Everything you need to know about loans, EMI, interest rates, prepayment strategies, and how to choose the best loan offer. Save lakhs with smart borrowing.
1. How EMI Works (The Math Explained Simply)
EMI (Equated Monthly Installment) is the fixed amount you pay every month to repay a loan. Every EMI has two parts:
Interest component: The cost of borrowing, charged on the outstanding balance.
Principal component: The actual loan repayment that reduces your outstanding balance.
Why early payments are mostly interest
In a ₹50L home loan at 8.5% for 20 years (EMI: ₹43,391), your first month's EMI is split: ₹35,417 goes to interest (82%) and only ₹7,974 to principal (18%). By month 120, it's roughly 55/45. In the final year, 99% goes to principal.
This is why prepaying in the early years saves the most money — each rupee of extra principal payment eliminates years of future interest. Try the EMI Calculator to see this amortization breakdown for your loan.
The EMI formula
EMI = P × r × (1+r)n / [(1+r)n − 1]
Where P = loan amount, r = monthly interest rate, n = total months. You don't need to memorize this — our EMI Calculator does it instantly with a full amortization schedule.
2. Loan Types Compared
Different loans serve different needs. Here's a comprehensive comparison:
Feature
Home Loan
Personal Loan
Car Loan
Education Loan
Interest Rate
8–10%
10–18%
7–12%
8–12%
Tenure
10–30 years
1–5 years
3–7 years
5–15 years
Collateral
Property
None
Vehicle
None / Co-signer
Tax Benefit
80C + 24(b)
None
None
80E (interest)
Prepayment Penalty
NIL (floating)
0–5%
0–3%
NIL
Processing Fee
0.25–1%
1–3%
0.5–2%
0–1%
Key insight: Home loans are the cheapest because they're secured by property. A ₹5L need funded by a personal loan at 14% costs ₹14,343/month for 3 years (total interest: ₹66,348). The same ₹5L as a home loan top-up at 9% costs ₹6,336/month for 10 years (total interest: ₹2,60,303). Lower EMI but higher total cost — choose tenure wisely!
A home loan is likely the largest financial commitment of your life. Here's everything you should know before signing.
How much home can you afford?
Banks typically lend 75-90% of a property's value (called LTV ratio). For a ₹1 Cr home, you'll need at least ₹10-25L as down payment plus ₹7-8L for stamp duty, registration, and other charges.
Thumb rule: Your home loan EMI should not exceed 35-40% of your take-home salary. If you earn ₹1L/month, keep EMI under ₹40K. Use our Mortgage Calculator to find a comfortable loan amount.
Fixed vs floating rate
Floating rate (most common): Linked to repo rate. Changes when RBI changes rates. Currently offers lower starting rates. No prepayment penalty.
Fixed rate: Stays constant for the entire tenure (or initial 2-5 years). Usually 1-2% higher. Prepayment penalty may apply.
For long tenures (15-30 years), floating rate usually saves more historically, and you can always prepay without penalty.
The total cost shock
A ₹50L home loan at 8.5% for 20 years has an EMI of ₹43,391. But the total repayment is ₹1.04 Cr — you pay more in interest (₹54L) than the loan itself. Reducing tenure to 15 years increases EMI to ₹49,237 but saves ₹15L in interest.
Prepayment is the single most powerful tool to reduce your loan cost. Even modest extra payments create massive savings due to the way compound interest works on loans.
Impact of prepayment (₹30L loan, 8.5%, 20 years)
Strategy
Tenure Reduction
Interest Saved
₹2,000/month extra
3 years 4 months
₹8.4 lakh
₹5,000/month extra
6 years 2 months
₹15.7 lakh
₹1L lump sum every year
5 years 8 months
₹14.1 lakh
One extra EMI per year
2 years 10 months
₹6.9 lakh
Best prepayment strategies
Use annual bonuses: Dedicate 50% of every bonus to loan prepayment. One extra EMI per year is effortless.
Increase EMI with salary hikes: Got a 10% raise? Increase your EMI by 5-7%. You won't feel the difference, but your loan will finish years early.
Reduce tenure, not EMI: When prepaying, choose "reduce tenure" over "reduce EMI" for maximum interest savings.
Front-load prepayments: Prepaying ₹1L in year 2 saves far more than the same ₹1L in year 15, because early principal reduction eliminates more future interest.
Section 80E: Entire interest amount (no cap) deductible for 8 years from start of repayment.
No tax benefits
Personal loans and car loans offer no direct tax deductions. This makes them the most expensive in real terms. Avoid personal loans if a home loan top-up is available at lower rates.
Choosing the longest tenure for lowest EMI: A ₹30L loan at 9% for 20 years costs ₹26,992/month but ₹34.8L total interest. For 10 years: ₹38,013/month but only ₹15.6L interest. You save ₹19.2 lakh by choosing shorter tenure.
Ignoring processing fees in your comparison: A bank offering 8.4% with 1% processing fee may cost more than 8.5% with zero processing fee.
Not checking your credit report first: Get your free CIBIL report before applying. Fix errors (common!) to ensure you get the best rate.
Stretching beyond your budget: Banks may approve ₹80L, but that doesn't mean you should take it. Leave room for other goals and emergencies.
Skipping loan insurance: For home loans, a simple term plan ensures your family isn't burdened if something happens. The cost is trivial compared to the risk.
Not reading prepayment clauses: Some fixed-rate loans charge 2-5% prepayment penalty. Always verify before signing.
Multiple loan applications simultaneously: Each application triggers a "hard inquiry" that lowers your credit score by 5-10 points. Apply to 2-3 banks maximum.
Neglecting balance transfer opportunities: If your current rate is significantly higher than market rates, transferring saves money. Banks charge 0.5-1% transfer fee, which typically pays for itself within months.
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