Two friends. Same job. Same salary. Same lifestyle on paper. But in reality? Worlds apart. One of them is debt-free, the other sends off ₹30,000 every month in EMIs. And that one little difference completely flips how they think about money, risk, and freedom. A CA recently broke it down in a way that makes you look at loans with fresh eyes—and maybe rethink how much “owning” really costs you.
CA Abhishek Walia shared on LinkedIn how EMIs quietly reshape your financial life. “On paper, they look the same. In reality, their financial lives are very different,” he wrote.
Here’s why:
The person with EMIs doesn’t just lose a slice of income every month. They lose courage. Debt forces them to play safe—no bold investments, no aggressive bets. Their choices shrink, not because they want safety, but because debt has tied their hands.
Meanwhile, the one without EMIs? They’re free to experiment. They can invest faster, grab opportunities, and take calculated risks without fear of missing next month’s payment. That flexibility is invisible on a payslip but very real in daily life.
This is the hidden power of EMIs. They don’t just cut disposable income; they quietly shape your behaviour. They decide how confident you feel, how much optionality you have, and how boldly you can play the money game.
Financial planners often say EMIs should never cross 40% of your income. Walia goes further—if you can, keep it under 25%. Anything above that doesn’t just buy you an asset, it buys you stress. And that stress doesn’t show up in your bank account—it shows up in your decisions.
Wealth, then, isn’t just about what you own. It’s about how freely you can act. And sometimes, freedom is worth more than the house, car, or gadget that chained you to an EMI in the first place.
CA Abhishek Walia shared on LinkedIn how EMIs quietly reshape your financial life. “On paper, they look the same. In reality, their financial lives are very different,” he wrote.
Here’s why:
The person with EMIs doesn’t just lose a slice of income every month. They lose courage. Debt forces them to play safe—no bold investments, no aggressive bets. Their choices shrink, not because they want safety, but because debt has tied their hands.
Meanwhile, the one without EMIs? They’re free to experiment. They can invest faster, grab opportunities, and take calculated risks without fear of missing next month’s payment. That flexibility is invisible on a payslip but very real in daily life.
This is the hidden power of EMIs. They don’t just cut disposable income; they quietly shape your behaviour. They decide how confident you feel, how much optionality you have, and how boldly you can play the money game.
Financial planners often say EMIs should never cross 40% of your income. Walia goes further—if you can, keep it under 25%. Anything above that doesn’t just buy you an asset, it buys you stress. And that stress doesn’t show up in your bank account—it shows up in your decisions.
Wealth, then, isn’t just about what you own. It’s about how freely you can act. And sometimes, freedom is worth more than the house, car, or gadget that chained you to an EMI in the first place.
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