Hello sir, I am 35 year old, and my take home is 75k, currently I have a debt of 10 lakhs, and I have no savings. I am planning on buying a rental income house of 50k per month on loan for 1.4 cr with a tenure of 20 years, please advise if this is a good plan ?
Ans: You are 35 years old. Your take-home income is Rs 75,000 per month.
You already have a debt of Rs 10 lakhs.
There is no savings in hand right now.
These three points are very important.
Let us understand them one by one:
Rs 10 lakhs debt means you are already repaying an EMI.
With Rs 75,000 monthly income, your cash flow is limited.
Having no savings makes your situation vulnerable to emergencies.
In this situation, buying a new property worth Rs 1.4 crore is a big step.
Let us assess the implications of this move from a 360-degree view.
Monthly Cash Flow Stress
Let us estimate how much EMI you might need to pay.
For a 1.4 crore loan with 20 years term, EMI will be around Rs 1.2–1.3 lakhs.
But your take-home salary is Rs 75,000.
You may expect rental income of Rs 50,000.
Still, EMI exceeds your monthly inflow.
This creates a negative cash flow of Rs 45,000 to 55,000 per month.
You are already repaying for the Rs 10 lakh loan.
This adds further strain on your cash flow.
You may depend on personal loans or credit cards in future.
This may lead to a debt trap.
Risk of Vacancy or Rental Delay
Real estate income is not guaranteed monthly.
Tenants may delay payments or vacate anytime.
You may lose 1 to 3 months rent per year during vacancy.
During those months, you will pay the EMI from your pocket.
This will create more financial pressure.
With no emergency fund, it becomes risky.
You Have No Emergency Buffer
You mentioned zero savings.
That is a very critical concern.
Any health issue can disturb your finances.
Job loss or income cut can cause heavy damage.
If tenants vacate suddenly, EMI burden will be yours alone.
A Certified Financial Planner always advises to build an emergency fund first.
3 to 6 months of expenses should be saved in liquid form.
That should be your first financial priority.
Buying Property on Loan: Costly in Long Term
Let us assess this step from a long-term view:
A 1.4 crore loan for 20 years can cost over Rs 2.8 crores total with interest.
You will repay more than double the principal.
You are expecting Rs 50,000 rent per month.
But there are other costs too.
Hidden costs include:
Property tax
Maintenance
Repairs and painting
Insurance
Brokerage for tenant
Legal issues if any
Your net rental yield may drop below 3% annually.
This is not a high return.
Alternatives Can Give Better Control
With Rs 75,000 income and Rs 10 lakh debt, here is what you can do:
Step 1 – Build Emergency Corpus First
Save at least Rs 1.5 lakhs in a savings or liquid fund.
This will act as cushion for any emergency.
It avoids borrowing at high interest.
Step 2 – Start Debt Repayment Plan
Pay off high interest debt first, if any.
Avoid minimum payments on credit cards.
Negotiate better terms with lenders if possible.
Step 3 – Start Small SIPs in Regular Mutual Funds
Start Rs 2,000 to Rs 3,000 monthly SIP in regular mutual funds.
Invest via a Certified Financial Planner.
Direct mutual funds give no advice or hand-holding.
Wrong fund choice can reduce your returns.
Regular mutual funds through MFD with CFP guidance give:
Professional fund selection
Rebalancing advice
Tax planning
Behavioural coaching in tough markets
Direct mutual funds have no such support.
You may choose the wrong fund and lose returns.
The so-called "savings" on commission can cost you much more.
Your Rental House Plan: Review Key Points
You plan to buy a Rs 1.4 crore property to earn Rs 50,000 rent.
Let us relook at key aspects:
1. Rental Yield:
Rent is Rs 6 lakhs per year.
On a Rs 1.4 crore property, that is just 4.3%.
After expenses, net yield is even lower.
2. Loan Repayment:
Total EMI outflow in 20 years is over Rs 2.8 crores.
Property value may not grow in the same proportion.
3. Illiquidity:
Property cannot be sold quickly.
If you face financial need, this becomes a major problem.
4. Leverage Risk:
You are trying to buy big with borrowed money.
This increases financial risk.
Your income cannot support the EMI even with rental inflow.
Better Alternative Plan: Step-by-Step Financial Building
• First 6 months:
Cut unnecessary expenses.
Build emergency fund of Rs 1.5 lakhs.
Clear part of your Rs 10 lakh debt.
• Next 6 to 12 months:
Start SIPs of Rs 3,000 to Rs 5,000 monthly.
Take help from Certified Financial Planner.
Avoid real estate and ULIPs at this stage.
• Year 2 onwards:
Increase SIP gradually as income improves.
Clear your existing debt completely.
Build goal-based investment plan.
• Future plans:
Once you have Rs 15–20 lakhs corpus, evaluate property.
But buy only if cash flow supports EMI.
Prefer loan EMI not exceeding 40% of income.
Rent alone should not be your support for EMI.
Investment vs Asset Ownership
A rental house gives you ownership feeling.
But from financial angle, your focus should be wealth creation.
Actively managed mutual funds through Certified Financial Planners offer:
Flexibility
Tax efficiency
Professional fund management
Goal tracking
Liquidity
Real estate gives none of these.
Liquidity is poor.
Rental yield is low.
Buying on heavy loan is very risky.
Your Financial Stability Is Priority
At this point, your priority is stability.
Avoid aggressive financial decisions.
Debt of Rs 10 lakhs plus Rs 1.4 crore more can collapse your future.
Instead, take small consistent steps.
Build:
Emergency fund
SIPs
Debt repayment
Insurance coverage
Tax plan
This path leads to financial freedom.
Rental property can come later.
Avoid These Mistakes
Don’t chase rental yield with 100% loan.
Don’t invest all earnings into one single illiquid asset.
Don’t ignore insurance and savings.
Don’t assume rent will come on time always.
Don’t take emotional decision in property buying.
Finally
Buying a rental house now is not advisable.
Your income cannot support it.
Your savings are nil.
Your debt is already Rs 10 lakhs.
Real estate is not a good investment for your case today.
It creates heavy EMI pressure.
Instead, build foundation first.
Start with small SIPs
Clear existing debts
Build emergency reserves
Set clear financial goals
Get guidance from Certified Financial Planner
Take slow and safe steps.
That will take you to long-term wealth.
Don’t stretch your income for big loans.
Financial peace matters more than property ownership.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment