# How Home Loan EMI Is Calculated in India

> Home loan EMI uses the reducing-balance formula on a floating repo-linked rate. See a ₹30 lakh worked example plus how RBI repo changes affect you.

_By emi.me Editorial · Reviewed by emi.me Editorial · Updated 2026-06-24_
Source: https://emi.me/learn/how-home-loan-emi-is-calculated-in-india/

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Home loan EMI in India is calculated on a **reducing-balance basis using EMI = P × r × (1 + r)^n ÷ ((1 + r)^n − 1)**, where P is the loan amount, r is the monthly interest rate and n is the tenure in months. Most home loans are floating-rate, benchmarked to the RBI repo rate plus a spread, so the rate can change over time. For example, **₹30,00,000 at 8.5% over 240 months gives an EMI of about ₹26,035**.

## The formula behind home loan EMI

Every lender uses the same reducing-balance EMI formula:

```
EMI = P × r × (1 + r)^n ÷ ((1 + r)^n − 1)
```

P is the principal, r is the monthly rate (annual rate ÷ 12, expressed as a decimal) and n is the number of monthly instalments. The mechanics are identical to any other loan — see [how EMI is calculated](/learn/how-emi-is-calculated/) for the step-by-step. What makes a home loan distinctive in India is the long tenure and the **floating, repo-linked rate**, both of which shape your total cost.

## Worked example: ₹30,00,000 at 8.5% for 20 years

Take a loan of ₹30,00,000 at 8.5% per annum over 20 years (240 months).

- **EMI ≈ ₹26,035**
- **Total repayment ≈ ₹62,48,327**
- **Total interest ≈ ₹32,48,327**

The first month's split shows why long tenures are interest-heavy early on:

| Component | Month 1 amount |
| --- | --- |
| Interest portion | ₹21,250 |
| Principal portion | ₹4,785 |
| EMI (total) | ₹26,035 |

That ₹21,250 is one month's interest at 8.5% on the full ₹30,00,000 outstanding. Only ₹4,785 reduces the principal in month one, so the balance falls slowly at first. Over 20 years the principal portion grows and the interest portion shrinks, but because the balance stays high for years, total interest reaches roughly ₹32.48 lakh — more than the original loan in this case. You can model your own loan with the [home loan calculator](/calculators/home-loan/) or the general [EMI calculator](/calculators/emi/). These are estimates; confirm the exact figures on your sanction terms.

## How RBI repo changes affect your EMI

In India, floating-rate home loans are **benchmarked to the RBI repo rate plus a spread** set by the lender. When the RBI changes the repo rate, your loan's interest rate is revised. Lenders typically **adjust the tenure first** — keeping the EMI the same but extending or shortening the number of instalments — though some may change the EMI instead.

This matters because a longer tenure raises the total interest you pay, as shown in [how loan tenure affects EMI](/learn/how-loan-tenure-affects-emi/). If a rate hike pushes your tenure up, you can often ask the lender to keep the tenure and raise the EMI instead, or prepay to offset it. Check your loan statement after any rate revision to see exactly how your lender applied it.

## Prepayment, foreclosure and the no-penalty rule

A major advantage in India: **RBI bars prepayment and foreclosure penalties on floating-rate home loans taken by individual borrowers**. That means you can make part-payments or close the loan early without an extra fee (confirm this on your sanction, especially for fixed-rate loans, which may differ).

Prepayment is powerful on a long home loan precisely because so much early interest is in play. Even a modest lump sum early in the tenure cuts the outstanding balance and saves substantial interest — see [how prepayment reduces EMI](/learn/how-prepayment-reduces-emi/) for the two strategies (reduce tenure vs reduce EMI) and how they differ.

## Tax benefits — confirm with an adviser

Under the **old tax regime**, home loans can carry deductions:

- **Section 24(b)** on the interest paid, and
- **Section 80C** on the principal repaid,

each subject to conditions, limits and your chosen regime. Whether you benefit, and by how much, depends on your circumstances, and the rules can change. We deliberately do not put a rupee figure on this — **confirm what applies to you with a qualified tax adviser** before factoring it into your decision.

The bottom line: a home loan EMI is set by the loan amount, the rate and the tenure, just like any loan — but in India the floating repo-linked rate, long tenure and penalty-free prepayment make active management worthwhile. Use the calculators to model scenarios, treat every output as an estimate, and reconcile it with your sanction letter and a tax adviser where relevant.
