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Your 20s are the best time to build strong financial habits, but they’re also filled with temptations and expensive mistakes.
Knowing the financial mistakes to avoid in your 20s can help you start saving, investing, and planning for the future — without years of regret.
Here are the top 10 money mistakes you should avoid in your twenties.
Spending beyond your means and only paying minimum dues leads to compounding debt and poor credit scores.
Fix it: Use credit responsibly, and pay off balances in full.
The biggest money mistake? Not investing early. Even ₹500/month in your 20s compounds into lakhs over decades.
Fix it: Start with SIPs or ETFs as early as possible.
Got your first salary? Avoid the urge to upgrade everything — phone, clothes, or car.
Fix it: Maintain a modest lifestyle and save/invest the difference.
Not having savings for unexpected events (medical, job loss) can derail your finances.
Fix it: Save at least 3–6 months of expenses in a liquid account.
Winging your monthly spending is a recipe for disaster.
Fix it: Use apps like Walnut, Monefy, or Notion to track every rupee.
Thinking you’re too young to get insured? Big mistake. A single medical emergency can wipe out your savings.
Fix it: Buy affordable health insurance early.
Many in their 20s ignore or delay tax filing — missing refunds and losing compliance.
Fix it: File taxes annually even if your income is low. Use tools like Cleartax or consult a CA.
If you don’t know where your money is going, it will always feel like it’s disappearing.
Fix it: Automate your savings and manually track discretionary expenses.
FOMO-driven expenses (like luxury travel, iPhones, festivals) can eat up long-term financial goals.
Fix it: Spend intentionally, not impulsively.
Most people wait until they’re in trouble to learn about money. That’s too late.
Fix it: Read blogs like bit2050.com, follow finance influencers, and use books like Rich Dad Poor Dad.
Not investing early is one of the biggest mistakes. Delaying even a few years can cost you lakhs in lost compounding.
No — but misusing it is. Use it smartly to build credit and earn rewards, but never carry high balances.
Aim for at least 20–30% of your income, with a split between emergency fund, SIPs, and long-term goals.
Avoid it. Loans should be taken for assets (education, home) not liabilities (gadgets, vacations).
Start with blogs like bit2050.com, YouTube channels like CA Rachana Phadke, and books like The Psychology of Money.
Avoiding financial mistakes in your 20s can set you up for a stress-free 30s and an early retirement plan.
Take small but consistent action now — and let bit2050.com guide you every step of the way.