Free EMI calculator for India. Calculate monthly instalment, total interest, and full amortization schedule for home loan, car loan, and personal loan.
EMI — Equated Monthly Instalment — is the fixed monthly amount you pay to repay a loan over a set period. Whether you are taking a home loan, car loan, or personal loan, understanding your EMI before you borrow is essential. A small change in interest rate or tenure can mean lakhs of rupees difference over the life of a loan.
An EMI has two components: the principal repayment and the interest payment. In the early months of a loan, most of your EMI goes toward interest. As time passes, the interest component decreases and the principal component increases. This is called an amortising loan.
The total interest you pay over the full loan tenure can often be more than the original loan amount — especially for long home loans. Our free EMI calculator shows you the complete amortization schedule so you can see exactly what you pay month by month.
EMI = [P x R x (1+R)^N] / [(1+R)^N - 1]. Where P = Principal loan amount, R = Monthly interest rate (annual rate divided by 12), N = Number of monthly instalments (loan tenure in months).
Example: A home loan of Rs 40 lakhs at 8.5% annual interest for 20 years gives an EMI of approximately Rs 34,722 per month. Total amount paid = Rs 83.3 lakhs. Total interest = Rs 43.3 lakhs — more than the original loan.
Always calculate EMI before finalising a loan. Compare across multiple banks — even a 0.25% difference in interest rate on a Rs 50 lakh home loan saves over Rs 1.5 lakhs over 20 years.
| Loan Type | Typical Interest Rate | Typical Tenure | Key Feature |
|---|---|---|---|
| Home Loan | 8 to 10% | 15 to 30 years | Lowest rate, tax benefits under 80C |
| Car Loan | 9 to 12% | 3 to 7 years | Medium rate, vehicle as collateral |
| Personal Loan | 12 to 24% | 1 to 5 years | Highest rate, no collateral needed |
| Education Loan | 8 to 12% | 5 to 15 years | Moratorium during study period |
Making extra payments toward your principal — called prepayment — dramatically reduces total interest paid. On a 20-year home loan, prepaying even Rs 1 lakh in year 3 can save Rs 3 to 5 lakhs in interest and reduce tenure by 2 to 3 years.
After calculating your EMI, also check your SIP calculator — sometimes investing the prepayment amount in mutual funds can give better returns than saving on loan interest, depending on the rates involved.
Financial advisors recommend keeping total loan EMIs (including all loans) below 40 to 50% of your monthly take-home salary. Below 35% is considered very comfortable. Calculate your take-home salary first using our salary calculator.
Yes, through two ways: refinancing at a lower interest rate (balance transfer to another bank), or making partial prepayments to reduce the outstanding principal. Some banks charge prepayment penalties — check before prepaying.
Missing an EMI damages your CIBIL credit score (deductions of 50 to 100 points per missed payment), attracts a penalty from the bank (typically 2 to 3% of the overdue amount), and accumulates additional interest on the unpaid amount.
For home loans: interest payment up to Rs 2 lakh per year is deductible under Section 24(b) and principal repayment up to Rs 1.5 lakh under Section 80C. No tax benefits on personal loans or car loans.
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