-59
Needs Work
Score Below 40
At Risk

The Average Score of Indian Salaried Professionals

Most Indian salaried professionals in the ₹12-30L range score 45-58. The biggest drags: emergency fund (most have zero), insurance coverage (most are underinsured), and tax efficiency (most don't know their regime savings).

The good news: 10-15 point improvements are achievable in under 3 months by fixing 2-3 structural issues.

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