sir i have a 80 lacs home loan and 65k emi i have been paying for last 2yrd. i have a 5lacs of extra income which i intend to prepay a part of loan. will the bank deduct my principal amt or interest with this 5 lacs. what benefit i will get if i prepay a part of loan.
Ans: ? Your financial discipline deserves appreciation
– You have been repaying a large home loan regularly.
– Rs. 65,000 EMI is a significant monthly commitment.
– Paying it for two years shows consistency and planning.
– Setting aside Rs. 5 lakhs to prepay is very thoughtful.
– This shows awareness towards reducing future burden.
? Prepayment directly reduces the principal
– Any lump sum repayment goes towards reducing principal.
– Bank does not use it to pay future interest.
– Future interest is calculated on reduced principal.
– Hence, this gives long-term benefit.
– You start saving interest from the next EMI cycle.
? You can reduce either EMI or tenure
– After part prepayment, bank gives two options.
– One, reduce loan tenure but keep EMI same.
– Two, reduce EMI but keep tenure same.
– Reducing tenure saves more interest in long run.
– Choose tenure reduction for highest benefit.
– Discuss this with your bank before making prepayment.
? Interest saving is significant over loan term
– Home loan interest is front-loaded.
– Early EMIs go mostly towards interest.
– Principal reduces slowly in initial years.
– So, early prepayment cuts interest sharply.
– Rs. 5 lakhs may save several lakhs over years.
– Actual saving depends on interest rate and remaining tenure.
? Helps reduce total loan burden faster
– Original Rs. 80 lakhs loan is large.
– You are only 2 years into it.
– Balance principal is still high.
– Prepayment now improves your financial strength later.
– It brings mental peace and long-term control.
? Prepayment gives better risk control
– Interest rates are rising in recent times.
– Future EMIs may increase if on floating rate.
– Prepaying helps reduce this exposure.
– It gives buffer against inflation and rate hikes.
? Improves your net worth and asset security
– Prepayment increases your ownership in the house.
– More principal repaid means more equity in the house.
– This improves personal net worth position.
– Also improves eligibility for future credit if needed.
? Prepayment improves cash flow in future years
– Even if EMI stays same, loan tenure reduces.
– Loan ends earlier than planned.
– Then, same Rs. 65,000 can be saved or invested.
– Can be used for kids’ education or retirement too.
– Helps build other goals without pressure.
? Emotional and psychological benefit
– Having a large loan creates stress.
– Even if affordable, it stays on the mind.
– Every partial prepayment gives mental peace.
– It makes you feel more in control.
– A stress-free mind helps better financial decisions.
? Avoid touching your emergency funds for prepayment
– Your Rs. 5 lakhs should not be from emergency reserve.
– Keep 6 months of expenses aside always.
– Prepayment should not impact your liquidity safety.
– Otherwise, any urgent need may force costly personal loans.
? Do not stop your investments completely
– Prepayment is good. But don’t stop long-term investments.
– SIPs in mutual funds must continue.
– These build wealth and beat inflation.
– Home loan gives relief, but investments create growth.
– Balance both smartly with proper monthly budgeting.
? Do not use direct stocks or speculative returns for prepayment
– Many use stocks or crypto profits for loan prepayment.
– This increases emotional risk.
– If market corrects, plans may get delayed.
– Use safe, surplus cash only for prepayment.
? Tax benefit does not get impacted negatively
– You still continue to get tax benefit on home loan.
– Section 80C covers principal up to Rs. 1.5 lakhs.
– Section 24(b) gives interest deduction up to Rs. 2 lakhs.
– These benefits remain until loan exists.
– Only, if you reduce tenure a lot, interest portion drops.
– So tax benefit may reduce in later years.
– But that is acceptable for higher savings.
? Plan future prepayments at regular intervals
– Rs. 5 lakhs is a good start.
– If possible, try yearly prepayments.
– Even Rs. 1–2 lakhs yearly helps greatly.
– Try using bonuses, incentives, or surplus income.
– But again, without disturbing SIPs or emergency fund.
? Don’t over-prioritise prepayment if other goals are underfunded
– Many people rush to close home loan early.
– But they ignore kids’ education or retirement.
– Ensure those goals are also funded regularly.
– Prepay loan only from surplus, not from goal funds.
? Keep some flexibility in financial plan
– After prepayment, EMI commitment remains.
– Ensure your monthly cash flow is still safe.
– Don’t stretch all surplus into the loan.
– Maintain balance between security and liquidity.
? Compare home loan interest with investment return
– If your loan interest is high, prepayment gives good return.
– But if interest is low, and investments give more, then wait.
– Equity mutual funds may grow faster in long term.
– But only if you have long horizon and risk tolerance.
– Hence, CFP can help compare options based on your profile.
? Avoid switching to fixed rate unless absolutely needed
– Some banks offer fixed rate for comfort.
– But fixed rate can be 1–2% higher.
– That reduces flexibility and increases cost.
– Better to stay with floating and prepay partly.
? Keep track of amortisation schedule
– Ask bank for updated loan statement.
– Check how principal changes after each prepayment.
– Track interest saving with every part payment.
– This gives you clarity and motivation.
? Prepayment in small parts is also useful
– You need not always do large amounts.
– Even Rs. 25,000 or Rs. 50,000 prepayment helps.
– Do it quarterly or yearly based on surplus.
– Each small step adds up over 10–15 years.
? Finally
– You are on a good path by thinking of prepayment.
– Rs. 5 lakhs will reduce your loan principal.
– This gives high interest saving and shorter loan term.
– Choose tenure reduction for best financial impact.
– Continue SIPs and protect emergency funds.
– Avoid using risky investments or emergency cash.
– Maintain a balance between growth and safety.
– Prepaying with discipline gives peace and long-term financial control.
– Review your decision yearly with a Certified Financial Planner.
– This ensures loan and life goals move together without conflict.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment