Calculate your exact monthly instalment, total interest payable, and year-wise repayment breakdown for any home loan. Adjust loan amount, interest rate, and tenure to find the right combination for your budget.
Home Loan EMI Calculator
Standard reducing balance EMI formula — same method used by all Indian banks
Current home loan rates (2025): 8.25%₹9.5% p.a. depending on lender and credit score. Check your bank's website for the most current rate before deciding.
Monthly EMI
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Year-wise Repayment Schedule
Year
Principal Paid
Interest Paid
Balance
How Home Loan EMI is Calculated
EMI stands for Equated Monthly Instalment. Every EMI payment has two components: principal repayment and interest. In the early years of your loan, most of your EMI goes toward interest. Gradually, as the principal reduces, the interest component shrinks and the principal component grows. This is called reducing balance method — the standard method used by all banks in India.
The EMI formula is: EMI = P — r — (1+r)^n — ((1+r)^n - 1) where P is the loan amount, r is the monthly interest rate (annual rate — 12), and n is the tenure in months.
How Much Loan Can You Get?
Indian banks typically lend up to 75-90% of the property value (loan-to-value ratio). Your EMI should ideally not exceed 40-50% of your net monthly income — this is the FOIR (Fixed Obligation to Income Ratio) that banks use. If your income is ₹1 lakh per month, your total EMI obligations should not exceed ₹40,000-₹50,000.
Tax Benefits on Home Loan
Section 24(b): Interest paid on home loan — deduction up to ₹2 lakh per year for self-occupied property. No cap for let-out property (though set-off limited to ₹2 lakh against other income).
Section 80C: Principal repaid in the year — deduction up to ₹1.5 lakh per year (within overall 80C limit shared with PPF, ELSS, insurance etc.).
Section 80EEA: Additional ₹1.5 lakh deduction on interest for first-time buyers of affordable housing (stamp duty value =₹45 lakh) — subject to conditions.
Stamp duty and registration: Deductible under Section 80C in the year of payment.
Fixed vs Floating Rate — Which is Better?
Floating rate loans are linked to the RBI repo rate via the lender's MCLR or RLLR. When RBI cuts rates, your EMI falls. When RBI raises rates, your EMI rises. Fixed rate loans give certainty — same EMI throughout — but are typically 1-2% higher than floating rates.
In India, most home loans are floating rate. Given that the RBI rate cycle tends to move down over long periods, floating rate is generally better for a 15-20 year loan. For short tenures (5-7 years), fixed rate may provide more certainty.
Prepayment — The Fastest Way to Save Interest
Even a single lump-sum prepayment significantly reduces your total interest outgo. A ₹50 lakh loan at 8.5% for 20 years costs approximately ₹55 lakh in interest. Prepaying ₹5 lakh at the end of year 3 can save ₹8-10 lakh in interest and reduce tenure by 2-3 years. Banks cannot charge prepayment penalties on floating rate loans as per RBI guidelines.
Preparing for Karnataka RERA Exam?
Section 24(b), Section 80C, and home loan concepts appear in the Sales and Documentation topic of the Karnataka RERA IBPS exam.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What happens to my EMI if RBI raises interest rates?
For floating rate loans, when RBI raises the repo rate, banks raise their MCLR or RLLR, which flows through to your interest rate. Banks typically keep the EMI the same and extend your loan tenure. If you want the tenure unchanged, you would need to increase your EMI. Some banks automatically increase EMI — check your loan agreement for the specific mechanism.
Is it better to pay higher EMI or prepay occasionally?
Both reduce your total interest burden. A higher EMI reduces tenure faster and saves interest consistently. Lump-sum prepayment is more flexible — you make extra payments only when you have surplus funds. The best approach is to use a slightly higher EMI for regular principal reduction, combined with lump-sum prepayments whenever you receive a bonus, incentive, or matured investment. Every rupee of prepayment in the early years saves several rupees in interest over the loan life.
Can I claim both Section 24(b) and Section 80C for the same loan?
Yes. Section 24(b) covers the interest component of your EMI (up to ₹2 lakh for self-occupied). Section 80C covers the principal component (up to ₹1.5 lakh within overall 80C limit). They are completely separate deductions on separate components of the same EMI. In the early years of a high-value loan, you will likely max out both limits.
Does the property need to be registered to claim tax deductions?
Yes. Tax deductions on home loan interest (Section 24b) are available only from the year in which construction is completed and possession is taken. For under-construction properties, interest paid during construction can be claimed in 5 equal instalments starting from the year possession is taken — a provision often missed by buyers.
Disclaimer: EMI calculations are based on the standard reducing balance formula. Actual EMI may differ due to processing fees, insurance charges, or rounding by your lender. Tax deduction limits are based on the Income Tax Act — consult a CA for your specific situation.