This Mortgage Calculator India is designed for Indian taxpayers, first-time filers, salaried professionals, NRIs, and families who want to understand their home loan EMI, total interest outgo, and possible tax deductions before filing their income tax return. At WealthSure, we simplify complex tax decisions with expert-led, compliance-oriented guidance so you can plan better, avoid errors, and file with confidence.
Indicative monthly EMI for a ₹50 lakh loan at 8.5% for 20 years.
Estimate your monthly EMI, total interest, principal repayment, and possible home loan tax deduction under Indian income tax rules. Use it before choosing a loan amount, finalising your tax regime, or filing your ITR.
Adjust the values below to see how your EMI and tax deduction estimate changes instantly.
Estimated Monthly EMI
₹44,986Under the old tax regime, you may be able to consider up to ₹2,00,000 interest deduction and available Section 80C principal deduction, subject to eligibility and documentation.
Home loans are not only about EMIs. They also influence cash flow, tax planning, regime selection, deduction claims, and compliance documentation.
Income tax filing in India is increasingly linked with AIS, Form 26AS, TIS, bank data, salary records, capital gains, rent, interest income, and loan information. First-time filers often struggle to match these data points correctly.
Many taxpayers are unsure whether the old regime is better because of deductions such as Section 80C, HRA, health insurance, and home loan interest, or whether the new regime’s lower slab structure is simpler.
Incorrect deduction claims, mismatched income, wrong property classification, or missed disclosures can lead to tax notices, delayed refunds, additional tax demand, interest, or penalties.
Taxpayers often know that home loans provide tax benefits but may not understand the difference between principal repayment under Section 80C and interest deduction under Section 24(b).
Digital filing has made tax compliance faster, but taxpayers still need reliable interpretation. A calculator should simplify decisions, not replace expert review where the case is complex.
Home loan tax treatment can change based on possession, co-borrower status, property use, construction status, ownership share, and available documents. WealthSure helps convert estimates into filing-ready clarity.
Buying a house is one of the largest financial commitments most Indian taxpayers make. However, the tax implications of a mortgage are often misunderstood. A taxpayer may focus only on the EMI while ignoring how interest, principal repayment, property possession, and tax regime selection affect the final income tax return.
This is especially important because Indian income tax filing has become more compliance-oriented. Taxpayers are no longer filing in isolation. Salary data, TDS details, bank interest, capital gains, securities transactions, property-related income, and other information may already appear in government reporting systems. Therefore, claiming a deduction without proper evidence can create avoidable scrutiny.
Under the old tax regime, eligible interest paid on a housing loan may be claimed under the head “Income from House Property.” For a self-occupied property, the deduction is generally capped at ₹2,00,000 when the required conditions are satisfied. If the property is under construction, pre-construction interest is usually handled differently and may be claimed in instalments after completion, subject to applicable rules.
Principal repayment on a qualifying housing loan may form part of the Section 80C deduction basket. However, the total Section 80C limit is ₹1,50,000 and includes other investments and payments such as EPF, PPF, ELSS, life insurance premium, tuition fees, and eligible principal repayment. This means you cannot claim ₹1,50,000 separately for home loan principal if your other 80C investments have already exhausted the limit.
The new tax regime has become the default framework for many taxpayers, and a significant share of taxpayers now file under it. However, the old regime may still be beneficial for individuals who have meaningful deductions such as home loan interest, Section 80C investments, health insurance premium, HRA, education loan interest, or donations.
The old regime may be suitable when you have substantial eligible deductions and exemptions. A home loan can be especially relevant because interest and principal repayment deductions may reduce taxable income, subject to limits and eligibility.
The new regime is simpler and generally offers lower slab rates, but several traditional deductions are unavailable or restricted. Taxpayers should compare both regimes before filing instead of assuming one is automatically better.
WealthSure combines digital tools, AI-driven insights, and expert advisory to help taxpayers make clearer financial decisions. Our goal is not only to help you calculate your EMI but also to help you understand whether your home loan supports better tax planning, stronger compliance, and smoother ITR filing.
For first-time filers, this matters even more. The difference between a correct return and a problematic return often lies in documentation, regime selection, income matching, and accurate deduction reporting. WealthSure helps you move from uncertainty to filing confidence.
Clear answers to common questions asked by Indian taxpayers before claiming home loan benefits.
A mortgage calculator estimates your monthly EMI, total loan repayment, total interest outgo, and possible tax deduction. The WealthSure Mortgage Calculator India also gives an indicative view of Section 24(b) interest deduction and Section 80C principal deduction.
Under the old tax regime, eligible taxpayers may claim principal repayment under Section 80C within the overall ₹1.5 lakh limit and interest deduction under Section 24(b), subject to conditions. The exact claim depends on ownership, loan purpose, possession, documentation, and property use.
Traditional deductions are restricted under the new tax regime. Taxpayers should compare both regimes carefully, especially if they have home loan interest, Section 80C investments, HRA, or other deductions.
Section 80C has an overall limit of ₹1.5 lakh. If your EPF, ELSS, PPF, insurance premium, tuition fees, or other eligible investments already use the limit, your additional principal repayment may not create extra deduction.
Yes. A home loan interest certificate from your bank or lender helps support the interest and principal components claimed in your ITR. You should also keep repayment proof, possession documents, and ownership records where applicable.
Co-owners who are also co-borrowers may be able to claim deductions based on their ownership share and repayment contribution, subject to eligibility. This should be reviewed carefully before filing.