The ₹55 Lakh Question: Is Raising a Child in Urban India Becoming a Luxury?

The ₹55 Lakh Question: Is Raising a Child in Urban India Becoming a Luxury?

The ₹55 Lakh Question: Is Raising a Child in Urban India Becoming a Luxury?

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How expensive is it really to raise a child in India’s cities today? One viral LinkedIn post has brought this uncomfortable question into the spotlight, sparking intense online conversations about parenting, social pressures, and the middle-class squeeze.

Akur Jhaveri, an Associate Vice President at IDfy, recently took to LinkedIn to share a personal revelation that’s now making waves across social media. What began as a casual conversation with his cousin—who teaches at an international school—turned into a financial eye-opener, forcing him to rethink the real price of parenting in metropolitan India.

“I never realised the real cost of raising kids in India, until I met my cousin last week,” Jhaveri wrote candidly.

Balwadkar

What followed was a breakdown that felt more like a corporate budget sheet than a family expense list.

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The Real Math Behind Modern Parenting

According to Jhaveri’s “back-of-the-envelope” calculation:

International school tuition fees alone cost around ₹7–9 lakh annually.

Add another ₹2–4 lakh for books, uniforms, private tuition, and other academic costs.

That brings the total educational cost to approximately ₹12 lakh a year.

Now toss in extracurricular activities, birthday parties, coaching, clothing, and leisure expenses, which can easily hit another ₹1 lakh annually.

Total estimated annual expense per child: ₹13 lakh.

And that’s just one child.

Here’s where things get more sobering.

Jhaveri calculates that if a parent allocates roughly 30% of their net income to cover their child’s expenses, they’d need to earn ₹43–44 lakh after tax to sustain this lifestyle.

But with taxes factored in (assuming a blended income tax rate of 20%), the required gross salary jumps to ₹55–60 lakh per year.

“To send your kids to a good school, an Indian needs to have a gross salary in the range of ₹50–60 lakhs,” Jhaveri explained. “And this is if you have ONE kid. Have another one, and these numbers increase substantially.”

He ends that part of the post with a wry observation: “I always used to wonder why people these days don’t want to have kids. Now I know why…”

In a follow-up note, Jhaveri addressed the obvious counterpoint—why not just opt for more affordable schools?

He wrote that while ICSE or CBSE schools may charge significantly less, there are two key challenges:

1. FOMO (Fear of Missing Out) among urban parents drives them toward high-end international education, hoping to give their kids a competitive edge.

2. The best ICSE schools are notoriously hard to get into. “Getting admitted to them is not a walk in the park,” said Jhaveri, who himself is a product of the ICSE system.

The post quickly went viral, attracting a flood of reactions—many in support, others critical.

Some users shared cost-effective alternatives. “Good CBSE schools in Delhi only charge ₹10K a month and deliver excellent academic results,” one parent noted.

Others called out the flawed logic of equating expensive schools with quality education. “If you’re paying ₹13 lakh a year and still hiring private tutors, then what’s the school doing?” a commenter questioned.

Then there were more pointed critiques: “The schools you mention cater to the super-elite. The post smells like attention-seeking, not real-world analysis.”

However, many parents could relate, especially to the unspoken pressures that push families into stretching their finances.

One user summed it up poignantly: “The real problem isn’t just the cost—it’s the FOMO. We’re not only burning out as parents, we’re passing the pressure onto our kids.”

Is Quality Education Now a Luxury?

Akur Jhaveri’s post may be based on rough calculations, but its emotional and financial truth has struck a chord. In a world where parenting choices are increasingly shaped by status, competition, and social media-fueled aspirations, his post has exposed the widening gap between aspiration and affordability.

As one user put it: “Good education is a luxury.” Maybe that’s the real wake-up call.

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