Home loans dominate Indian household debt — and yet most borrowers think about their loan once at origination and then again only when EMI auto-debits succeed or fail. Two decisions you make early (tenure and prepayment strategy) determine whether you pay 1.4x or 2.0x the principal in interest over the life of the loan.
This is what to actually do with a home loan in 2026.
What changed in 2026
- RBI repo cut by 50 bps over Feb–Apr 2026 — most floating-rate loans (linked to repo via EBLR) reset within 3 months. Check your loan statement for the new rate.
- Spread reset for legacy MCLR loans is more transparent — many old MCLR-linked loans transferred to EBLR in 2024–2025. If you're still on MCLR, ask the bank to switch.
- Zero foreclosure / prepayment charges on floating-rate retail home loans is now universal — RBI rule, no exceptions for individual borrowers.
Rates in May 2026 (indicative)
- SBI Home Loan (EBLR): 8.40% (special rate for women), 8.50% standard
- HDFC Bank: 8.50–9.10% (slab-driven by loan amount and CIBIL)
- ICICI Bank: 8.55–9.10%
- Axis Bank: 8.60–9.20%
- Bajaj Housing: 8.65–9.30%
- LIC HFC: 8.45–8.95%
Differences within 25–50 bps usually come down to your CIBIL, employer category, and negotiation. The "rack rate" advertised on the website is rarely what a salaried borrower with 750+ CIBIL actually gets.
The tenure decision
Same loan, ₹50 lakh principal at 8.5%:
| Tenure |
EMI |
Total interest |
Total payable |
| 15 years |
₹49,237 |
₹38.6 lakh |
₹88.6 lakh |
| 20 years |
₹43,391 |
₹54.1 lakh |
₹104.1 lakh |
| 25 years |
₹40,261 |
₹70.8 lakh |
₹120.8 lakh |
| 30 years |
₹38,446 |
₹88.4 lakh |
₹138.4 lakh |
Going from 20 to 30 years saves ₹4,945/month — but you pay ₹34.3 lakh more interest. If you can comfortably afford the 20-year EMI, take that. Many borrowers default to 30 just because it's lower without doing this math.
Prepayment vs investment — the honest math
At 8.5% loan rate, prepayment is a guaranteed risk-free 8.5% return (more, if you're claiming 24(b) interest deduction under old regime — your effective rate is closer to 6.0% post-tax for high-bracket borrowers).
To beat prepayment with investment, you need:
- Post-tax post-cost return > effective loan rate
- For equity at 12% pre-tax → ~10.5% post-LTCG → wins at most rates
- For debt at 7% pre-tax → ~5% post-tax → loses to prepayment
The math favors prepayment for anyone with:
- Loan rate above 8.5%
- No equity discipline (won't actually invest the freed cash)
- Old regime not maxed on 24(b) (so tax shield isn't being captured)
Tax benefits — and where they fall short
Old regime:
- Section 24(b): up to ₹2 lakh interest deduction on self-occupied home
- Section 80C: principal repayment up to ₹1.5 lakh (combined with other 80C)
New regime: none of the above apply for self-occupied. Let-out properties allow interest deduction unrestricted but with set-off cap of ₹2 lakh per year against other heads.
If you're new-regime, the home loan has no tax shield on the self-occupied home. Recompute prepayment math at the gross rate.
Loan transfer (balance transfer) — when it actually works
Home loan balance transfer is legitimate when:
- New rate is at least 50 bps lower than current
- Remaining tenure is 7+ years
- Processing/legal/MOD charges (typically 0.35–1.0% of loan) are recovered in under 24 months
Do not transfer to chase a 10–20 bps difference. The processing fee usually eats the savings.
FAQ
Should I prepay or shorten tenure?
Functionally similar. "Reduce EMI" keeps tenure same and lowers monthly payment; "Reduce tenure" keeps EMI same and shortens loan. Reduce tenure usually saves more interest because you don't change consumption patterns.
Is fixed-rate home loan better than floating?
Floating wins in falling/stable rate cycles (2026 is one). Fixed wins if you believe rates will rise sharply. For a typical 20-year loan in India, floating is the default.
Can I claim both 24(b) and HRA?
Yes, in some cases — if the home is in a different city from your work, or it's let out. For self-occupied home in same city as work, only one applies.
Where to go next
For related guides see How to buy your first house in 2026, Best mortgage refinance rates in 2026, and How to pay off mortgage fast in 2026.