Hi All,
I need your valuable suggestion, please help. I am 45 years and I have a homeloan of 16L with EMI 16.7K/month ( remaining 52 months to end) and 23L homeloan topup EMI of 35K ( 93 months remaining to pay). I want to take topup loan of 25L, so is it good to close the homeloan and take topup or how to proceed. Would like to close all the this loans by next 5 years. Kindly suggest.
Ans: Your current financial standing reflects disciplined planning and a proactive approach towards debt management and investments. Let's delve into a comprehensive analysis to guide your decision on whether to prepay your home loan or continue with your current strategy.
Your Current Financial Picture
Your Age: 45 years
Home Loan Outstanding: Rs. 16 lakh
Home Loan EMI: Rs. 16,700 per month (52 months left)
Top-up Loan Outstanding: Rs. 23 lakh
Top-up Loan EMI: Rs. 35,000 per month (93 months left)
Considering New Top-up Loan: Rs. 25 lakh
Your Goal: Close all loans within the next 5 years
Understanding Your Core Objective
Your goal to become debt-free in 5 years is bold and focused.
Planning is the key to achieve this without hurting your other financial goals.
The idea of taking a new top-up loan needs careful assessment.
Should You Take a New Top-Up Loan?
Taking a Rs. 25 lakh top-up will increase your monthly EMI load.
It can increase your financial stress and delay complete loan closure.
Top-up loans might come at a higher interest rate.
Avoid new debt unless absolutely needed for urgent purposes.
You should first assess why you need this extra loan.
If it is for consumption or regular needs, avoid it completely.
If it is for repaying another higher-cost loan, evaluate alternatives.
Evaluate Home Loan Prepayment
Loans are useful, but they carry interest which eats into your savings.
Closing loans early helps save big on interest.
You can pay small extra amounts every year to reduce tenure.
Focus on the loan with the highest interest and longest tenure.
Your top-up loan of Rs. 23 lakh with 93 months should be the first priority.
Re-structure EMIs Instead of Top-Up
Avoid taking a fresh Rs. 25 lakh loan.
Instead, consider restructuring your current EMIs if income flow is tight.
Some banks allow step-up EMI or tenure adjustment.
It will keep your total loan under control.
Discuss this clearly with your lender before acting.
Smart Loan Repayment Strategy (Next 5 Years Plan)
Aim to repay the top-up loan faster using extra income or annual bonus.
Try part payments every 6 months or once a year.
Avoid touching emergency funds or retirement funds.
Control new expenses to free more cash towards debt.
You can cut expenses that are not urgent for next 2 years.
Avoid buying new car, gadgets, or travel on EMIs.
Investment vs Loan Repayment – Which is Better Now?
If your investments give lower returns than loan interest, focus on repayment.
If your mutual funds are earning 9%, and your loan is 8%, you can balance.
But most importantly, check your risk capacity before investing more.
Do not invest heavily in share market if debt is very high.
Emergency situations can create problems if you are over-invested.
Use a slow and steady approach – part prepay, part invest.
Avoid stopping all investments – keep a minimum SIP running.
Maintain Emergency & Insurance Before Prepayment
Always keep 6 months’ household expenses in liquid form.
Don’t touch emergency funds to prepay loans.
Make sure you and your family have sufficient health insurance cover.
Also check if you have a term life cover of 10–15 times your annual income.
Loan repayment is good, but not at the cost of security.
What About Mutual Fund Investing?
If you have SIPs, continue them in small amounts.
Don’t stop all long-term investments for repaying loans.
Mutual funds give better long-term returns if held for 7+ years.
But stay away from index funds if you are not tracking them well.
Actively managed mutual funds handled by Certified Financial Planners give better risk-adjusted returns.
Direct mutual funds look cheap, but lack ongoing support.
Investing through MFDs with CFP background ensures long-term advice.
You get portfolio review, tax support, and goal-based adjustments.
Avoid direct funds unless you have full time to track, review, and rebalance.
Don’t Touch Long-Term Investments or Retirement Corpus
PPF, EPF, NPS, or other long-term products should not be withdrawn now.
If you use these to repay loan, you hurt your retirement peace.
Future corpus will be small, and you may depend again on loans.
Treat long-term savings as non-touchable.
Build short-term cash surplus from salary or business profit.
5-Year Practical Action Plan
Year 1–2: Avoid new loans. Start part-prepaying the 23L top-up loan.
Year 2–3: Increase EMI or part-payment on 16L home loan if top-up balance reduces.
Year 3–4: Reduce lifestyle costs. Channel savings towards both loans.
Year 4–5: Close the bigger loan. Wind up the smaller loan fully.
Post 5 Years: Loan-free life. Full focus on investments and retirement planning.
Mental Peace and Confidence
Being debt-free gives freedom and strong peace of mind.
Avoid the trap of more top-up loans. It delays financial independence.
Plan well and stay consistent in actions.
You don’t have to be fast. You have to be disciplined.
Even one prepayment each year will reduce years off your loan.
You are only 45. Still 15 years to build wealth peacefully.
Don’t rush. But don’t delay either.
Finally
Taking a top-up of Rs. 25 lakh now will increase debt pressure.
Instead, reduce existing loans with regular part-payments.
Maintain health and life insurance covers.
Continue small investments to build long-term wealth.
Avoid emotional financial decisions.
Balance repayment, savings, and investment step by step.
With a proper 5-year plan, you can close all loans without any extra stress.
You will then enter your 50s debt-free and wealth-focused.
That will give peace, pride, and protection to your entire family.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP
Chief Financial Planner
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment