{"id":185608,"date":"2023-10-23T06:27:06","date_gmt":"2023-10-23T06:27:06","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/indiansapidnews.com\/?p=185608"},"modified":"2023-10-23T06:27:06","modified_gmt":"2023-10-23T06:27:06","slug":"getting-married-plan-finances-first","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/indiansapidnews.com\/celebrity\/getting-married-plan-finances-first\/","title":{"rendered":"Getting Married? Plan Finances First!"},"content":{"rendered":"

For women, it is important to build an emergency fund and a financial independence fund independent of the couple’s joint goals and plans.<\/strong><\/p>\n

India’s wedding season is coming. There were 3.2 million weddings November to December last year, with an expenditure of Rs 3.75 trillion, according to Nikkei Asia and the Confederation of All India Traders.<\/p>\n

When Indians marry, they usually bring together their finances.<\/p>\n

Soni K, who is a digital marketer in Mumbai, says she has already planned her finances before her wedding in December.<\/p>\n

“We have decided to have separate assets, but will go for joint liabilities and expenses,” says Soni about her fiancé.<\/p>\n

Soni’s parents are teachers and want her to merge all her finances with her future spouse. (Soni’s real name has been changed for this story.)<\/p>\n

“In current times, when both husband and wife are working to achieve their financial goals and trying to strike a balance between maintaining their lifestyle and saving for the future, one cannot have a cookie-cutter approach,” says Jinal Mehta, a certified financial planner and founder of Beyond Learning Finance.<\/p>\n