
Background:
Approximately six years ago, a residential property was purchased and registered solely in my mother's name.
At the time of purchase, I was the primary loan applicant and my mother was the co-applicant for the home loan.
For the initial 3–4 years, I paid the EMIs regularly.
Subsequently, the home loan was transferred (balance transfer) from Piramal Finance to Axis Bank.
At present, my mother is servicing the EMIs using her pension. The EMI is debited from my Axis Bank account, and she transfers the corresponding amount to my account before the EMI is deducted.
Current Situation:
My parents have now expressed their intention to transfer the property to my sister, provided she is willing to continue paying the remaining home loan EMIs and become the owner of the property.
However, my sister's current income is not sufficient to independently qualify for the outstanding home loan.
Guidance Required:
I would appreciate advice on the following:
What is the correct legal and banking procedure to transfer the ownership of the property from my mother to my sister?
What are the available options to transfer or restructure the existing home loan when the proposed new owner does not currently meet the bank's eligibility criteria?
As the current primary loan applicant, what steps should I take to completely release myself from all financial and legal obligations related to this home loan?
Is it mandatory to close the existing loan and apply for a fresh loan, or are there alternative options such as loan assumption, co-borrower substitution, or loan restructuring?
What legal documents, approvals, registrations, and bank formalities would be required to complete this process while ensuring that I have no future liability for either the property or the loan?
My objective is to ensure that the property and the associated loan are transferred legally and transparently, with all responsibilities assigned to the appropriate parties, and that I am fully discharged from any future financial or legal obligations.
Ans: » Understanding The Core Issue
– Your situation involves two separate matters which must be handled together:
Ownership of the property.
Liability for the home loan.
– The property is legally owned by your mother since the registered sale deed is in her name.
– However, you remain contractually liable to the bank because you are the primary borrower on the home loan.
– Merely transferring the property to your sister will not automatically remove your liability towards the bank.
» Property Transfer Options
– Since the property is in your mother's name, she can transfer it to your sister through a legally valid instrument such as:
Gift Deed (commonly used among family members).
Settlement Deed (depending on State laws).
Sale Deed (if consideration is involved).
– The appropriate method depends on the family's intention, stamp duty implications and State regulations.
– The transfer document must be properly executed and registered with the Sub-Registrar.
– However, because the property is mortgaged to the bank, the bank's consent will generally be required before ownership transfer can be completed.
» Home Loan Is The Bigger Challenge
– The bank's primary concern is repayment capacity.
– Since your sister currently does not meet the bank's eligibility criteria on her own, the bank may not agree to substitute her as the sole borrower.
– Banks normally assess:
Income.
Existing liabilities.
Credit score.
Repayment capacity.
– If these criteria are not met, the bank may reject the proposed borrower substitution.
» Possible Loan Restructuring Options
– Option 1: Loan Takeover By Sister
Your sister applies to become the borrower.
Bank reassesses eligibility.
If approved, you are released from the loan.
This is usually the cleanest solution.
– Option 2: Sister Plus Co-Borrower
Your sister becomes owner.
Another eligible family member joins as co-borrower.
Bank reassesses the combined income.
Bank may then agree to replace you.
– Option 3: Fresh Loan Arrangement
Existing loan is closed.
New loan is sanctioned in the name of the new owner and eligible co-borrower.
Existing mortgage is released.
New mortgage is created.
– This option is often adopted when borrower substitution is not feasible.
» How To Completely Remove Your Liability
– This is the most important part.
– Do not rely on family understandings or private agreements.
– Even if your sister starts paying EMIs, the bank can still legally recover dues from you if your name remains on the loan.
– To be fully discharged:
Bank must formally remove your name from the loan documents.
Bank must issue revised loan documents showing the new borrower structure.
Your release should be acknowledged by the bank in writing.
– Until this happens, your liability generally continues.
» Documents Typically Required
– Identity and address proofs.
– Property documents.
– Existing loan documents.
– No-objection requirements from the lender.
– Income documents of proposed borrowers.
– Registered transfer deed.
– Fresh loan agreements, if restructuring is approved.
– Mortgage-related documentation as required by the lender.
» Practical Approach
– First meet the Axis Bank home loan department and explain the proposed arrangement.
– Ask specifically whether borrower substitution is permitted under your loan structure.
– Obtain the bank's process in writing.
– Simultaneously consult a property lawyer who can review:
Title documents.
Existing mortgage.
Proposed transfer deed.
Liability release mechanism.
– The legal documentation should be aligned with the bank's requirements before registration.
» Risk Areas To Avoid
– Do not transfer ownership first and discuss the loan later.
– Do not assume that EMI payments by another family member remove your liability.
– Do not sign private family arrangements expecting the bank to recognise them.
– Do not proceed with registration without understanding the lender's consent requirements.
» Finally
– Your objective of getting fully released from future financial and legal obligations is absolutely reasonable.
– The safest outcome is one where:
Ownership is legally transferred to your sister.
The bank formally approves the revised borrower arrangement.
Your name is removed from all loan obligations.
Written confirmation of your discharge is obtained from the lender.
– Whether this can be achieved through borrower substitution or requires a fresh loan will depend largely on your sister's eligibility and the bank's internal policy. Therefore, the first practical step is a detailed discussion with the bank's home loan team and a property lawyer before any ownership transfer is initiated.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
AMFI-Registered MFD – ARN 4188
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.linkedin.com/in/ramalingamcfp/