Sunday, May 10, 2026
29.1 C
New Delhi

Education Costs Are Rising Faster Than Salaries: What It Means For Families

Show Quick Read

Key points generated by AI, verified by newsroom

For most Indian families, after buying a home, planning for a child’s education is often the next major financial priority for families. It represents stability, opportunity, and long-term security. However, over the past several years, the cost of education has increased steadily. In many cases, it has grown faster than annual salary increments. This gap is now becoming visible in household budgets.

Understanding education inflation

Education expenses have been rising consistently. School tuition fees, coaching classes, digital learning subscriptions, and extracurricular activities all add to the total cost. At the higher education level, professional courses such as engineering, medicine and management are significantly more expensive than they were a few years ago, particularly in private institutions. For instance, the annual tuition fee for a two-year MBA at several leading private institutions in India was typically in the range of Rs 12-15 lakh around five years ago. Today, at many of these same institutions, the total programme fee is closer to Rs 20-25 lakh. 

Families must budget for accommodation, transport, books, devices and other academic expenses. These costs compound over time. What appears manageable today can become substantial over a 10 to15 year period.

Salary growth has been moderate

While incomes have grown, salary increments in many sectors have remained moderate in recent years. Urban salaried households, annual hikes often fall within mid-single digits. According to the Aon Annual Salary Increase and Turnover Survey, average salary increases in India have hovered around 9 per cent across sectors, with actual increments varying by industry and role. When education costs rise faster than income, the savings gap widens. This means families must now allocate a larger portion of their income towards education planning. What earlier required gradual savings now demands structured and early preparation.

The funding gap

When education costs outpace salary growth, families typically rely on three approaches. They increase savings, take education loans, or use funds originally meant for other goals such as retirement. 

Education loans provide access, but they also create repayment responsibilities. Parents who self-fund may compromise long-term financial security. In some cases, families even consider secured borrowing options such as gold loans to meet urgent education expenses. 

While such loans can offer quick liquidity, they carry risks if repayments are delayed. Careful evaluation is important before choosing this route. The financial pressure is higher for families with more than one child, especially when education cycles overlap.

Planning becomes essential

The widening gap has made early financial planning essential. Many parents now start investing in education soon after a child is born. Long-term options such as systematic investment plans (SIPs) in diversified funds are often used to gradually build a corpus. Inflation-adjusted planning is equally important. Estimating only current fees is not enough. Future costs must be projected realistically. Adequate term insurance also helps protect the child’s education goal in case of an unforeseen loss of income.

Education continues to be a necessary investment. However, rising costs and moderate salary growth have made planning more demanding. The solution is not to scale back aspirations but to prepare earlier and more carefully. With disciplined savings, realistic projections, and informed financial decisions, families can bridge the gap. 

(The author is Associate Analyst, Communications, BankBazaar.com. This article has been published as part of a special arrangement with BankBazaar)

Go to Source

Hot this week

Bangladesh HC rejects detained Hindu monk’s bail plea

DHAKA: Bangladesh High Court on Sunday rejected a bail petition of Hindu monk Chinmoy Krishna Das as he is being tried by a lower court in connection with a lawyer’s killing in 2024 during clashes in Chittagong after he was den Read More

Israel operated from Iraq’s Najaf desert during war: Reports

Israeli forces established a makeshift base using an old airstrip in Iraq’s desert during the war against Iran, two security officials told AFP on Sunday, confirming The Wall Street Journal report. Read More

Non-binary Indian on student visa elected to Scottish Parliament

A non-binary transgender Indian and former PhD student, born in Tamil Nadu, has become the first person to be elected as a Member of the Scottish Parliament (MSP) despite being a foreign citizen who does not have a permanent visa to l Read More

Anger, confusion as Louisiana Republicans move to erase majority-Black US House dist

Baton Rouge, Louisiana: As a child, Leona Tate was one of the “New Orleans Four,” the first Black students to desegregate a public school in the deep South, enduring racial slurs and death threats as armed US Marshals esco Read More

Why Kiara-Sid kept it private; wants Saraayah to ‘experience life fully’

Kiara Advani recently opened up about her relationship with husband Sidharth Malhotra and why the couple consciously chose to keep their romance away from the public eye for years before marriage. Read More

Topics

Bangladesh HC rejects detained Hindu monk’s bail plea

DHAKA: Bangladesh High Court on Sunday rejected a bail petition of Hindu monk Chinmoy Krishna Das as he is being tried by a lower court in connection with a lawyer’s killing in 2024 during clashes in Chittagong after he was den Read More

Israel operated from Iraq’s Najaf desert during war: Reports

Israeli forces established a makeshift base using an old airstrip in Iraq’s desert during the war against Iran, two security officials told AFP on Sunday, confirming The Wall Street Journal report. Read More

Non-binary Indian on student visa elected to Scottish Parliament

A non-binary transgender Indian and former PhD student, born in Tamil Nadu, has become the first person to be elected as a Member of the Scottish Parliament (MSP) despite being a foreign citizen who does not have a permanent visa to l Read More

Anger, confusion as Louisiana Republicans move to erase majority-Black US House dist

Baton Rouge, Louisiana: As a child, Leona Tate was one of the “New Orleans Four,” the first Black students to desegregate a public school in the deep South, enduring racial slurs and death threats as armed US Marshals esco Read More

Why Kiara-Sid kept it private; wants Saraayah to ‘experience life fully’

Kiara Advani recently opened up about her relationship with husband Sidharth Malhotra and why the couple consciously chose to keep their romance away from the public eye for years before marriage. Read More

French national shows symptoms on return from hantavirus-hit ship

Five passengers of the MV Hondius will be quarantined in Paris “until further notice”, France’s prime minister says. Read More

His father had just been buried. Then West Bank settlers forced him to dig up the body

The UN human rights office condemns incident as “‘appalling and emblematic of the dehumanisation of Palestinians” in the West Bank. Read More

Trump calls Iran response to US proposal to end war ‘totally unacceptable’

On Sunday, Trump posted a message saying: “For 47 years the Iranians have been ‘tapping’ us along, keeping us waiting, killing our people with their roadside bombs, destroying protests, and recently wiping out 42,000 innocent, unarm Read More

Related Articles