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Some words may have different meanings around the world. It turns out ‘middle class’ is one such term. The meaning may differ depending on which side of the world you are on. For Sonal Chaudhary, an Indian woman living in Connecticut, US, with her family, ‘middle class’ means comfortable living, with a beautiful home that sits on a plot of over an acre, with a massive backyard, a sunroom, and a deck for parties.Chaudhary recently walked her followers through the house, talking about her ‘middle-class family home’ in the US. There was nothing boastful about it. Just a regular tour on a regular Tuesday. The internet, especially back home, did not quite agree with her definition of ordinary.
A home tour that broke the internet
A few days ago, Chaudhary gave her followers a tour of what she described as her ‘middle-class’ home in the US, and the internet was divided.
The house sits on a plot of just over an acre, with a front yard, a garage, and enough backyard space for the kids to play football or badminton without anyone complaining about the neighbours. The built-up area comes in at roughly 2,200 square feet, spread across a layout that includes a sunroom, a sitting area, and a spacious deck for entertaining.
The internet read this less like a description of ‘middle class’ and more like a description of ‘somebody’s dream house’. “This is how a middle-class family home looks in America. We bought this house in 2023 for $440,000,” the woman revealed in the video. The family moved to the US six years ago.
Here is where the numbers get interesting. The median new single-family home sold in the US in 2023 cost $428,600, with a median size of 2,286 square feet, according to Census Bureau data. Her $440,000 purchase sits almost exactly at the national midpoint. Statistically speaking, she is not exaggerating. That is genuinely what a fairly typical American home looks like.
The internet says ‘India could never’
Chaudhary’s video was flooded with comments, mostly from the audience back home. Many expressed that a middle-class home in India looks nothing like this. In certain parts of the country, owning a home itself is a challenge for middle-class families. “Hate me all you want BUT INDIA COULD NEVER EVER,” an Instagram user named tar_booj commented. “Ye middle class hai? (Is this middle class? ) ,” another quipped. Another expressed that the woman is clearly living the best life: “Winning at life looks like this.” A fourth said, “Um no, ma’am, you’re not middle class.” One user said, “Ye middle class to crorepati kisko bolenge (If this is middle class, then what’s a millionaire? ).”In India, urban areas have been hit hardest by shrinking affordability. For most urban middle-class Indian households in 2024–26, realistic options are limited to smaller apartments on city outskirts, older resale flats nearer the centre, or long-term renting rather than buying in major metros. According to the 2026 UN-Habitat World Cities Report, India is seeing a sharp decline in affordable housing in major cities. In India’s eight largest cities, affordable housing has fallen from 52.4% of new supply in 2018 to just 17.1% by mid-2025. Nowhere does that squeeze show up more sharply than in Mumbai, where the price-to-income ratio has climbed to 14.3, meaning a typical household would need more than fourteen years of income, spent on nothing else, just to buy a home outright.
View original source — Times of India ↗



