EMI Calculator — Home, Car & Personal Loan

Calculate your monthly loan EMI instantly. Get full breakdown — principal, interest, total payment and year-wise amortization schedule for any loan. 100% free, no signup.

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Free EMI Calculator India — Calculate Home Loan, Car Loan & Personal Loan EMI

Our free online EMI calculator helps you calculate Equated Monthly Installments (EMI) for any type of loan — home loan, car loan, personal loan, education loan, or any other amortizing loan. Simply enter your loan amount, interest rate, and tenure to instantly get your monthly EMI, total interest payable, and a complete year-wise amortization schedule.

Planning a ₹50 lakh home loan? Buying a car on finance? Considering a personal loan for a wedding or medical emergency? Our calculator gives you complete financial clarity in seconds — free, with no registration required.

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Full year-by-year breakdown of principal, interest, and balance.
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Home, car, personal, education — preset values for each.
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What is EMI (Equated Monthly Installment)?

EMI stands for Equated Monthly Installment — the fixed amount a borrower pays to a bank or financial institution every month until the loan is fully repaid. EMI consists of two components that are blended together into one fixed payment:

  • Principal component — The portion of EMI that reduces your outstanding loan balance
  • Interest component — The cost of borrowing, calculated on the outstanding principal balance

In the early months of the loan, a larger proportion of the EMI goes toward interest. As the loan matures and the principal balance reduces, the interest component decreases and a larger share goes toward principal repayment. This is called an amortizing loan structure.

For example, on a ₹10 lakh home loan at 8.5% for 20 years (EMI = ₹8,678): In month 1, approximately ₹7,083 goes to interest and ₹1,595 to principal. By month 200 (near the end), approximately ₹122 goes to interest and ₹8,556 to principal.

EMI Formula — How EMI is Calculated

The EMI calculation is based on the reducing balance method using this formula:

EMI = [P × R × (1+R)^N] / [(1+R)^N − 1]

Where:

  • P = Principal loan amount (e.g., ₹10,00,000)
  • R = Monthly interest rate = Annual interest rate ÷ 12 ÷ 100 (e.g., 8.5% ÷ 12 ÷ 100 = 0.00708)
  • N = Loan tenure in months (e.g., 20 years × 12 = 240 months)

Example calculation: ₹10 lakh at 8.5% for 20 years: EMI = [10,00,000 × 0.00708 × (1.00708)^240] / [(1.00708)^240 − 1] = ₹8,678 per month

Home Loan EMI in India — 2024 Rate Guide

Home loan rates in India vary by lender, loan amount, and borrower credit profile. Here are current home loan interest rates from major lenders:

Bank / NBFCInterest Rate (p.a.)Processing FeeMax Tenure
SBI Home Loan8.50% – 9.65%0.35% of loan amount30 years
HDFC Bank8.75% – 9.65%0.50% or ₹3,000 min30 years
ICICI Bank8.75% – 9.85%0.50% or ₹3,000 min30 years
Axis Bank8.75% – 13.30%Up to 1%30 years
LIC Housing Finance8.35% – 10.35%Up to 0.25%30 years
Kotak Mahindra Bank8.75% – 9.25%0.50%20 years
Bank of Baroda8.40% – 10.65%0.25% to 0.50%30 years

Rates are indicative and subject to change. Check with lenders for current rates based on your credit profile.

Home Loan EMI Table — ₹10 Lakh to ₹1 Crore

Loan Amount8% for 20 yr8.5% for 20 yr9% for 20 yrTotal Interest (8.5%, 20yr)
₹10 Lakh₹8,364₹8,678₹9,000₹10.83 Lakh
₹20 Lakh₹16,729₹17,356₹17,999₹21.65 Lakh
₹30 Lakh₹25,093₹26,035₹26,999₹32.48 Lakh
₹50 Lakh₹41,822₹43,391₹44,986₹54.14 Lakh
₹75 Lakh₹62,733₹65,087₹67,479₹81.21 Lakh
₹1 Crore₹83,644₹86,782₹89,973₹1.08 Crore

Car Loan EMI in India — 2024

Car loan interest rates in India typically range from 7.9% to 15% depending on the vehicle type, lender, and credit profile:

LenderNew Car RateUsed Car RateMax Tenure
SBI Car Loan8.65% – 9.60%11.15% – 14.75%7 years
HDFC Bank7.90% – 11.50%11.50% – 16.00%7 years
ICICI Bank8.90% – 12.50%12.50% – 15.00%7 years
Axis Bank8.75% – 13.50%13.50% – 16.50%7 years

For a ₹8 lakh car loan at 9.5% for 5 years, the monthly EMI is approximately ₹16,791. Total interest paid over 5 years would be ₹2.07 lakh — 26% of the loan amount.

Personal Loan EMI in India — 2024

Personal loans are unsecured and hence carry higher interest rates. Current personal loan rates from major banks:

LenderInterest RateMax Loan AmountTenure
SBI Personal Loan11.45% – 14.60%₹20 Lakh6 years
HDFC Bank10.85% – 24.00%₹40 Lakh5 years
ICICI Bank10.85% – 19.00%₹50 Lakh6 years
Axis Bank11.25% – 22.00%₹40 Lakh5 years
Bajaj Finserv11.00% – 35.00%₹40 Lakh5 years
Tata Capital10.99% onwards₹35 Lakh6 years

Understanding the Amortization Schedule

Our EMI calculator provides a complete year-by-year amortization schedule — a detailed breakdown showing:

  • EMI paid per year — Total installments paid in each year
  • Principal repaid per year — How much of your outstanding loan is reduced each year
  • Interest paid per year — Cost of borrowing for each year
  • Outstanding balance — Remaining loan amount at the end of each year

The amortization schedule is valuable for planning prepayments. Making a lump-sum prepayment in the early years (when the outstanding principal is highest) reduces future interest significantly. For example, prepaying ₹1 lakh in year 3 of a 20-year home loan can save ₹3–4 lakh in total interest and reduce tenure by 1–2 years.

How to Reduce Your Loan EMI

  • Negotiate a lower interest rate: A higher credit score (750+) gives you bargaining power. Compare rates across 5–6 lenders before accepting an offer.
  • Increase loan tenure: Extending from 15 to 20 years on a ₹50 lakh home loan at 8.5% reduces EMI from ₹49,240 to ₹43,391 — saving ₹5,849/month, though total interest increases.
  • Make a larger down payment: Reducing the loan principal directly reduces EMI. On a ₹60 lakh property, paying ₹20 lakh down (33%) instead of ₹10 lakh (17%) reduces the loan and EMI significantly.
  • Make regular prepayments: Even small annual prepayments of ₹25,000–50,000 reduce outstanding principal and can cut loan tenure by 2–5 years.
  • Refinance to a lower rate: If market rates fall significantly (1%+ lower than your current rate), consider balance transfer to a lender offering lower rates.

What is FOIR and How Does It Affect Loan Eligibility?

FOIR (Fixed Obligation to Income Ratio) is the ratio of your total monthly loan EMIs to your monthly gross income. Banks use FOIR to assess your loan repayment capacity:

  • Most banks allow maximum FOIR of 40–55% depending on income level
  • Higher-income borrowers (₹75,000+/month) may get FOIR up to 60–65%
  • Formula: FOIR = (All existing EMIs + New EMI) ÷ Gross Monthly Income × 100

Example: If you earn ₹80,000/month and have existing EMIs of ₹20,000, your current FOIR is 25%. To maintain 50% FOIR, you can take on additional EMIs up to ₹20,000. This helps determine maximum loan eligibility before applying.

Flat Rate vs Reducing Rate Interest — Important Difference

This is one of the most misunderstood concepts in personal finance in India:

FeatureFlat RateReducing Rate (EMI)
Interest calculated onOriginal principal throughoutOutstanding principal (reduces each month)
Actual costHigher effective rateLower effective rate
Common inTwo-wheeler loans, old personal loansHome loans, car loans, most bank products
Conversion1% flat ≈ 1.7–1.8% reducingStandard EMI formula applies

Our EMI calculator uses the reducing balance method (the standard for all bank loans in India). If you are quoted a flat rate, multiply by approximately 1.8 to compare with reducing rate offers.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is EMI and how is it calculated?
EMI (Equated Monthly Installment) is the fixed monthly payment made to repay a loan. It is calculated using the formula: EMI = [P × R × (1+R)^N] / [(1+R)^N − 1], where P is principal, R is monthly interest rate, and N is tenure in months. Our calculator computes this automatically — just enter your loan amount, interest rate, and tenure.
What is the EMI for ₹10 lakh home loan for 20 years at 8.5%?
The monthly EMI for a ₹10 lakh home loan at 8.5% for 20 years is ₹8,678. Over 20 years, you would pay total interest of ₹10,82,720 — making the total repayment ₹20,82,720 on a ₹10 lakh principal. This demonstrates why reducing loan tenure (e.g., 15 years) can save significant interest.
How can I reduce my home loan EMI?
You can reduce EMI by: (1) Increasing tenure — longer tenure means lower EMI but more total interest; (2) Making a larger down payment to reduce principal; (3) Negotiating a lower interest rate — even 0.5% lower saves lakhs over a 20-year loan; (4) Regular prepayments to reduce outstanding principal; (5) Balance transfer to a lender offering lower rates.
What is the maximum loan I can get based on my salary?
Banks typically allow EMI to be 40–50% of your monthly take-home income. So if you earn ₹60,000/month, you can afford EMIs up to ₹24,000–30,000. At 8.5% for 20 years, this EMI supports a home loan of approximately ₹27–34 lakh. Higher income, better credit score, and fewer existing obligations increase loan eligibility.
Does prepaying a loan save money?
Yes, significantly. Making extra payments reduces the outstanding principal, which reduces future interest charges. For example, on a ₹50 lakh home loan at 8.5% for 20 years, making a one-time prepayment of ₹5 lakh in year 5 can save approximately ₹12–15 lakh in total interest and cut the tenure by 3–4 years. Note that banks may charge a prepayment penalty on fixed-rate loans.
What happens if I miss an EMI payment?
Missing an EMI has serious consequences: (1) Late payment fee of 1–3% on the overdue amount; (2) Negative impact on your CIBIL credit score — one missed payment can drop your score by 50–100 points; (3) Repeated defaults may lead to the account being classified as NPA (Non-Performing Asset) and legal action; (4) Banks can enforce security (for secured loans like home or car loan). If you anticipate difficulty, contact your bank proactively — they may offer restructuring or moratorium.