# the raise that never reaches your portfolio

_Personal Finance . 2026-06-05 . By Tanmay Kurtkoti. Educational, illustrative, not advice._

A friend got his third raise in three years last month. He earns nearly double what he did when we met. And he still tells me, with a straight face, that he cannot find the money to start a SIP.

The strange thing is he is not lying. The money genuinely showed up. It just never reached the part of the account that compounds.

This is lifestyle creep, and it is the quietest leak in personal finance. Not a bad fund. Not a high fee. Just spending that expands to fill whatever lands in the account. The raise arrives, the standard of living rises to meet it, and somehow there is nothing extra to invest.

I ran the numbers on two people to see how much it actually costs. Both start at Rs 1L a month. Both get 8 percent raises for ten years. Both invest their savings at the same 11 percent. The only thing that differs is where the raise goes.

The first one keeps a flat 20 percent savings rate the whole decade. The raise feeds a bigger lifestyle. He ends with about Rs 54.4L.

The second one banks half of every increment before it touches his baseline. His savings rate drifts from 20 to 35 percent without a single moment that feels like a cut. He ends with about Rs 75.9L.

Same income. Same raises. Same returns. A Rs 21.5L gap, paid entirely by the version of him that let the raise become lifestyle.

The single-purchase cousin of this is the "I deserve it" splurge. One Rs 60000 reward is a Rs 4.84L line twenty years out. The reward is real. The price tag just shows up much later, and much bigger.

Honest version: you will never out-earn this by picking a better fund. You beat it by deciding, before the raise lands, that half of it routes straight to the SIP. Half still upgrades your life. The other half keeps working.

The raise you cannot feel is the one still doing your job for you:
