About this EMI calculator
The EMI (Equated Monthly Installment) Calculator helps you understand your monthly loan repayment amount before you commit to a loan. Whether it's a home loan, car loan, or personal loan, knowing your EMI helps you plan your budget and avoid over-borrowing.
EMI consists of two parts: principal repayment and interest payment. In early years, most of your EMI goes toward interest. As you progress, more goes toward principal. This calculator shows you the complete picture including total interest outgo.
Financial advisors recommend keeping your total EMI commitments below 40% of your monthly income. Use this calculator to ensure your loan fits comfortably within your budget without compromising your lifestyle or emergency savings.
How EMI calculation works
EMI is calculated using a mathematical formula that considers three factors: loan amount (principal), interest rate, and tenure. The formula ensures you pay the same amount every month, making budgeting easier.
In the initial years, your EMI is mostly interest. For example, on a ₹25 lakh home loan at 9% for 20 years, your first EMI of ₹22,493 includes ₹18,750 interest and only ₹3,743 principal. This ratio gradually reverses over time.
Shorter tenure means higher EMI but much lower total interest. A 15-year loan vs 20-year loan might increase EMI by 20% but saves 30-40% in total interest. Use this calculator to find the right balance for your budget.
Choosing the right loan tenure
Longer tenure reduces EMI burden but increases total interest dramatically. A ₹25 lakh loan at 9% costs ₹29 lakh interest over 20 years but only ₹18 lakh over 15 years - a ₹11 lakh difference!
For home loans, 15-20 years is optimal for most people. For car loans, 3-5 years is standard. For personal loans, keep it under 3 years to avoid paying excessive interest on unsecured debt.
Consider prepayment options. If you can afford higher EMI, take shorter tenure. If you need flexibility, take longer tenure but prepay when you have surplus funds. Most banks allow prepayment without penalty after 6-12 months.
Interest rates and how to get the best deal
Home loans typically range from 8-10%, car loans 9-12%, and personal loans 11-18%. Your credit score significantly impacts the rate - a 750+ score can save you 1-2% compared to a 650 score.
Even 0.5% difference in interest rate matters hugely over long tenures. On a ₹25 lakh 20-year loan, 8.5% vs 9% saves you ₹2.5 lakh in total interest. Always negotiate and compare multiple banks.
Fixed vs floating rates: Fixed rates provide certainty but are usually 0.5-1% higher. Floating rates are lower but can increase if RBI raises rates. For long-term loans, floating is usually better as rates tend to decrease over decades.
EMI affordability and financial planning
The 40% rule: Your total EMIs (all loans combined) should not exceed 40% of your monthly income. If you earn ₹1 lakh, keep total EMIs under ₹40,000 to maintain financial health.
Before taking a loan, ensure you have 6 months of expenses as emergency fund. Don't compromise emergency savings to afford higher EMI - unexpected job loss or medical emergency can derail your finances.
Factor in other costs beyond EMI. Home loans need property tax, maintenance. Car loans need insurance, fuel, servicing. Personal loans might be for expenses that have ongoing costs. Budget holistically, not just EMI.