Summary of this article
Financial planning is not just about actions taken during the year, but about periodically stepping back to assess if those actions are still aligned with your goals.
The first step is understanding what actually needs to be done, not what is assumed.
Regular reviews ensure that your strategy evolves with your life, not away from it.
March isn’t just about closing the year; it’s about understanding it. For years, a 36-year-old bank manager treated March like a deadline. Every year-end looked the same: last-minute investments, hurried tax-saving decisions, and policies bought more out of urgency than intent. It felt responsible, even disciplined. Until one simple question changed his approach: What if March wasn’t about saving tax, but about checking whether your entire financial plan is actually working?
That shift from deadline to checkpoint brought clarity.
One weekend of review revealed what a year of routine hadn’t. Idle money sitting in low-yield savings accounts. Asset allocation that had quietly become more aggressive than intended. Nominee details that hadn’t kept pace with life changes.
That pause is what March can offer, if approached differently.
A Mindset Reset That Changes Outcomes
Most individuals approach the financial year-end with a compliance mindset of closing gaps, meeting deadlines, and avoiding penalties. While necessary, this often leads to rushed, suboptimal decisions. A more effective approach is to treat March as a structured review point.
“Financial planning is not just about actions taken during the year, but about periodically stepping back to assess if those actions are still aligned with your goals,” says Sanjiv Bajaj, Joint Chairman and MD at BajajCapital Ltd., “March provides a natural checkpoint to do that with clarity.”
1. Tax Review - Close Gaps, Don’t Create New Ones
The first step is understanding what actually needs to be done, not what is assumed. Section 80C, 80D, HRA, home loan benefits - all these are important, but they should be approached with calculation, not urgency. Many individuals overestimate how much they still need to invest, often duplicating contributions already made through EPF, insurance premiums, or existing commitments.
“Tax efficiency should ideally follow financial planning, not drive it,” Bajaj explains. “When decisions are made purely for tax-saving in the last few days, they often compromise long-term outcomes.” The goal is simple: optimise what remains, not rush into what isn’t needed.
2. Portfolio Rebalancing - Realign Risk Quietly
Markets move. Portfolios drift. An equity allocation that was originally set at 60 per cent can easily rise to 70–75 per cent after a strong market year. While it may feel like growth, it also means your risk exposure has increased without a conscious decision. Rebalancing is not about reacting, it’s about realigning.
“Maintaining the right asset allocation is critical to consistent wealth creation,” says Bajaj. “Rebalancing ensures that your portfolio continues to reflect your risk appetite, not just market performance.”
Even small corrections done annually can prevent larger imbalances over time.
3. Insurance: Does Your Protection Still Match Your Life?
Over a year, incomes change, responsibilities evolve, and healthcare costs rise. But insurance often remains untouched. A policy that felt sufficient two or three years ago may no longer offer the same level of protection today. Term insurance should reflect current income and future responsibilities. Health insurance should account for rising medical costs, especially in urban India where inflation in healthcare continues to outpace general inflation.
“Insurance adequacy is not a one-time decision,” Bajaj notes. “It needs to evolve with your life stage, income, and financial responsibilities.” A quick review here can prevent significant gaps later.
4. Emergency Fund: Quietly Eroded, Rarely Reviewed
Emergency funds are built with intention, but rarely revisited. Over time, they may reduce due to usage or become insufficient as expenses rise. What was six months of expenses a year ago may now only cover four. March offers a good opportunity to see if your financial cushion is still intact.
If it's not, you can use things like bonuses, performance incentives, or tax refunds to shore it up before the new financial year kicks off.
5. Documentation And Nominees: Little Things, Big Difference
Financial planning isn't just about how much you make; it's also about making sure things keep going. Nominee information on your bank accounts, mutual funds, insurance policies, and EPF accounts should be up to date. Life changes - marriage, having kids, or moving - often mean you need to make updates, but they tend to get put off.
Similarly, keeping documents organised both digitally and securely simplifies not just tax filing, but future access when it matters most.
6. Goals: Are You Still On Tack?
Perhaps the most overlooked part of financial planning is revisiting goals. Over a year, priorities can shift. Timelines may change. Expenses may evolve. But investments often continue on autopilot.
A simple review can answer key questions:
Are your current investments aligned with your goals?
Is your monthly contribution still adequate?
Do any goals need to be redefined?
“A financial plan is only effective if it remains relevant,” Bajaj says. “Regular reviews ensure that your strategy evolves with your life, not away from it.”











