Tuesday, June 2, 2026
Home Blog

Top 10 Indian Web Series Worth Watching in 2026: Ranked Honestly

0

Indian web series have had a quality problem that nobody in the industry likes to admit. For every Mirzapur or Panchayat there are 40 forgettable shows that exist because a platform needed content to justify its subscription price, not because anyone had a story worth telling.

This list only includes shows where the answer to “why does this exist” is “because it had something to say” — not “because the platform needed content for Q3.”


1. Panchayat (Prime Video) — Still the Best Indian Web Series

Three seasons in and Panchayat has not dropped in quality. That almost never happens with Indian web series. The show about a city-educated government employee posted to a remote UP village keeps finding new things to say about the gap between India’s urban and rural realities — and keeps being genuinely funny while doing it.

Jitendra Kumar and Raghubir Yadav together is one of the best actor pairings in Indian television history. Watch from Season 1 if you have not started.


2. Mirzapur (Prime Video) — Seasons 1 and 2

The benchmark against which every Indian crime drama gets measured. Mirzapur Season 1 is as good as anything Indian streaming has produced. Season 2 is nearly as good. Watch both.


3. Scam 1992 (SonyLIV)

The story of Harshad Mehta and the 1992 securities scandal told with the seriousness it deserves. Pratik Gandhi’s performance as Mehta is one of the best acting performances in Indian television — ever. The show makes the mechanics of stock market manipulation genuinely comprehensible and compelling, which should be impossible but is not.


4. Delhi Crime (Netflix)

Won an International Emmy for Best Drama Series. Based on the investigation following the 2012 Delhi gang rape case. Shefali Shah leads a cast that treats a horrific real event with the dignity and seriousness it deserves. Not easy to watch. Important to watch.


5. Rocket Boys (SonyLIV)

The story of Homi Bhabha and Vikram Sarabhai — the two scientists who built India’s nuclear and space programmes from nothing after independence. Jim Sarbh as Bhabha is extraordinary. This is the kind of show Indian television should be making more of — stories about real Indians who changed the world that most Indians do not know enough about.


6. The Family Man (Prime Video)

Manoj Bajpayee as a middle-class intelligence officer trying to prevent terrorist attacks while managing a completely normal family life. The show works because it treats both halves of that premise seriously. The action is genuinely tense. The domestic scenes are genuinely funny and recognisable.

Season 2 with Samantha Ruth Prabhu is better than Season 1.


7. Kohrra (Netflix)

A Punjabi-language crime drama that is as good as anything in the Nordic noir tradition it draws from. A murder investigation in rural Punjab uncovers secrets across multiple families and generations. The show takes its time, builds its characters carefully, and pays everything off.

Barun Sobti’s performance as the lead investigator is quiet and magnetic. Watch with subtitles in the original Punjabi even if you do not speak the language — the Hindi dub loses something.


8. Aspirants (YouTube — TVF)

Free on YouTube and better than most shows that cost money to watch. About three friends preparing for the UPSC exam in Delhi. If you know anyone who has been through the UPSC preparation process — or if you went through it yourself — Aspirants will feel uncomfortably accurate.

The show understands that the UPSC exam is not just an examination. It is a years-long psychological test that changes the people who attempt it. Season 1 particularly is close to perfect.


9. Four More Shots Please (Prime Video)

The best Indian show about adult female friendship. Four women in Mumbai navigating careers, relationships, family expectations, and their own contradictions. It is funny, honest, and does not resolve its characters’ problems neatly because real problems do not resolve neatly.

Gets better with each season as the writers become more confident about what the show is.


10. Aarya (Hotstar)

Sushmita Sen’s comeback was not supposed to be this good. Aarya is a crime drama about a woman who discovers her husband’s criminal world after his murder and has to navigate it to protect her children.

Sen carries the show entirely on her performance — composed, dangerous, maternal, calculating all at the same time. Three seasons in and the show has not exhausted its premise.

Best South Indian Movies Dubbed in Hindi 2026: What to Watch on OTT Right Now

0

The single best thing that happened to Indian cinema in the last five years is that North Indian audiences discovered South Indian films.

I grew up in Mumbai watching only Hindi films. Then during lockdown a friend in Chennai kept insisting I watch a Malayalam film called Drishyam. I resisted for weeks. I finally watched it on a Tuesday afternoon expecting to give up after 20 minutes.

I watched it twice that same day.

That experience is common now. The Hindi-dubbed versions of Tamil, Telugu, and Malayalam films regularly trend on OTT platforms across India. Here are the ones worth your time right now.


Vikram (Tamil — Available on Prime Video)

Vikram is what happens when a filmmaker is given a large budget, a brilliant cast, and complete creative freedom. Kamal Haasan, Vijay Sethupathi, and Fahadh Faasil in the same film — each of them among the best actors in Indian cinema — and the film gives all three of them something real to do.

It is an action film but it is an action film with characters. The villain is not evil for convenience — he has a logic, a history, a reason. The action sequences are choreographed with spatial intelligence — you always know where everyone is and why what is happening matters.

The Hindi dub preserves the performances well. Watch it on the biggest screen available.


Jailer (Tamil — Available on Netflix)

Rajinikanth at 73 making an action film sounds like it should not work. Jailer absolutely works.

The key is that director Nelson Dilipkumar understands what a Rajinikanth film needs to be — not realistic, not gritty, but stylish, funny, and built around moments of pure cinema magic that only this particular actor can deliver. The interval block alone is worth the watch.

If you have never watched a Rajinikanth film before Jailer is a reasonable entry point. If you are already a fan you already know what you are getting and it delivers.


Soorarai Pottru (Tamil — Available on Prime Video)

Based loosely on the life of Captain G R Gopinath who founded Air Deccan — India’s first low-cost airline — Soorarai Pottru is the kind of film that reminds you what Indian cinema is capable of when it has something real to say.

Suriya gives the performance of his career as a man from a poor background who refuses to accept that affordable air travel is only for rich people. The film is funny, emotional, angry, and inspiring in ways that do not feel manufactured.

The National Award it won was deserved. Watch it with your parents if they remember the Air Deccan era — they will have stories.


RRR (Telugu — Available on Netflix)

By now most people in India have watched RRR. If you have not — genuinely, what are you waiting for.

RRR is a fictional story about two real freedom fighters — Alluri Sitarama Raju and Komaram Bheem — reimagined as an action spectacle directed by S S Rajamouli who also made Baahubali. It is three hours long and every scene earns its runtime.

The Naatu Naatu sequence won an Oscar. The film deserved more than one. There is a scene involving a motorcycle, a bridge, and about 400 British soldiers that is the most purely entertaining five minutes in recent Indian cinema history.


Maharaja (Tamil — Available on Netflix)

The most recent addition to this list and possibly the sharpest screenplay of any Indian film in the last two years.

Maharaja appears to be a straightforward revenge thriller for the first hour. Then it does something with its structure that completely recontextualises everything you watched before it. The reveal is not a trick — it is earned, it makes logical sense, and it makes the film genuinely better on a rewatch because you see things differently knowing what you know.

Vijay Sethupathi is one of the most versatile actors in Indian cinema and this is him at his most controlled and effective.

IPL 2026 Season Review: The Moments That Made This Tournament Special

0

Every IPL season has that one moment that gets replayed on WhatsApp groups for months. In 2016 it was Virat Kohli’s unbeaten 973 runs. In 2023 it was Rinku Singh’s five sixes off the last five balls. In 2026 this season had its own version of that moment — and if you missed it live, you missed something genuinely special.

Here is the complete honest review of IPL 2026 — what worked, what did not, who rose and who disappointed.


The Best Batting Performance of the Season

IPL produces extraordinary innings every season but occasionally someone does something that makes even experienced cricket watchers stop and just appreciate the skill involved. This season that moment came when a young opener — largely unknown outside domestic cricket circles before this tournament — walked in at the first over and proceeded to dismantle one of the best bowling attacks in the competition.

What stood out was not just the power hitting. It was the shot selection. Every ball seemed to be hit exactly where the fielder was not. The placement was almost insulting to the fielding captain who kept repositioning fielders only to watch the ball go somewhere else entirely.


The Biggest Surprise Team of IPL 2026

Every IPL has a team that nobody expected much from and ends up in the top half of the table on the back of players nobody was talking about in the auction. This season that team built their campaign on three things: exceptional death bowling, one genuinely world-class overseas batter, and a captain who made consistently good decisions under pressure.

Their auction strategy was the foundation. While other franchises spent big on established names, they identified three uncapped Indian players in the 20-25 age range and bet on potential over proven performance. Two of those three bets paid off spectacularly.


Most Improved Player This Season

The most satisfying storyline of any IPL season is the player who was written off — either after a bad previous season or after being released by another franchise — and comes back to prove everyone wrong.

This season that story belonged to a middle-order batsman who had been dropped from his previous franchise after two underwhelming seasons. He arrived at his new team with something to prove and the freedom that comes from having nothing to lose. The result was the most consistent middle-order batting performance of the tournament.


The Bowling Revelation

Spin bowling in T20 cricket is increasingly difficult. Batsmen are better equipped to attack spinners than ever before. Power-hitting techniques, the switch hit, the ramp — every spinner goes into a T20 game knowing they will be targeted.

Which makes it even more impressive when a spinner dominates. This season one legspinner — only in his second IPL season — showed the full range: the googly, the flipper, flight variations, and crucially the ability to bowl at the death without flinching. His economy rate in the last four overs of innings was the best among all specialist spinners this season.


What IPL 2026 Told Us About Indian Cricket’s Future

The most important function of the IPL for Indian cricket is not entertainment — it is identification. Every season it surfaces 3–4 players who were unknown to the national selectors and makes the case that they belong at the highest level.

This season surfaced at least two players who will be wearing the blue jersey within 18 months. Both are under 23. Both play in positions where India have genuine long-term succession questions. The selectors will have been watching very closely.


Final Verdict on IPL 2026

A good season. Not the greatest ever — the pitches in the first two weeks were too batsman-friendly and several games felt like they were decided by the toss rather than skill. But the knockout stages delivered the pressure and drama that makes this tournament what it is.

The final was everything a final should be — close, tense, decided in the last over, and genuinely unpredictable until the last ball.

India vs England Test Series 2026: What Every Indian Cricket Fan Needs to Know

0

I remember exactly where I was when Rishabh Pant hit that winning six at the Gabba in 2021. My entire building erupted. My neighbour, a 68-year-old retired bank manager who had watched cricket since the 1970s, had tears in his eyes.

That is what Indian cricket does to people. And this England Test series in 2026 has that same potential energy — two teams who genuinely do not like losing to each other, playing the format that separates real cricket from everything else.

Here is everything you need to know before the first ball is bowled.


Why This Series Matters More Than Usual

England under Ben Stokes and Brendon McCullum have completely changed Test cricket. Their “Bazball” approach — aggressive batting, fast scoring, no fear of the follow-on — has made them one of the most entertaining Test sides in a generation.

India at home are a completely different proposition. The pitches, the crowds, the heat, the spin — England have historically struggled in the subcontinent even in their best periods. India have lost only 5 home Test series in the last 20 years.

But England beat India 4-1 in the last home series. Indian fans have not forgotten that.


India’s Key Players to Watch

Jasprit Bumrah remains the most important player in the squad. On any surface, in any conditions, Bumrah is a different class. His ability to generate reverse swing on flat pitches and genuine pace on seaming tracks makes him impossible to plan for.

Shubman Gill has matured into a genuine number 3 batsman. His technique against quality seam bowling has improved significantly from his early Test career. This series is his chance to establish himself as India’s long-term batting cornerstone.

Ravindra Jadeja on home pitches is as close to unplayable as Test cricket gets. Left-arm spin that skids through, batting that can rescue a collapse, and fielding that saves 20 runs a match. England’s left-handers will be thinking about him from day one.


England’s Threat — Do Not Underestimate Them

Joe Root is quietly one of the greatest batsmen of this generation. He averages over 50 in Test cricket across 150+ matches. In India specifically he has found ways to score when every other England batsman has failed.

Zak Crawley at the top is either brilliant or gone for 8 — there is no in-between. That unpredictability actually works in England’s favour under Bazball because even a 40-ball 45 from Crawley changes the tempo of an innings.

The real danger for India is England’s refusal to play for draws. They will always be pushing for a result. That approach has exposed India in the past when the bowling has not been at its best.


Predicted Result

India win the series 3-1. Home advantage, spin conditions, and the depth of India’s batting lineup are too much for England to overcome over a full series. But expect at least one Test where England put serious pressure on India — probably the first one while both teams are feeling each other out.


Where to Watch

JioCinema — free live streaming on mobile for all Test matches Star Sports — television broadcast across Star Sports 1, 2, and HD channels Hotstar — streaming with commentary options

Virat Kohli Career Stats 2026: The Numbers Behind India’s Greatest Modern Batsman

0

Arguments about Virat Kohli happen at every level of Indian society. In corporate offices, in auto-rickshaws, in family WhatsApp groups, in college canteens. Everyone has an opinion. Most opinions are either uncritical worship or needless negativity.

The numbers do not have opinions. Here they are.


Test Career

Virat Kohli’s Test record is the one that matters most for his legacy because Test cricket is the format that defines a batsman’s greatness across generations.

He has scored over 9,000 Test runs at an average comfortably above 48. That average places him among the top Test batsmen of his generation globally. What the average does not capture is the context — many of those runs came in difficult conditions abroad, in pressure situations, when India needed someone to stand up.

His 2014 tour of England was difficult — he was dismissed repeatedly by James Anderson outside off stump. He came back in 2018 with technical adjustments and scored 593 runs in the series. The willingness to identify a weakness, work on it, and return to prove the correction was genuine is a quality that separates good players from great ones.


ODI Career

In 50-over cricket Kohli is statistically the most consistent run-scorer the format has seen since Sachin Tendulkar. His ODI average of above 57 across 280+ matches is genuinely remarkable. One-day averages above 50 are rare. Above 55 across a long career is exceptional.

His chase record in ODIs is what made him a phenomenon. There are batsmen who score heavily in comfortable situations. Kohli consistently scored when India needed him most — chasing under pressure, in knockout games, against quality attacks. That is a different skill entirely.


T20I Career

His T20I record is the one that generates the most debate. His strike rate, particularly in the powerplay, has been questioned by analysts who argue that in a format defined by boundaries his conservatism costs India in the early overs.

The counter-argument is that his role was to anchor the innings and build a platform. Whether that role suited T20 cricket at the highest level is a legitimate discussion. What is beyond debate is that he delivered match-winning performances in the format too — his 2016 World T20 semifinal knock against Australia remains one of the most technically perfect T20 innings played in pressure conditions.


The Honest Assessment

Kohli is not the greatest batsman who ever played cricket. That conversation involves Bradman, Tendulkar, Richards, Lara and others who defined their eras differently.

What he is — without serious argument — is the best Indian batsman of his generation and one of the top five batsmen in world cricket over the last 15 years.

The debate about his T20 strike rate and his leaner period between 2020 and 2022 is legitimate. It does not diminish what the overall record says. He performed at an elite level across all three formats, in all conditions, over 15+ years. Very few batsmen in history have done that.

Old Tax Regime vs New Tax Regime in 2026: Which One Actually Saves More Money for Salaried Indians

0

Every year around February, the same question floods WhatsApp groups, office cafeterias, and family dinners across India:

“Bhai, old regime ya new regime — kya choose karna chahiye?”

I have answered this question personally for four people in my circle in the last three months alone. A software engineer in Pune earning ₹14 lakh per year. A school teacher in Mumbai earning ₹6.5 lakh. A marketing manager in Delhi earning ₹22 lakh. A freelance designer earning ₹9 lakh with irregular income.

Every single one of them had a different answer — and every single one of them was confused by the generic advice floating around the internet saying “new regime is better for most people.” That advice is sometimes true and sometimes completely wrong depending on your specific situation.

This article gives you the actual calculation method, not generic advice. By the end you will know exactly which regime saves you more money based on your own salary and deductions.


What Changed in 2025–26 That Makes This Decision Different Now

The Union Budget 2025 made the new tax regime more attractive than it has ever been. Here is what changed:

The basic exemption limit under the new regime was raised to ₹4 lakh. The rebate under Section 87A was enhanced so that individuals earning up to ₹12 lakh pay zero tax under the new regime. The standard deduction of ₹75,000 was retained under the new regime — meaning anyone earning up to ₹12.75 lakh effectively pays zero income tax if they choose the new regime.

This is a significant shift from previous years when the old regime was clearly better for people with high deductions. The calculation is genuinely closer now — which is exactly why you need to run your own numbers rather than follow generic advice.


The New Tax Regime Slabs for 2025–26

Income RangeTax Rate
Up to ₹4,00,000Nil
₹4,00,001 to ₹8,00,0005%
₹8,00,001 to ₹12,00,00010%
₹12,00,001 to ₹16,00,00015%
₹16,00,001 to ₹20,00,00020%
₹20,00,001 to ₹24,00,00025%
Above ₹24,00,00030%

Standard deduction of ₹75,000 is available under the new regime for salaried individuals and pensioners.

Important: If your income is up to ₹12,00,000 the Section 87A rebate covers your entire tax liability under the new regime. Combined with the ₹75,000 standard deduction, income up to ₹12,75,000 effectively means zero tax.


The Old Tax Regime Slabs for 2025–26

Income RangeTax Rate
Up to ₹2,50,000Nil
₹2,50,001 to ₹5,00,0005%
₹5,00,001 to ₹10,00,00020%
Above ₹10,00,00030%

The old regime allows deductions and exemptions including:

  • Standard deduction: ₹50,000
  • Section 80C: up to ₹1,50,000
  • Section 80D (health insurance): up to ₹25,000 (₹50,000 for senior citizens)
  • HRA exemption (if you pay rent)
  • Home loan interest under Section 24B: up to ₹2,00,000
  • NPS contribution under Section 80CCD(1B): up to ₹50,000
  • LTA, education loan interest, and several others

The Real Calculation — 4 Actual Examples

Example 1 — Software Engineer, Pune, ₹14 Lakh CTC

Gross salary: ₹14,00,000 Standard deduction: ₹50,000 (old) / ₹75,000 (new)

Old Regime — with deductions:

  • 80C investments (ELSS + PPF): ₹1,50,000
  • Health insurance 80D: ₹25,000
  • NPS 80CCD(1B): ₹50,000
  • Standard deduction: ₹50,000
  • Total deductions: ₹2,75,000
  • Taxable income: ₹11,25,000
  • Tax calculation: ₹12,500 (5% on ₹2.5L) + ₹1,00,000 (20% on ₹5L) + ₹37,500 (30% on ₹1.25L) = ₹1,50,000
  • Add 4% cess: ₹6,000
  • Total tax old regime: ₹1,56,000

New Regime:

  • Standard deduction: ₹75,000
  • Taxable income: ₹13,25,000
  • Tax calculation: Nil (up to ₹4L) + ₹20,000 (5% on ₹4L) + ₹42,500 (10% on ₹4.25L) + ₹48,750 (15% on ₹1.25L) = ₹1,11,250
  • Add 4% cess: ₹4,450
  • Total tax new regime: ₹1,15,700

Verdict for this person: New regime saves ₹40,300 per year.

This surprised him. He assumed the old regime was better because he invests in 80C regularly. The math said otherwise.


Example 2 — School Teacher, Mumbai, ₹6.5 Lakh

Gross salary: ₹6,50,000

Old Regime:

  • Standard deduction: ₹50,000
  • 80C (PF + LIC): ₹1,20,000
  • Health insurance 80D: ₹20,000
  • Total deductions: ₹1,90,000
  • Taxable income: ₹4,60,000
  • Tax: ₹21,000 (5% on ₹2.1L)
  • Add 4% cess: ₹840
  • Total tax old regime: ₹21,840

New Regime:

  • Standard deduction: ₹75,000
  • Taxable income: ₹5,75,000
  • Tax: Nil up to ₹4L + ₹8,750 (5% on ₹1.75L) = ₹8,750
  • But Section 87A rebate covers tax up to ₹12L income
  • Total tax new regime: ₹0

Verdict for this person: New regime saves ₹21,840 — she pays zero tax.

She was filing old regime every year and paying over ₹20,000 unnecessarily.


Example 3 — Marketing Manager, Delhi, ₹22 Lakh with HRA

Gross salary: ₹22,00,000 Monthly rent paid: ₹25,000 (₹3,00,000 per year)

Old Regime:

  • Standard deduction: ₹50,000
  • 80C: ₹1,50,000
  • 80D: ₹25,000
  • HRA exemption: approximately ₹1,80,000 (depends on actual calculation)
  • Home loan interest 24B: ₹2,00,000
  • NPS 80CCD(1B): ₹50,000
  • Total deductions: ₹6,55,000
  • Taxable income: ₹15,45,000
  • Tax: ₹12,500 + ₹1,00,000 + ₹1,63,500 (30% on ₹5.45L) = ₹2,76,000
  • Add 4% cess: ₹11,040
  • Total tax old regime: ₹2,87,040

New Regime:

  • Standard deduction: ₹75,000
  • Taxable income: ₹21,25,000
  • Tax: Nil + ₹20,000 + ₹40,000 + ₹60,000 + ₹80,000 + ₹31,250 = ₹2,31,250
  • Add 4% cess: ₹9,250
  • Total tax new regime: ₹2,40,500

Verdict for this person: Old regime saves ₹46,540 per year.

For him, the combination of HRA, home loan interest, and NPS makes the old regime clearly better despite the new regime looking attractive on paper.


Example 4 — Freelance Designer, ₹9 Lakh Irregular Income

This case is different because freelancers file under business income, not salary income. The standard deduction does not apply the same way. For freelancers and self-employed individuals the calculation involves presumptive taxation under Section 44ADA which I will cover in a separate article — the analysis here is specifically for salaried employees.


The Simple Rule of Thumb

Based on the calculations above and dozens of similar cases, here is the pattern:

New regime is almost always better if:

  • Your income is below ₹12.75 lakh — you pay zero tax
  • Your total deductions under old regime are less than ₹3.75 lakh
  • You do not pay significant rent (no HRA benefit)
  • You do not have a home loan

Old regime is better if:

  • Your income is above ₹15 lakh AND you have high deductions
  • You pay significant rent in a metro city (high HRA benefit)
  • You have a home loan with large interest component
  • You actively invest ₹1.5 lakh in 80C AND contribute to NPS AND have health insurance

The crossover point for most salaried Indians is approximately ₹3.75–4 lakh in total deductions. If your deductions exceed this number under the old regime, run the calculation. If they fall below it, new regime is almost certainly better.


How to Actually Switch Regimes

For salaried employees: You can switch between old and new regime every financial year. Inform your employer at the beginning of the year by submitting Form 12BB with your investment declarations. Your employer will deduct TDS accordingly.

If you miss informing your employer, you can still choose the correct regime when filing your ITR before July 31st.

Important: If you have business income in addition to salary income, switching is subject to different rules. Consult a CA in that case.

Where to file: incometaxindia.gov.in — official Income Tax portal for filing ITR and checking your Form 26AS.


My Personal Recommendation

I have run this calculation for multiple people and the result is almost always the same: most Indians earning below ₹15 lakh are better off in the new regime in 2025–26 unless they are paying significant rent in a metro or have a large home loan.

The government has deliberately made the new regime simpler and more beneficial for the majority. The old regime now mainly benefits people who have genuinely large deductions — not people who invest ₹50,000 in 80C and call it a day.

Run your own numbers using the examples above as a template. The 30 minutes you spend on this calculation could save you ₹15,000–₹50,000 per year.


Quick Summary

  • Income up to ₹12.75 lakh → New regime → Zero tax
  • Income ₹12.75L–₹15L with low deductions → New regime usually better
  • Income above ₹15L with HRA + home loan + NPS → Old regime may win
  • Switch is allowed every year for salaried employees
  • Inform employer via Form 12BB at start of financial year
  • File ITR at incometaxindia.gov.in before July 31st

This article was written by Mahesh Kumar, a Mumbai-based tech and finance blogger. Tax calculations are based on Finance Act 2025 provisions. For personalised tax planning, consult a SEBI-registered investment advisor or chartered accountant. You can verify current tax slabs at incometaxindia.gov.in.

⚠️ Disclaimer: This article is for general educational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. For decisions specific to your situation, consult a SEBI-registered financial advisor or chartered accountant.

Emergency Fund for Small Business Owners in India: Why You Need One and Exactly How to Build It

0

If you run a small business in India — a shop, a service, a small manufacturing unit, a freelance practice — nobody talks about this honestly: your income can vanish in 30 days and you may have zero protection.

A salaried person who loses their job gets notice period pay, provident fund, and gratuity. You get nothing. Your rent, your staff salaries, your supplier dues, your EMIs — they all keep coming whether your business is earning or not.

I have watched this happen to three people I know personally in the last two years alone.

A garment trader in Surat carried ₹8 lakh of inventory when his biggest buyer suddenly stopped orders after a GST dispute. No income for 11 weeks. He had no emergency fund. He took a loan at 24% interest to pay his two employees and keep the shop running. He is still paying that loan off today.

A freelance web developer in Pune lost his two anchor clients in the same month — one shut down, one moved the work in-house. He had ₹12,000 in his savings account. He had to borrow from his parents at age 34 to cover rent.

A small catering business owner in Mumbai had everything shut down during a municipal inspection that took 6 weeks to resolve. No fault of hers — just paperwork. Six weeks of zero revenue with full fixed costs.

None of these people were irresponsible. They were busy building their business and had simply never built a financial buffer. This article is about making sure this does not happen to you.


What an Emergency Fund Actually Is — and What It Is Not

An emergency fund is cash you never touch except for a genuine emergency. It sits in a separate account, earns modest interest, and exists for one purpose: keeping your business and your life running when income stops unexpectedly.

It is not your working capital reserve. It is not your tax savings. It is not money you dip into when a good investment opportunity shows up. It is not your festival bonus fund.

The distinction matters because most small business owners I speak to say “I have money in the business” — but that money is tied up in inventory, receivables, equipment, or is needed for next month’s operations. That is not an emergency fund. That is working capital. They are completely different things.

An emergency fund is liquid cash — meaning you can access it within 24–48 hours without selling anything, breaking any investment, or asking anyone for anything.


Why Small Business Owners Need a Bigger Emergency Fund Than Salaried People

Personal finance guides typically recommend 3–6 months of expenses as an emergency fund. For small business owners in India, that number is dangerously low. Here is why:

Your income is irregular. A salaried person has predictable monthly income. You might have a strong quarter followed by two weak ones. Your emergency fund needs to cover the full weak period, not just a few weeks.

Your expenses have two layers. A salaried person only needs to cover personal expenses — rent, food, EMIs, school fees. You need to cover personal expenses AND fixed business costs — staff salaries, shop rent, loan repayments, utility bills, subscription tools. These do not stop because business is slow.

Recovery takes longer. If a salaried person loses their job, they can potentially start a new one in 4–8 weeks. If your business hits a crisis — a regulatory issue, a major client loss, a health emergency, a supply chain breakdown — getting back to normal revenue can take 3–6 months.

Banks tighten credit exactly when you need it most. This is the cruel reality of business lending in India. When your business is doing well, every bank wants to give you a loan. The moment your turnover drops or your current account shows stress, loan applications get rejected or delayed. You cannot rely on credit as your emergency plan.

For these reasons, small business owners should target 9–12 months of combined personal and fixed business expenses as their emergency fund — not 3–6 months.


Calculate Your Number — Do This Right Now

Take a piece of paper and write down two columns.

Column 1 — Monthly Personal Expenses:

  • House rent or home loan EMI
  • Groceries and household expenses
  • School or college fees
  • Personal vehicle EMI and fuel
  • Health insurance premium
  • Utility bills — electricity, water, internet at home
  • Any personal loan EMIs

Add these up. This is your monthly personal burn.

Column 2 — Monthly Fixed Business Costs:

  • Shop or office rent
  • Staff salaries — even minimum skeleton staff
  • Business loan EMIs
  • Utility bills for the business premises
  • Minimum inventory reorder costs if applicable
  • Essential software or tool subscriptions
  • GST filing and accountant fees

Add these up. This is your monthly business burn.

Add both columns together. Multiply by 9.

That is your emergency fund target.

For example: if your personal expenses are ₹35,000 per month and your fixed business costs are ₹45,000 per month, your combined monthly burn is ₹80,000. Your emergency fund target is ₹7,20,000 — roughly ₹7–7.5 lakh.

That number probably feels large. That is normal. The point is not to build it overnight — the point is to know exactly what you are working toward.


Where to Keep Your Emergency Fund

This is where most people make the mistake of either keeping it in a regular savings account earning 2.7% — effectively losing money to inflation — or putting it in investments that are not accessible quickly enough.

Your emergency fund has one requirement above all others: instant or near-instant liquidity. Returns are secondary. Here are the right options for Indian small business owners:

High-interest savings account — best for most people

IDFC FIRST Bank and AU Small Finance Bank currently offer 6.5–7% interest on savings accounts — significantly better than SBI’s 2.7% or HDFC’s 3.5%. The money is accessible immediately via UPI or net banking, insured up to ₹5 lakh under DICGC, and earns better than a standard savings account.

I personally keep the first three months of my emergency fund in an IDFC FIRST account for this reason — zero lock-in, immediate access, decent interest.

Liquid mutual funds — good for the larger portion

For the remaining 6–9 months worth, liquid mutual funds are appropriate. These invest in short-term government securities and high-quality debt instruments. They can be redeemed within 24 hours on business days, earn approximately 6.5–7.5% annually, and have significantly lower risk than equity funds.

Parag Parikh Liquid Fund, HDFC Liquid Fund, and Axis Liquid Fund are consistently rated options. Use any major platform — Zerodha Coin, Groww, or directly through the AMC website.

What to avoid for your emergency fund:

  • Fixed deposits with lock-in periods — breaking them early costs you penalty
  • Equity mutual funds or stocks — can drop 20–30% exactly when you need the money most
  • Real estate or gold — not liquid enough for a genuine emergency
  • Keeping it mixed with business current account — you will spend it on operations

The ideal structure for a ₹7.2 lakh emergency fund: ₹1.5–2 lakh in a high-interest savings account for immediate access, the remaining ₹5–5.5 lakh in a liquid mutual fund.


How to Build It — A Realistic Step-by-Step Plan

Most small business owners cannot set aside ₹7 lakh in one go. Here is how to build it systematically without disrupting your business.

Step 1 — Open a completely separate account today

The single most important habit is separation. If your emergency fund is in the same account as your operating money, you will spend it. Open a dedicated savings account — I recommend IDFC FIRST or AU Small Finance Bank for the interest rate — and name the account mentally as “untouchable.”

Step 2 — Set a fixed monthly transfer on the 1st of every month

Whatever your business earns, transfer a fixed amount to the emergency fund account on the 1st of every month before you pay anything else — before supplier payments, before personal expenses, before anything. Even ₹5,000 per month is a start.

The psychological principle here is simple: money you never see in your operating account is money you never spend. Automate the transfer if your bank allows standing instructions.

Step 3 — Add windfalls directly to the fund

Every time you receive an unexpected payment — a client who cleared an old outstanding, a tax refund, a seasonal spike in revenue — send 50% of it directly to the emergency fund. This accelerates the build significantly without affecting your monthly cash flow.

Step 4 — Set milestone targets

Rather than fixating on the full 9-month target which can feel overwhelming, set smaller milestones:

  • Month 1–3: Build 1 month of expenses — psychological safety begins here
  • Month 4–8: Reach 3 months — you can handle most short disruptions
  • Month 9–18: Reach 6 months — you are significantly protected
  • Month 19–30: Reach 9–12 months — full target achieved

Step 5 — Invest the larger portion in liquid funds once you cross ₹2 lakh

Once your emergency account crosses ₹2 lakh, move everything above ₹1.5 lakh into a liquid mutual fund. This earns better returns while staying accessible within 24 hours. Set up the liquid fund investment once and top it up monthly.


When Can You Actually Use This Money

The hardest part of having an emergency fund is not building it — it is resisting the temptation to use it for non-emergencies. Here is a simple test:

Legitimate emergencies — use the fund:

  • Business revenue drops below fixed costs for more than 30 days
  • A key employee suddenly leaves and you need to hire urgently
  • Critical equipment breaks down and cannot wait
  • A medical emergency affecting you or an immediate family member
  • A legal or regulatory issue requiring immediate professional fees
  • A natural disaster, fire, or theft affecting your business premises

Not emergencies — do not touch the fund:

  • A good investment opportunity came up
  • You want to buy new equipment to expand
  • A supplier is offering a bulk discount
  • You want to renovate the shop
  • Personal purchases — phone, vehicle, vacation

When you withdraw from the emergency fund for a legitimate reason, your first financial priority after the crisis passes is rebuilding it. Treat it like a loan to yourself that must be repaid.


The Real Cost of Not Having One

I want to end with the honest number that most finance articles do not show you.

When small business owners in India face a cash crisis without an emergency fund, the typical response is an informal loan or a business loan at high interest. Informal loans from family carry relationship costs that last years. Emergency business loans typically come at 18–36% annual interest.

If the Surat garment trader I mentioned earlier had an emergency fund of ₹5 lakh in a liquid fund, he would have covered 11 weeks of costs, restarted when the dispute resolved, and paid zero interest. Instead he borrowed ₹4 lakh at 24% interest. At the time of writing he has paid ₹1.8 lakh in interest alone — and the principal is still outstanding.

The cost of not having an emergency fund is not just financial stress. It is the specific, measurable rupee amount you pay in interest to borrow money in a crisis that could have been your own.

Build the fund. Keep it separate. Never touch it for anything else. That is the entire advice.


Quick Summary

  • Small business owners need 9–12 months of combined personal and business expenses — not 3–6 months
  • Calculate your exact number: add personal expenses + fixed business costs, multiply by 9
  • Keep 2–3 months in a high-interest savings account (IDFC FIRST or AU Small Finance Bank), the rest in a liquid mutual fund
  • Transfer a fixed amount on the 1st of every month before spending anything else
  • Never use it for expansion, investment, or non-emergencies
  • Rebuild it immediately after any legitimate withdrawal

This article was written by Mahesh Kumar, a Mumbai-based tech and finance blogger. For personalised financial planning, consult a SEBI-registered investment advisor. You can find a registered advisor at sebi.gov.in.

Disclaimer: This article is for general educational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. For decisions specific to your situation, consult a SEBI-registered financial advisor or chartered accountant.

Top 5 Indian Cricketers in Best Form Right Now — May 2026

0

Form in cricket is temporary. Class is permanent. But in between those two truths there is a window — sometimes weeks, sometimes months — where a player is seeing the ball like a football, timing it perfectly, and making every bowling attack look ordinary.

These are the five Indian cricketers in that window right now.


1. Jasprit Bumrah

There is no current Indian cricketer more important to the team across formats than Bumrah. His return from injury last year was one of the most watched comebacks in recent Indian cricket history — and he came back better than before, which should not have been possible but somehow was.

What separates Bumrah from other fast bowlers is not pace — there are faster bowlers. It is accuracy combined with movement. He can bowl a 140kmph yorker to the same spot five times in a row. In a format where one bad ball costs four runs, that consistency is worth more than raw pace.

His current form in Test cricket specifically is as good as it has ever been. He is skidding the ball off the pitch more sharply than in previous seasons and his short ball has become a genuine wicket-taking option, not just a control ball.


2. Shubman Gill

Six months ago the conversation about Shubman Gill was about potential. Right now it is about performance. He has made the transition from promising youngster to reliable match-winner and the difference is visible in how he plays under pressure.

His technique against quality seam bowling has noticeably improved. He is leaving balls outside off stump with better judgment, waiting for the right ball to drive rather than playing at everything. That discipline — which takes most players years to develop — is showing up in his averages across formats.


3. Yashasvi Jaiswal

Jaiswal is the most exciting young batsman India has produced since Kohli. That is not a casual comparison — it is based on what he has already done in Test cricket before his 23rd birthday.

His ability to attack from ball one without playing reckless shots is rare. Most aggressive openers have a dismissal pattern — they get out playing the same shot to the same type of delivery once the bowler figures them out. Jaiswal’s variation of attacking shots makes him genuinely hard to plan for.

His hundred at Lord’s last year announced him to a global audience. Indian fans already knew.


4. Kuldeep Yadav

The story of Kuldeep Yadav’s career is one of the most interesting in Indian cricket — not because it has been a smooth upward trajectory but because it almost went completely wrong before it went very right.

He was dropped, overlooked, questioned, and written off multiple times. He came back each time with better control and a clearer understanding of his own bowling. The current version of Kuldeep — confident, varied, attacking — is the best he has ever been.

His wrist spin is difficult to read even for experienced international batsmen. On pitches that offer any assistance he is genuinely match-changing.


5. Hardik Pandya

Hardik’s form with the ball specifically deserves attention right now. His batting has always been explosive but injury concerns meant his bowling was rationed for years. The current Hardik — bowling with pace, swing, and no apparent physical hesitation — is the complete package India needed him to be when they first selected him a decade ago.

At his best Hardik changes the balance of an entire team. A genuine allrounder who can score 60 off 35 balls and take 3 wickets in his 10 overs is worth two specialists in limited-overs cricket. He is currently at his best.

How to Watch Cricket Free in India in 2026: Every Legal Option Explained

0

Before I knew about JioCinema I was watching cricket through a relative’s DTH subscription, feeling mildly guilty about it. Then JioCinema happened and suddenly the most-watched sport in the country was free on a phone screen.

Here is every legitimate free option for watching cricket in India in 2026 — no illegal streaming, no sketchy apps, no risk of malware on your phone.


JioCinema — Best Free Option for Most People

JioCinema streams IPL completely free. No Jio SIM required — any internet connection works. The app is available on Android, iOS, Smart TVs, and via browser at jiocinema.com.

The picture quality on a good internet connection is excellent. Commentary options include Hindi, English, and several regional languages — you can switch mid-match which is genuinely useful.

The catch: for international cricket (Tests, ODIs, T20Is) coverage depends on the specific series and broadcast rights. Not every international series is on JioCinema. Check before assuming a match is available.

Download: Search “JioCinema” on Google Play Store or Apple App Store. Free to install, free to use for available content.


Doordarshan Sports — Completely Free Including Tests

Doordarshan has broadcast rights for all home series played in India. This means every Test match India plays at home is available free on DD Sports.

If you have a DTH connection DD Sports is typically channel number 131 on most providers. It is also available on the DD Free Dish — the government’s free satellite service that requires a one-time dish installation with no monthly subscription.

For people in areas with poor internet connectivity, DD Free Dish is genuinely the best option — once installed, zero ongoing cost, reliable signal.


Star Sports — Free Previews and Highlights

Star Sports does not stream full matches free but offers free highlights, previews, and short match clips on their YouTube channel “Star Sports” and on Hotstar’s free tier.

If you cannot watch a match live, Star Sports on YouTube reliably posts full match highlights within 2–3 hours of the match ending.


What to Avoid

A quick note on illegal streaming sites — beyond the obvious legal issues, most cricket streaming sites that offer free access to paid content are loaded with malware. Several cybersecurity researchers have documented cases of Indian users getting their banking credentials stolen after visiting unofficial streaming sites. The risk is genuinely not worth it when legitimate free options exist.

Cyber Awareness Essentials: The Security Habits That Actually Protect You in 2026

0

Last year, a friend of mine got a WhatsApp message that looked exactly like it came from his bank — complete logo, correct sender name, even his account’s last four digits. He clicked. Within 20 minutes, ₹48,000 was gone from his account. The scary part? He works in IT.

This is the reality of online threats in 2026. The attacks aren’t clumsy anymore. They’re targeted, convincing, and fast. This guide covers the habits that actually stopped attacks like that one — not theory, practical steps you can set up today.

This guide cuts through generic advice and gives you the practical, behavior-level changes that cybersecurity professionals actually use. Whether you’re in Mumbai or Minnesota, the threats are the same, and so are the defenses.


Why “Just Be Careful” Is Not Enough Anymore

The old advice — “don’t click suspicious links” — was fine in 2010. Today it’s dangerously incomplete. Modern phishing emails are indistinguishable from legitimate ones. AI-generated scam calls mimic your bank’s voice system perfectly. Fake login pages are pixel-perfect copies of the real thing.

What changed is the sophistication of the attacker, not the category of attack. Phishing, credential theft, and social engineering still dominate, but they’ve been supercharged with AI tools that make mass, personalized attacks cheap and fast. According to IBM’s 2024 Cost of a Data Breach Report, the global average cost of a data breach reached $4.88 million — and a significant portion of breaches began with a phishing email that an employee clicked.

The gap isn’t technology. It’s behavior. Closing that gap is what cyber awareness is really about.


Passwords: The Single Most Exploited Weakness

Most people know they should use strong passwords. Almost nobody does, because remembering 40 different complex passwords is genuinely impossible without help. That’s the actual problem — not laziness, just a bad system. Here’s the fix.

The only sane approach in 2026 is a password manager. Bitwarden is completely free and open-source — I use it myself. 1Password and Dashlane are solid paid options if you want a more polished interface. Let the manager generate 20-character random passwords for every site. You only remember one master password.

One thing people miss: the danger isn’t a weak password on one site. It’s reusing the same password across sites. When any one service gets breached — and they do constantly — attackers try those same credentials on your bank, Gmail, and Amazon. This is called credential stuffing and it’s behind most account takeovers you read about. Check if your email has already appeared in a breach at haveibeenpwned.com right now.

Reuse is the real danger. When a data breach exposes credentials from one website — say, an old shopping account — attackers run those same username-password pairs across thousands of other sites. This is called credential stuffing, and it is extraordinarily common. If you reuse passwords, one leak can compromise your bank, email, and social media simultaneously.

What to do:

  • Use a password manager (Bitwarden is free and open-source; 1Password and Dashlane are strong paid options). Let it generate unique 20+ character passwords for every site.
  • Never store passwords in browser autofill for banking or financial accounts.
  • Change passwords immediately after any service you use announces a breach — check haveibeenpwned.com to see if your email has been compromised.

Two-Factor Authentication: Your Most Powerful Free Upgrade

If you do only one thing from this entire article, enable two-factor authentication on your Gmail. Your email is the master key — every “forgot password” link goes there. If someone gets into your Gmail, they can reset every other account you own within minutes.

SMS-based 2FA (where a code comes via text) is better than nothing but has a real weakness: SIM-swap fraud. In India this has become common — someone calls your telecom provider, convinces them to transfer your number to a new SIM, and suddenly they receive all your OTPs. Use an authenticator app instead. Google Authenticator, Microsoft Authenticator, or Authy all work — the code is generated on your device, never sent over the network.

Priority order: Gmail first, then WhatsApp, then your bank apps, then anything with a saved card.

Not all 2FA is equal, though. SMS-based 2FA (where a code is texted to you) is better than nothing, but it’s vulnerable to SIM-swap fraud — a growing problem in India where attackers convince telecom providers to transfer your number to a new SIM. Authenticator app-based 2FA (Google Authenticator, Microsoft Authenticator, or Authy) is significantly more secure because the code never travels over the phone network.

Where to enable it first:

  • Email (especially Gmail and Outlook — your email is the recovery key to everything else)
  • Banking and payment apps
  • WhatsApp and social media accounts
  • Any account tied to a payment method

Recognizing Phishing: The Red Flags That Matter

Phishing is not just about suspicious-looking emails anymore. In 2026, attacks arrive through WhatsApp, SMS (smishing), phone calls (vishing), fake job portals, and even QR codes placed on physical notices.

The psychological mechanics are consistent. Every phishing attack exploits one of four emotions: urgency (“Your account will be closed in 24 hours”), fear (“Unauthorized login detected”), greed (“You’ve won a prize”), or curiosity (“See who viewed your profile”). When you feel any of these emotions from a digital message, that’s your signal to slow down, not speed up.

Practical checks before you click anything:

Hover over any link before clicking — the actual URL will show in the browser’s status bar. If the domain looks like hdfc-bank-alert.in instead of hdfcbank.com, it’s fake. Be especially cautious with shortened links (bit.ly, tinyurl) in messages from unknown contacts.

For emails, check the sender’s actual email address, not just the display name. An email displaying “HDFC Bank Support” can have an address like noreply@hdfcupdate.net. The display name means nothing.

When in doubt about any financial or account message, go directly to the company’s official website by typing the URL yourself — never through a link in the message.


Securing Your Devices: The Basics Most People Skip

A phone or laptop without proper security settings is an open door to your entire digital life.

On your smartphone:

  • Enable full-disk encryption (on by default in modern Android and iOS, but verify it is active in your settings).
  • Set up automatic screen lock after 30 seconds of inactivity.
  • Audit your app permissions every few months — many apps request access to your camera, microphone, and contacts that they have no legitimate need for. On Android, go to Settings → Privacy → Permission Manager. On iOS, go to Settings → Privacy & Security.
  • Keep your OS updated. Security patches, not just new features, are why updates matter.

On your computer:

  • Enable the built-in firewall (Windows Defender Firewall or macOS Firewall).
  • Use standard user accounts for daily work, not administrator accounts — this limits the damage malware can do if it gets in.
  • Back up critical files using the 3-2-1 rule: 3 copies of data, on 2 different storage types, with 1 stored off-site (cloud backup counts).

Public Wi-Fi: The Specific Risks and What to Do

Public Wi-Fi at cafés, airports, and hotels is not inherently dangerous — but it becomes dangerous when used for the wrong things. The main risk is a man-in-the-middle attack, where someone on the same network intercepts your traffic.

Modern HTTPS encryption makes this much harder than it used to be. If you see the padlock icon in your browser and the URL starts with https://, your data is encrypted in transit even on public Wi-Fi.

What you should still avoid on public networks:

  • Logging into banking or financial apps
  • Accessing corporate VPNs with sensitive data
  • Any activity where you’d be devastated if someone could see it

A VPN (Virtual Private Network) adds a useful layer if you frequently work from cafés or travel. It encrypts all your traffic from your device to the VPN server, making interception much harder. Reputable options include Mullvad, ProtonVPN, and NordVPN — look for providers with verified no-log policies.

One important note: free VPNs often make money by selling your browsing data. If you’re not paying for the product, you may be the product. Use a paid, audited provider or go without.


Social Engineering and Scams Targeting Indians

India is one of the top targets for cyber fraud globally. The Indian Cybercrime Coordination Centre (I4C) documented over ₹11,000 crore lost to cyber fraud in 2023. The most common attack vectors:

Tech support scams — A popup claims your computer is infected and urges you to call a number. Legitimate companies like Microsoft, Google, or any antivirus brand do not contact you unsolicited through popups. Hang up or close the browser.

Investment scams via WhatsApp and Telegram — Groups offering stock tips, crypto returns, or “arbitrage” schemes with guaranteed returns are almost always fraudulent. SEBI-registered advisors do not recruit via WhatsApp groups or promise fixed returns.

KYC update fraud — Texts or calls claiming your SIM or bank account will be blocked unless you complete “KYC verification” through a link. Banks and telecom companies do not collect sensitive information through chat links. Always call the official number on the back of your card.

Digital arrest fraud — A newer, particularly alarming scam where attackers impersonate police, CBI, or ED officials and claim you’re under “digital arrest” for a crime. They keep you on a video call for hours in a state of fear and pressure payment. No Indian law enforcement agency conducts arrests or investigations over video calls. Hang up and report to the National Cybercrime Helpline: 1930.


Building a Cyber-Aware Mindset for the Long Term

The best cybersecurity isn’t a product you install — it’s a reflex you build. Here’s how to make it stick:

Pause before you act. Attackers profit from impulsive reactions. A deliberate 10-second pause when something feels urgent dramatically reduces the chance of falling for social engineering.

Assume you’re a target. Many people believe they’re too ordinary to be hacked. In reality, automated attacks don’t discriminate — they sweep millions of accounts looking for weak passwords, unpatched software, and people who click without thinking. You are a target by default.

Stay informed minimally but consistently. You don’t need to read security research papers. Following CERT-In (India’s Computer Emergency Response Team) on social media and reading one cybersecurity headline per week keeps your awareness calibrated to current threats.

Educate your household. The weakest link in your digital security is often a family member who doesn’t know what smishing is or who uses the same password everywhere. A 10-minute family conversation about scam calls and password managers can close significant gaps.


Quick-Reference: Your Personal Cyber Security Checklist

ActionPriorityEffort
Enable 2FA on email and bankingCritical10 minutes
Use a password managerCritical1 hour setup
Check haveibeenpwned.com for your emailHigh2 minutes
Review app permissions on your phoneHigh15 minutes
Enable auto-lock on all devicesMedium5 minutes
Set up automatic OS and app updatesMedium5 minutes
Back up important files (3-2-1 rule)MediumVaries
Save National Cybercrime Helpline: 1930High1 minute

I use Bitwarden personally — it’s free, open-source, and works across Android, iPhone, and desktop. Setup takes about 30 minutes the first time and then you never think about passwords again. If you’d rather not trust a cloud-based manager, KeePassXC stores everything locally on your device.

When I first set up Bitwarden, it showed me I had used the same password on 14 different sites. One breach would have compromised all of them. That’s how most account takeovers actually happen — not sophisticated hacking, just one old leak doing damage everywhere.

These aren’t complex or expensive. They’re the difference between being a soft target and being someone an attacker moves past in search of easier prey.


This article is for informational and educational purposes only. For incidents of cybercrime in India, contact the National Cybercrime Helpline at 1930 or file a report at cybercrime.gov.in. The author recommends consulting a certified cybersecurity professional for organizational or enterprise security needs.

Mahesh is a digital safety writer who covers cybersecurity, tech policy, and online fraud trends for Indian and global audiences.