Learn budgeting, taxes, loans & investing through real Indian scenarios — games, articles, and daily challenges that make finance actually fun.
Pick your style — read, play, or track. Everything is tailored to the Indian financial system.
24 bite-sized articles with real ₹ examples, Indian banks (SBI, HDFC, ICICI), and mini quizzes that earn you XP.
8 scenario-based simulations — buy a home in Bengaluru, file taxes, pick credit cards, build a SIP portfolio.
Log your salary, split it into needs/wants/savings using the 50-30-20 rule, and see exactly where your money goes.
No boring theory — just real scenarios with real numbers. Make mistakes safely, learn what works.
From opening your first bank account to understanding SIPs — everything in one place, with Indian context.
Build a money habit in 2 minutes a day. Answer one question, earn XP, and see your streak grow — like Duolingo, but for your wallet.
Earn XP by reading articles, playing games, and acing daily quizzes. Watch yourself climb from Rupee Rookie to Money Master.
No credit card, no complicated setup. Just sign up and start building your financial knowledge.
Answer 3 quick questions — your money worry, how you like to learn, and which topic to start with. We personalise everything.
Read articles, play scenario games, answer daily quizzes. Each activity earns XP and builds your confidence with money.
Watch your streak grow, climb the leaderboard, and see your level rise from Rupee Rookie to Money Master.
Young Indians are finally making sense of their money — one article, one game at a time.
"Finally understood the difference between old and new tax regime! The Tax Filer game saved me ₹8,000 this year. Never thought taxes could be fun."
"The Home Buyer game changed how I think about renting vs buying. I ran the numbers for Pune and realised I'm better off renting for 3 more years."
"Got my first salary and had no idea what to do with it. FinLearn India helped me set up a budget, start an SIP, and build an emergency fund in one weekend."
Join thousands of young Indians learning to take control of their money — no jargon, no judgment, no cost.