🔍 Why This EMI Calculator Is Different
Every major EMI calculator in India — from bank websites to finance portals — gives you one number and stops: your monthly instalment. That’s the least useful piece of information when you’re deciding whether to take a ₹10 lakh car loan or a ₹40 lakh home loan. We built 4 modes that answer what actually matters: how much total interest you’ll pay, what happens if you prepay ₹5,000 extra per month, which bank costs you less over the full tenure, and whether your income can genuinely sustain this EMI without financial stress.
Compare two loan offers — different banks, rates or tenures. Find which costs you less over the full repayment period.
Loan Option A
Loan Option B
See how much interest you save and how many months you cut by paying extra every month. The earlier you start, the more you save.
Find the safe EMI range and maximum loan amount your income can support — before walking into a bank.
What Is EMI and How Is It Calculated?
An EMI (Equated Monthly Instalment) is the fixed amount you pay to a bank every month to repay a loan — covering both principal and interest in a single payment. Every bank in India uses the reducing balance method for EMI calculation, which means your interest charge decreases every month as your outstanding principal reduces with each payment.
In the early months of your loan, the vast majority of your EMI goes toward interest. As the outstanding principal shrinks month by month, more of each EMI goes toward principal repayment. This is why prepaying in the first few years of a home loan or car loan saves far more than the same prepayment made in later years.
EMI for Every Loan Type — Quick Reference (June 2026)
Use these reference EMI figures against current Indian bank lending rates as a starting point before using the calculator for your exact scenario. All figures use the RBI repo-linked benchmark rates as of June 2026.
| Loan Type | Typical Rate (June 2026) | ₹5 Lakh / 5 Yr | ₹10 Lakh / 10 Yr | ₹20 Lakh / 15 Yr | ₹50 Lakh / 20 Yr |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 🏠 Home Loan (SBI) | 8.50% p.a. | ₹10,254/mo | ₹12,398/mo | ₹19,695/mo | ₹43,391/mo |
| 🏠 Home Loan (HDFC) | 8.75% p.a. | ₹10,306/mo | ₹12,512/mo | ₹19,921/mo | ₹44,109/mo |
| 🚗 Car Loan | 9.00% p.a. | ₹10,378/mo | ₹12,667/mo | — | — |
| 💼 Personal Loan | 12.00% p.a. | ₹11,122/mo | ₹14,347/mo | — | — |
| 🏍️ Bike Loan | 10.50% p.a. | ₹10,747/mo | — | — | — |
| * Indicative EMI at listed rates. Actual rates depend on CIBIL score, loan-to-value ratio, and bank’s internal risk pricing. Home loan rates are floating (linked to RLLR). Verify current rates at sbi.co.in and hdfcbank.com before applying. | |||||
Sources: SBI Home Loan rates; HDFC Bank Home Loan rates. June 2026.
How Much EMI Can You Actually Afford? The Income Rule
This is the question banks ask internally before approving your loan — but they rarely explain their logic to you. Understanding it before you apply is the difference between a loan that builds your life and one that slowly drains it.
Salaried (fixed monthly income): Total EMI across all active loans should not exceed 35–40% of gross salary or 30% of net take-home. Banks typically use the FOIR (Fixed Obligation to Income Ratio) of 40–50% for approval, but financial health requires staying under 30% of net income so you have room for emergencies, savings, and irregular expenses.
Self-Employed / Shop Owners: Income varies month to month. The standard 40% bank rule is dangerous territory here. A monthly income of ₹80,000 in a good month and ₹30,000 in a slow month means a ₹24,000 EMI (30% of ₹80,000) could become unserviceable in 3 out of 12 months. Safe EMI for variable-income borrowers: 20–22% of average income across the last 12 months — not the best month. Building a buffer via a Recurring Deposit (RD) can help manage those lean periods.
Farmers / Seasonal Income: Loan repayment capacity is concentrated in 2–3 months after harvest. Agricultural loan EMI calculations should be based on the actual cash-flow calendar, not a flat monthly average. An 18% cap on monthly average income is prudent. Many Kisan Credit Card (KCC) structures align with crop cycles precisely for this reason. Check our Kisan Credit Card (KCC) Calculator to understand how to claim the 3% prompt repayment subsidy.
Banks show you the EMI. They do not show you the total interest — the full cost of borrowing. A ₹30 lakh home loan at 8.50% for 20 years costs ₹78 lakh in total (₹30L principal + ₹48L interest). You pay 2.6× the original loan amount. This is not bad — homeownership often justifies the cost — but every borrower should see this number clearly before signing. Mode 1 above shows it on every calculation. Mode 3 shows how much you can reduce that total by prepaying even a small amount monthly.
SBI EMI Calculator vs HDFC EMI Calculator — What Actually Changes
When people search for an SBI EMI calculator or HDFC EMI calculator, they want to compare what each bank will charge for the same loan. The answer: the formula is identical — only the interest rate input changes. SBI home loan starts at 8.50% p.a. (June 2026) and HDFC at 8.75%. On a ₹30 lakh loan for 20 years, this 0.25% difference means:
- SBI: EMI = ₹26,035/month, Total interest = ₹32,48,472
- HDFC: EMI = ₹26,617/month, Total interest = ₹33,88,047
- Difference: ₹582/month higher EMI with HDFC; ₹1,39,575 more total interest over 20 years
Use Mode 2 (Compare Loans) above to run this comparison for your exact loan amount, and change the tenure to see how a longer or shorter term interacts with the rate difference. The comparison mode pre-loads with SBI vs HDFC home loan rates.
Home loan (emi calculator home loan): Longest tenure (up to 30 years), lowest rate (8.50–9.50%), tax benefit on principal (80C) and interest (24b). (If you are maximizing Section 80C, read our comparison on PPF vs ELSS vs NPS). Most cost-effective borrowing if the property is for genuine residence or rental investment. Never use home loan tenure extension to “reduce EMI” — you pay disproportionately more interest over 25–30 years.
Car loan EMI (emi calculator car): 5–7 year tenure typical. Rate 9–10.50%. Car is a depreciating asset — it loses 15–20% value in Year 1. Borrow the minimum needed and prepay aggressively to reduce total interest on an asset that loses value every month you hold it.
Personal loan EMI: Highest rate (10.30–24%), shortest tenure (1–5 years), no collateral. Total interest on a ₹3 lakh personal loan at 14% for 3 years = ₹67,000 — 22% of the loan amount as interest for just 36 months. Use personal loans only for genuine short-term needs, and repay in the shortest viable tenure.
Bike EMI (bike emi calculator): Two-wheeler loans at 10–13% for 12–36 months. Short tenure means total interest impact is manageable. Watch for insurance and accessory bundling by dealers — these inflate the financed amount without adding proportionate value.
Compare Your SIP Returns Against Loan Interest
Before taking a loan to invest in a fixed deposit, check if the math makes sense
SIP Calculator → FD Calculator →Frequently Asked Questions
Conclusion
An EMI calculator is the starting point, not the endpoint. The EMI number tells you what you’ll pay monthly. The amortization schedule tells you how much of that is interest in each year. The prepayment analyzer tells you how much you can save by paying slightly more. The affordability checker tells you whether this loan fits your income reality — not just the bank’s approval criteria.
Use all four modes before signing a loan agreement. Especially the affordability mode — because the EMI that fits today’s income should also fit next year’s rent increase, next year’s school fee, and next year’s unexpected medical bill.
➡️ FD Calculator — See if a fixed deposit grows faster than your loan interest
➡️ SIP Calculator — Build an emergency fund via SIP to avoid future personal loans
➡️ RD Calculator — Systematic saving to reduce your next loan requirement
➡️ PPF vs ELSS vs NPS — Where to park money you’re saving toward a down payment
