HDFC Life's 'Ready for Life' Report Highlights a Gap of 26 Points Between Perceived and Actual Financial Readiness
NewsVoir
Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], November 10: HDFC Life has launched 'Ready for Life' - its latest research-based study. This one-of-its-kind report makes an effort to quantify the Financial Readiness Gap - the difference between perceived and actual financial preparedness of individuals.
The Index shows a 26-point gap, which implies that there is a big difference in terms of actual readiness of an individual in comparison to how ready they think they are largely due the lack of action to convert financial planning from merely a plan into reality. In other words, the index reveals that individuals are not well-prepared to handle uncertainties of life across different financial aspects.
The Ready for Life Index 2025 is a proprietary research initiative by HDFC Life. This research has been conducted by Ipsos India, an independent market research company. Based on 1,836 face-to-face interviews with working men and women aged between 25-55 years across Metros, Tier 2, and Tier 3 cities*, the study evaluates India's life readiness across four key pillars -- Financial Planning, Emergency Preparedness, Health & Well-being, and Retirement Strategy.
Balancing Confidence and Preparedness -- India's Retirement Reality
The Ready for Life Index 2025 evaluates India's overall preparedness across life pillars of high importance and finds that though awareness and optimism are visible, preparedness is still uneven.
While Indian customers are inclined towards conventional savings instruments like endowment insurance plans, fixed deposits, and gold, protection and growth-oriented products like term insurance, market linked products, and retirement products are underutilised.
Term insurance, which is one of the most cost-effective protection instruments, has modest ownership owing to limited product understanding, myths around claim settlement, and belief that premiums offer no return if the policy holder outlives the policy term. While financial discipline is visible to an extent, the savings space remains dominated by traditional products and short-term goals. The real opportunity lies in encouraging systematic, long-term investing to build sustainable wealth and reduce over-reliance on low-growth instruments.
The study reveals notable regional variations in financial readiness across India:
* North India shows the widest readiness gap of 30 points, mainly due to weaker emergency and retirement planning
* East India records the most realistic self-assessment with a gap of 20 points, and also displays a traditional and disciplined savings approach
* West India demonstrates a more diversified investment outlook but lower focus on long-term planning
* Tier 3 cities display the lowest preparedness and widest confidence gaps, highlighting the need for deeper financial literacy efforts beyond metros
Click here for the report
Vineet Arora - Executive Director & Chief Business Officer, HDFC Life, shared his thoughts on the study, "The Ready for Life Index reflects India's growing awareness and optimism about financial planning but also reminds us that true readiness is built through consistent planning and protection. Confidence alone is not enough -- preparedness needs structure and action."
*List of cities - Delhi, Chennai, Mumbai, Kolkata, Lucknow, Jodhpur, Kochi, Vishakhapatnam, Vadodara, Nagpur, Bhubaneshwar, Patna, Muzaffarnagar, Panipat, Thanjavur, Machilipatnam, Anand, Dhule, Bardhaman, Ganjam
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