Retirement isn’t something that happens to you; it’s something you build together. For Indian couples, the stakes are particularly high. Unlike single earners, dual-income households face a unique puzzle: two careers, two financial histories, two risk appetites, and yet a single shared future.
The complexity isn’t just mathematical. It’s personal. She may have taken career breaks. He might have lost income during transitions. One partner might be more conservative; the other, aggressive. These differences are real. The good news? They’re not obstacles. They’re the foundation of a stronger retirement plan.
This guide walks you through a practical approach to retirement planning for married couples in India, one that honors both perspectives while moving toward one unified goal, based on regulations from the Employees’ Provident Fund Organization (EPFO), Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), and the Income Tax Department.

Single individuals plan for themselves. Couples plan for themselves, their spouse, and the shared life they want to build. This distinction matters profoundly.
Key Differences in Couple-Specific Retirement Planning:
There is no standard retirement corpus for every Indian couple. The right amount depends on lifestyle, city, healthcare needs, inflation, liabilities, and expected retirement age.
Most couples avoid discussing money. This is the first mistake.
Before building a retirement plan, you need clarity on five things:
Write down the current take-home income for each partner. Not gross salary — actual money hitting your accounts after taxes. This number is your foundation.
List what you already own: home value, cars, savings accounts, investments, life insurance policies, and provident fund balances. Couples often have fragmented assets that haven’t been consolidated.
Home loans, personal loans, and credit card debt all affect retirement readiness. A couple with ₹50 lakhs in savings but ₹30 lakhs in outstanding debt is in a weaker position than a couple with ₹35 lakhs in savings and no debt.
What does retirement mean to you both? Will you travel monthly? Maintain current spending? Reduce expenses? This shapes your target corpus.
One partner’s answer to “Can you handle a 20% market drop?” might differ significantly from the other’s. Document these honestly.
This conversation is essential. When both partners understand the complete financial picture, they can make informed decisions about joint retirement planning.
The corpus calculation uses a simple formula, but the inputs require careful attention to detail.
Formula for Retirement Planning for Dual-Income Couples:
Here’s how it works in practice:
Example Scenario:
Using the inflation-adjusted calculation:
This is your target corpus. For a couple expecting to live to 85 at current spending levels and 6% annual inflation, the goal is ₹3.87 crore.
Key point: This isn’t one partner’s responsibility. It’s a joint target requiring both salaries.
This is where “His Plan” and “Her Plan” become one retirement strategy.
In most Indian dual-income households, contributions are unequal. Partner A might earn ₹1.2 crore annually; Partner B, ₹70 lakhs. This doesn’t mean Partner B should contribute less to retirement. Here’s why:
Contribution Strategy:
Why independent accounts matter: If one partner becomes unable to work due to health or other reasons, the other isn’t suddenly carrying the entire retirement burden.
EPF/PPF Allocations:
National Pension System (NPS):
Voluntary Investments:
Insurance and Risk:
In India, each person files an individual tax return. Unlike in some countries, there is no joint married tax-filing system. Instead, each partner optimizes their personal tax situation within the Income Tax Act framework.
Individual Tax Planning Strategies for Married Couples:
Each partner can independently claim:
Additional ₹50,000 deduction beyond the ₹1.5 lakh 80C limit for NPS Tier I contributions. Both partners can claim this separately.
Health insurance premiums:
Each partner can claim independently based on their own health insurance policies.
If the couple owns multiple properties, consider who should claim what to minimize the family’s tax burden. However, each person files individually; there’s no joint filing system in India.
Both partners can time their EPF and NPS withdrawals, as well as other pension income, across different financial years to optimize taxable income each year and minimize tax liability together.
The hardest part of couple-based retirement planning is acknowledging that one partner might not make it to retirement together.
Contingency Planning:
Retirement planning for couples is fundamentally different from planning as an individual. It requires honest conversations, aligned goals, and ongoing coordination. The framework outlined here — from the initial money conversation through contingency planning — works because it addresses both the financial and relational dimensions of shared retirement.
The couples who succeed at retirement planning typically follow a predictable pattern: they talk openly about money, establish a shared target, contribute according to their capacity, and review progress annually. They don’t need perfect alignment on every decision; they need sufficient alignment on the destination.
Whether you implement this framework immediately or gradually, the key is to begin the conversation. Many couples delay retirement planning because they’re overwhelmed by complexity. In reality, the complexity emerges only when you start addressing it. The earlier you begin, the more time compound growth works in your favor, and the more flexibility you have to adjust course if circumstances change.
The financial mechanics are straightforward. The relational aspect — ensuring both partners feel heard, involved, and secure in the plan — is what actually makes retirement planning sustainable over 15, 20, or 30 years of shared life.
Your retirement won’t be built by one person’s salary or decision-making. It will be built through both partners’ contributions, intentionality, and regular reassessment. That’s what makes it resilient.
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