Monthly EMI ₹96,502 · 20-year tenure · Total interest ₹1,31,60,480
| Tenure | Monthly EMI | Total Interest | Total Payment |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10 years | ₹1,32,151 | ₹58,58,120 | ₹1,58,58,120 |
| 15 years | ₹1,07,461 | ₹93,42,980 | ₹1,93,42,980 |
| 20 years | ₹96,502 | ₹1,31,60,480 | ₹2,31,60,480 |
| 25 years | ₹90,870 | ₹1,72,61,000 | ₹2,72,61,000 |
| 30 years | ₹87,757 | ₹2,15,92,520 | ₹3,15,92,520 |
A ₹100 lakhs home loan falls in the premium segment, typically financing apartments and villas in metropolitan areas. At this loan size, even a small difference in interest rate makes a significant difference in total interest paid — a 0.5% rate difference costs or saves over ₹7,89,360 over 20 years. At 10%, this rate is slightly above the market average. If your current lender quotes this rate, it is worth comparing with other banks — even a 0.5% reduction can save significant interest over 20 years.
Based on the standard EMI-to-income ratio of 40%, a monthly take-home salary of at least ₹2,41,255 is recommended to comfortably repay this loan. If your income is lower, opt for a longer tenure to reduce the EMI — choosing 20 years over 10 years reduces your monthly outgo by ₹35,649, freeing up ₹4,27,788 per year for other expenses. However, a longer tenure also means paying more total interest, so prepay whenever you have surplus funds.
Over a 20-year tenure, you will pay ₹1,31,60,480 in interest on a ₹100 lakh loan — that is 132% of your principal. This is the true cost of stretching repayment over two decades. If you were to aggressively prepay and close the loan in 10 years instead, you would save approximately ₹38,17,500 in interest. Even making one extra EMI per year as a part-prepayment can shave 2–3 years off a 20-year tenure.
To put this rate in perspective: if you were to get a home loan at 8.35% (the approximate floor rate offered by top public sector banks), your monthly EMI would be ₹85,835 — that is ₹10,667 less per month than at 10%. Over 20 years, that difference adds up to ₹25,60,080 in total interest. Before finalising a lender, compare rates from SBI, HDFC, ICICI, and LIC HFL — a small negotiation or credit score improvement can meaningfully reduce your cost.
The EMI formula is based on the reducing balance method used by all banks in India:
EMI = P × r × (1+r)^n ÷ ((1+r)^n − 1)
For this loan: P = ₹1,00,00,000 (principal), r = 10/12/100 = 0.00833 (monthly rate), n = 240 months (20 years). This gives a monthly EMI of ₹96,502.
This table shows how much of each year's payment goes toward principal vs. interest, and your remaining balance at the end of each year.
| Year | Principal Paid | Interest Paid | Total Paid | Balance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Year 1 | ₹1,65,472 | ₹9,92,552 | ₹11,58,024 | ₹98,34,528 |
| Year 2 | ₹1,82,799 | ₹9,75,225 | ₹11,58,024 | ₹96,51,729 |
| Year 3 | ₹2,01,940 | ₹9,56,084 | ₹11,58,024 | ₹94,49,789 |
| Year 4 | ₹2,23,087 | ₹9,34,937 | ₹11,58,024 | ₹92,26,702 |
| Year 5 | ₹2,46,446 | ₹9,11,578 | ₹11,58,024 | ₹89,80,256 |
| Year 6 | ₹2,72,252 | ₹8,85,772 | ₹11,58,024 | ₹87,08,004 |
| Year 7 | ₹3,00,759 | ₹8,57,265 | ₹11,58,024 | ₹84,07,245 |
| Year 8 | ₹3,32,255 | ₹8,25,769 | ₹11,58,024 | ₹80,74,990 |
| Year 9 | ₹3,67,046 | ₹7,90,978 | ₹11,58,024 | ₹77,07,944 |
| Year 10 | ₹4,05,480 | ₹7,52,544 | ₹11,58,024 | ₹73,02,464 |
Run your own numbers with different amounts, rates, and tenures
Open EMI Calculator →The monthly EMI for a ₹100 lakh home loan at 10% for 20 years is ₹96,502. For 15 years it is ₹1,07,461, and for 10 years it is ₹1,32,151.
Total interest paid over 20 years is ₹1,31,60,480. Your total repayment (principal + interest) would be ₹2,31,60,480.
With a monthly EMI of ₹96,502 at 10% for 20 years, you need a minimum monthly take-home salary of approximately ₹2,41,255, based on the standard 40% EMI-to-income guideline used by most banks.
Rates around 10% are more common at NBFCs and private sector lenders. If you are quoted this rate, compare offers from public sector banks — you may qualify for a lower rate with a good credit score.
Yes — you can reduce your EMI by choosing a longer tenure (up to 30 years), negotiating a lower interest rate, making a larger down payment to reduce the principal, or maintaining a high CIBIL score above 750. You can also do a balance transfer to a lender with a lower rate after 12–24 months of repayment.