Finance

EMI Calculator

Calculate monthly instalments for home, car & personal loans

Configure your loan

₹10.0L
₹50K₹1.0Cr
8.5%
5%20%
20 yrs
1 yr30 yrs
💡 Try a sample:
Monthly EMI₹8,678
Total Payment₹20,82,776
Total Interest₹10,82,776
Principal₹10.0L
Interest Share52%
20×12Payments
8.5%Per annum
52%Interest share

How EMI is calculated — the maths behind your monthly payment

Every EMI you pay is a mix of two parts: a chunk that reduces your outstanding loan balance (principal) and a chunk that goes to the bank as profit (interest). Early in the loan, interest eats up the larger share. By the final years, almost every rupee goes toward principal. This shift is called amortization, and understanding it changes how you think about prepayments.

The standard EMI formulaEMI = P × r × (1+r)n ÷ ((1+r)n − 1)P = loan amount · r = monthly rate (annual ÷ 12 ÷ 100) · n = total months

On a 20-year home loan at 8.5%, that means 240 monthly payments. The formula guarantees each payment is identical, but the internal split between principal and interest changes every single month.

Real-world example

₹40.0L loan — two banks, very different outcomes

Bank A8.4% · 20 yearsEMI: ₹34,614/moTotal interest: ₹43.1L
vs
Bank B8.75% · 25 yearsEMI: ₹32,446/moTotal interest: ₹57.3L

Bank B's "lower" EMI costs ₹14.2L extra. The calculator above shows this split instantly.

Three mistakes that cost borrowers thousands

01

Choosing tenure by EMI alone

A 30-year tenure on ₹50.0L at 9% brings EMI down to ₹40,232 — comfortable on paper. But total interest balloons to ₹94.8L, nearly double the loan itself. The same loan at 15 years costs ₹50,713/month but saves you ₹53.0L in interest. Always check the total cost, not just the monthly number.

02

Ignoring a 0.25% rate difference

Quarter-percent differences sound trivial. On a ₹60.0L, 20-year loan, the gap between 8.5% and 8.75% adds ₹1,002 to your monthly EMI and ₹2.4L to your total outgo. Before you sign, get written quotes from at least three lenders and negotiate.

03

Skipping the scenario tool

The "Save Scenario" button above lets you lock a combination and compare it side by side with another. Most borrowers who compare three scenarios discover a better option they would have missed otherwise.

How prepayment changes the equation

When you make a lump-sum prepayment, the entire amount reduces your outstanding principal directly. On a ₹50.0L, 20-year loan at 8.5%, a one-time prepayment of ₹2.0L at end of year 3 saves roughly ₹5.8L in total interest and shortens your loan by about 14 months.

Most banks let you choose: reduce tenure (saves more money) or reduce EMI (eases monthly pressure). Many lenders allow penalty-free prepayment on variable-rate home loans. Fixed-rate and personal loans may carry fees of 2–4%.

Results are projections based on the formula provided. Actual EMI may vary based on processing fees, prepayment charges, and bank-specific terms. This tool does not constitute financial advice — consult your lender or a qualified advisor before taking a loan.

Key Terms

EMI

Equated Monthly Instalment — the fixed amount you pay every month to repay a loan over its tenure.

Principal

The original loan amount borrowed, excluding any interest charged.

Amortization

The process of gradually paying off a loan through scheduled periodic payments of principal + interest.

Tenure

The duration of the loan, typically expressed in months or years. Longer tenure = lower EMI but higher total interest.