# How Loan Tenure Affects Your EMI (and Total Interest)

> A longer tenure lowers your EMI in a shrinking curve but raises total interest steeply. See a ₹10 lakh comparison across 10, 15, 20 and 25 years.

_By emi.me Editorial · Reviewed by emi.me Editorial · Updated 2026-06-24_
Source: https://emi.me/learn/how-loan-tenure-affects-emi/

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Loan tenure has a clear two-sided effect: **a longer tenure lowers your EMI but along a shrinking curve, while it raises your total interest steeply.** Spreading the same principal over more months makes each instalment smaller, yet because interest is charged on the outstanding balance for longer, the total you pay climbs sharply. For a ₹10,00,000 loan at 9%, the EMI falls from ₹12,668 over 10 years to ₹8,392 over 25 years — but total interest nearly triples.

## Why tenure pulls the EMI and interest in opposite directions

The EMI is set by the reducing-balance formula:

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

where P is the principal, r is the monthly rate (annual ÷ 12 as a decimal) and n is the number of months. Increasing **n** spreads repayment over more instalments, so each EMI shrinks. But interest is charged on the balance every month, and a longer tenure keeps that balance high for longer — so more interest accrues overall. The full mechanics are in [how EMI is calculated](/learn/how-emi-is-calculated/).

## Worked example: ₹10,00,000 at 9% across tenures

Hold the loan amount at ₹10,00,000 and the rate at 9%, and vary only the tenure:

| Tenure | EMI | Total interest |
| --- | --- | --- |
| 10 years (120 m) | ₹12,668 | ₹5,20,109 |
| 15 years (180 m) | ₹10,143 | ₹8,25,680 |
| 20 years (240 m) | ₹8,997 | ₹11,59,342 |
| 25 years (300 m) | ₹8,392 | ₹15,17,589 |

Two patterns stand out:

- **The EMI falls along a shrinking curve.** Going from 10 to 15 years cuts the EMI by about ₹2,525, but going from 20 to 25 years cuts it by only about ₹605. Each extra five years buys smaller and smaller monthly relief.
- **Total interest rises steeply.** It climbs from about ₹5.20 lakh at 10 years to about ₹15.18 lakh at 25 years — nearly three times as much — even though the EMI dropped by only a few thousand rupees.

You can reproduce and extend this with the [EMI calculator](/calculators/emi/). These are estimates; confirm against your sanction terms.

## The diminishing-returns trap

The table shows why stretching the tenure to "make the EMI affordable" can be a costly habit. The first few years of extra tenure deliver real monthly savings, but beyond a point you are paying a lot more total interest for very little reduction in EMI. Doubling the tenure never halves the EMI, because the balance stays high for longer and interest keeps accruing.

This is the mirror image of how [the interest rate affects EMI](/learn/how-interest-rate-affects-emi/): both rate and tenure feed the same reducing-balance engine, and both can quietly inflate your total cost while the monthly figure looks manageable.

## How to use tenure wisely

A practical way to balance affordability against cost:

1. **Pick the shortest tenure whose EMI you can comfortably afford.** This minimises total interest.
2. **Don't over-extend just to shave the EMI** — past a certain point you pay far more interest for trivial monthly savings.
3. **Use a longer tenure as a safety buffer, then prepay.** Take the longer term for a lower committed EMI, and when you have surplus, prepay to cut the effective tenure — see [how prepayment reduces EMI](/learn/how-prepayment-reduces-emi/).
4. **Recheck on any rate revision.** On floating-rate loans, lenders often adjust the tenure when rates change, which can quietly raise your total interest.

The bottom line: tenure is a trade-off, not a free lunch. A longer term lowers the EMI along a curve of diminishing returns while pushing total interest up steeply. Choose the shortest tenure you can sustain, consider prepaying a longer one, and use the [EMI calculator](/calculators/emi/) to compare options — treating every figure as an estimate to confirm with your lender.
