Home Loan Hub Tricity : The Complete Guide for Tricity Property Buyers 2026

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Loan Hub · Tricity Property Buyers

The Complete Home Loan Guide for Tricity Property Buyers 2026

Everything on eligibility, EMI, CIBIL score, bank-by-bank comparison, PMAY, tax benefits, and every mistake that gets applications rejected — written for buyers in Mohali, Chandigarh, Zirakpur, Panchkula, Kharar and New Chandigarh.

✍ By Manindar Verma, Managing Director 🏛 RERA: PBRERA-CHD04-REA0390 🔄 Updated: July 2026
📖 This guide is part of the Ultimate Tricity Property Buying Guide — the complete pillar page covering every step of buying property in the Tricity.
A note on the numbers in this guide: Interest rates, eligibility criteria, and charges change with RBI policy and vary by lender and borrower profile. Figures here reflect market research as of July 2026 (RBI repo rate at 5.25%, unchanged since the April 2026 policy review) and are meant to help you understand ranges and mechanics — always confirm current rates and terms directly with the bank before applying. This is educational content, not financial advice.

A home loan is usually the largest financial commitment most people make in their lifetime — often 15 to 30 years of monthly payments tied to one decision. Yet most buyers spend more time comparing flooring tiles than comparing loan structures. This guide covers everything from “what is a home loan” through to bank-by-bank comparisons, so you can walk into any bank branch or NBFC office already knowing more than the loan officer expects.

What is a Home Loan, and Why It Matters

A home loan is money borrowed from a bank or housing finance company (HFC) to purchase, construct, or renovate a residential property, repaid over an agreed tenure through Equated Monthly Instalments (EMIs) that cover both principal and interest. The property itself is mortgaged to the lender as security until the loan is fully repaid.

In India, most home loans today are linked to external benchmarks — primarily the RBI’s repo rate — through frameworks like the Repo Linked Lending Rate (RLLR) or External Benchmark Lending Rate (EBLR). This means your EMI can move up or down when the RBI changes the repo rate, which currently stands at 5.25% as of the most recent Monetary Policy Committee review. Interest in India is calculated on a reducing balance basis — you only pay interest on the outstanding principal, which is why prepaying early in the loan tenure saves disproportionately more than prepaying later.

Why it matters more than people think: A 0.5% difference in interest rate on a ₹50 lakh, 20-year loan can change your total interest outgo by ₹3-6 lakh over the loan’s life. Comparing lenders properly, before signing, is worth far more time than most buyers give it.

Types of Home Loans

Loan TypePurpose
Purchase LoanBuying a ready or under-construction residential property — the most common type
Construction LoanBuilding a house on land you already own, disbursed in stages tied to construction progress
Plot LoanBuying a residential plot, usually with a condition to construct within a set period
Composite LoanCombined plot purchase + construction, financed as a single loan
Home Improvement LoanRenovation, repairs, or upgrades to an existing home
Home Extension LoanAdding rooms or floors to an existing structure
Balance TransferMoving an existing home loan to a new lender for a better rate or terms
Top-Up LoanAdditional borrowing on top of an existing home loan, usually at home-loan-like rates rather than personal loan rates
Loan Against Property (LAP)Borrowing against an already-owned property for any purpose, not restricted to housing

Who Can Apply — Eligibility Criteria Explained

Eligibility comes down to five factors banks weigh together, not any single number in isolation: age, income, employment stability, existing debt obligations, and credit score. Meeting one criterion strongly doesn’t offset a weak one elsewhere — a high salary with heavy existing EMIs can still get rejected.

Age Limit

Most lenders require the loan to be fully repaid before the borrower turns 60-70 (salaried) or 65-70 (self-employed), which effectively caps your maximum tenure based on your current age. A 45-year-old applicant may only be eligible for a 15-20 year tenure instead of the full 30 years available to a 25-year-old.

Income Criteria & Salary Requirements

There’s no single minimum salary mandated across the industry — it depends on the loan amount sought and the city’s cost of living. What matters more than the absolute number is your FOIR (explained below) and how it compares to the EMI the loan would require.

Employment Type — Salaried vs Self-Employed vs Business Income

Salaried applicants are generally assessed on net monthly salary, employment tenure (usually 2+ years total, 6+ months in the current job), and employer reputation. Self-employed professionals and business owners are assessed on average income over the last 2-3 years of ITRs, business vintage (usually 3+ years), and profit stability rather than a single year’s peak income — a business with one strong year and two weak ones often gets a more conservative eligibility than steady moderate earnings.

FOIR Explained — The Number That Decides Your Eligibility

FOIR (Fixed Obligation to Income Ratio) is the percentage of your monthly income already committed to EMIs and fixed obligations. Most banks cap FOIR at 40-50% of net monthly income for salaried applicants, sometimes up to 55-65% for higher income brackets. If your FOIR after adding the new EMI exceeds the bank’s threshold, your eligible loan amount shrinks — or the application gets rejected outright.

Common Mistake: Applying for a large loan while carrying a car loan, personal loan, or high credit card outstanding, then being surprised when the sanctioned amount is far lower than the bank’s advertised “eligibility calculator” figure. Existing EMIs are the single most underestimated eligibility killer.

Property Eligibility — Loan-to-Value, Margin Money & Down Payment

Beyond your personal eligibility, the property itself has to qualify. Loan-to-Value (LTV) ratio caps how much of the property’s value a bank will finance — typically 90% for loans up to ₹30 lakh, 80% for ₹30 lakh-₹75 lakh, and 75% above that, per RBI guidelines. The remaining portion — margin money — has to come from your own funds as the down payment. This is separate from, and in addition to, registration and other transaction costs.

Documents Required

For Salaried Applicants

  • PAN & Aadhaar
  • Last 3 months’ salary slips
  • Form 16 / ITR for last 2 years
  • Bank statements (6 months)
  • Employment/appointment letter
  • Property documents

For Self-Employed / Business Owners

  • PAN & Aadhaar
  • ITR for last 2-3 years (self + business)
  • Business proof (registration, GST)
  • Bank statements (12 months, personal + business)
  • Profit & Loss statement, Balance Sheet (CA-certified)
  • Property documents

For NRIs

  • Passport & Visa/work permit copy
  • Overseas employment/salary proof
  • NRE/NRO bank statements
  • Power of Attorney (registered, for an India-based representative)
  • PAN card
  • Property documents

The Complete Home Loan Process, Step by Step

  1. Pre-Approval: Get an in-principle sanction based on your income and documents before finalizing a property — this tells you your real budget upfront.
  2. Property Selection & Application: Submit the loan application along with property documents once you’ve selected a unit.
  3. Property Verification: The bank’s technical team inspects the property’s construction stage, layout, and compliance with sanctioned plans.
  4. Legal Check: The bank’s legal team verifies title, chain of ownership, RERA registration, and encumbrance status.
  5. Technical Valuation: An independent valuer assesses the property’s market value, which the bank uses to finalize the loan-to-value calculation.
  6. Sanction Letter: Once verification clears, the bank issues a formal sanction letter specifying loan amount, interest rate, and tenure.
  7. Disbursement: Funds are released — either in full for ready properties, or in stages tied to construction milestones for under-construction ones.
  8. Registration: The property is registered in your name at the sub-registrar’s office, with the bank’s lien noted on the title.
  9. Possession: You take possession of the property, and EMI payments (already ongoing on the disbursed amount, or starting in full if fully disbursed) continue through the loan tenure.

Getting Stuck at Any Step?

We coordinate directly with banks and NBFCs for Tricity property buyers — from pre-approval through to disbursement — so you’re not navigating this alone.

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The Complete CIBIL Score Guide

CIBIL (Credit Information Bureau India Limited) is India’s oldest and most widely used credit bureau, maintaining a score from 300 to 900 that summarizes your repayment history and credit behavior. Banks pull this score — or an equivalent from Experian, CRIF High Mark, or Equifax, India’s other three RBI-licensed bureaus — as one of the first checks on any loan application.

300-579 Poor580-669 Average670-739 Good740-900 Excellent
Higher rejection riskBest rates & fastest approval

Most banks require a minimum score of 650-700 to consider a home loan application at all, and reserve their best advertised interest rates for applicants above 750. Below 650, approval becomes difficult regardless of income, and if approved at all, it’s usually at a materially higher rate.

How to Check Your CIBIL Score for Free

You’re entitled to one free full credit report per calendar year directly from each bureau — CIBIL, Experian, CRIF High Mark, and Equifax — through their official websites. Many banking apps and financial platforms also offer free score checks (a “soft enquiry,” which doesn’t affect your score), making it easy to monitor your score without cost.

What Actually Moves Your Score

FactorImpact
Payment HistoryThe single biggest factor — even one missed EMI or credit card payment can drop your score noticeably
Credit UtilizationUsing more than 30-40% of your credit card limit regularly signals risk, even if you pay in full
Settled / Written-Off AccountsA “settled” status (paid less than owed) hurts your score more than a fully closed loan and stays visible for years
Hard EnquiriesApplying for multiple loans/cards in a short period signals credit-hungry behavior and can pull your score down
Credit Mix & AgeA healthy mix of secured (home/car) and unsecured (credit card) credit, held over a longer history, generally helps

How to Improve a Low Score

  • Pay every EMI and credit card bill on or before the due date — set auto-pay if you tend to forget.
  • Bring credit card utilization down below 30% of the limit, ideally by paying more than once a month if needed.
  • Avoid applying for multiple loans or cards within a short window before a home loan application.
  • Clear any settled or written-off accounts where possible, and dispute genuine errors on your credit report directly with the bureau.
  • Give it time — meaningful improvement typically takes 4-12 months of consistent good behavior, not weeks.
Common Myth: Checking your own CIBIL score lowers it. This is false — self-checks are “soft enquiries” and have no impact. Only lender-initiated “hard enquiries” during an actual application can have a small, temporary effect.

Home Loan EMI Calculator

EMI (Equated Monthly Instalment) is calculated using the formula EMI = P × r × (1+r)ⁿ / ((1+r)ⁿ − 1), where P is the principal loan amount, r is the monthly interest rate (annual rate ÷ 12 ÷ 100), and n is the total number of monthly instalments (tenure in years × 12). Move the sliders below to see how loan amount, rate, and tenure change your EMI.

Interactive EMI Calculator

Adjust the sliders — your EMI, total interest, and total payment update instantly.

Monthly EMI
Total Interest
Total Payment
Indicative only. Your actual rate depends on credit score, lender, and profile — confirm with the bank before deciding.

Illustrative EMI Table (at 8.5% p.a.)

Loan Amount10 Years15 Years20 Years25 Years30 Years
₹20 Lakh₹24,807₹19,692₹17,357₹16,106₹15,391
₹30 Lakh₹37,211₹29,538₹26,035₹24,159₹23,086
₹50 Lakh₹62,018₹49,230₹43,392₹40,266₹38,477
₹75 Lakh₹93,027₹73,845₹65,088₹60,398₹57,716
₹1 Crore₹1,24,036₹98,460₹86,784₹80,531₹76,954

Figures assume a flat 8.5% p.a. rate for illustration — your actual rate will vary. Notice how the EMI drop from 20 to 30 years is much smaller than from 10 to 20 years, while total interest paid keeps rising — a longer tenure lowers your monthly burden but increases total cost.

Amortization in one line: In the early years of any loan, most of your EMI goes toward interest, not principal — which is why prepaying in years 1-5 reduces your total interest far more than prepaying the same amount in year 15.

Comparing Major Lenders

Public sector banks, private banks, and housing finance companies (HFCs) each have a different personality when it comes to home loans. This is a qualitative comparison — actual interest rates change with RBI policy and your specific profile, so treat this as a starting point for questions to ask, not a rate quote.

Public Sector Banks (SBI, PNB, Bank of Baroda, Canara Bank, Union Bank, Indian Bank)

Typically strong on: Lower processing fees, competitive rates tied closely to repo rate, wide branch network for in-person support
Watch for: Slower disbursement timelines, more paperwork-heavy processes, less flexibility for self-employed/business income assessment

Private Banks (HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, Axis Bank, Kotak)

Typically strong on: Faster processing and disbursement, digital-first application process, more flexible eligibility assessment for salaried professionals
Watch for: Processing fees and other charges can run slightly higher; always ask for a full charges breakdown, not just the headline rate

Housing Finance Companies (LIC Housing Finance, Bajaj Housing Finance)

Typically strong on: More flexible eligibility criteria, often better suited for self-employed or non-standard income profiles
Watch for: Rates can run slightly higher than top-tier bank rates for the same profile — compare the full cost, not just eligibility ease
What to CompareWhy It Matters
Interest Rate TypeRepo-linked (RLLR/EBLR) is now standard and moves transparently with RBI policy — ask which benchmark your specific rate is tied to
Processing FeeUsually 0.25%-1% of loan amount plus GST — negotiate this, it’s rarely fixed
Women Applicant BenefitMany lenders offer a small rate concession (commonly around 0.05%) when a woman is a co-applicant or sole owner
Prepayment RulesRBI mandates no prepayment penalty on floating-rate loans to individual borrowers — confirm this explicitly before signing
Balance Transfer EaseSome lenders make it easier to switch away later than others — ask about transfer processing time upfront

Charges Beyond the Interest Rate

ChargeTypical Range
Processing Fee0.25%-1% of loan amount + GST
Legal & Technical ChargesFlat fee, varies by lender, covers title verification and property valuation
MOD (Memorandum of Deposit) ChargesStamp duty on mortgage deed registration, varies by state
Loan Insurance (optional but commonly bundled)One-time premium, often financed into the loan itself — always ask if it’s mandatory or optional
GST on Charges18% applicable on processing fees and most service charges
Common Mistake: Loan insurance is frequently presented as compulsory when it’s actually optional or available from a separate insurer at a lower premium. Always ask explicitly whether it’s mandatory before agreeing to have it added to your loan amount.

Tax Benefits on Home Loans

Important — Old vs New Tax Regime: Under the New Tax Regime (the current default for most taxpayers), the home loan interest deduction under Section 24(b) and principal deduction under Section 80C are not available for a self-occupied property. These deductions remain available only if you opt for the Old Tax Regime. Confirm which regime you’re filing under before assuming any of the benefits below apply to you.
SectionBenefitStatus (Old Regime Only)
Section 80CUp to ₹1.5 lakh/year on principal repayment (within the overall 80C limit shared with other investments)Available
Section 24(b)Up to ₹2 lakh/year on interest for a self-occupied property; no cap for a let-out property, but overall loss set-off against other income is capped at ₹2 lakh/yearAvailable
Section 80EEAdditional ₹50,000/year for specific older loans (2016-17 sanction window)Only for loans from that specific window
Section 80EEAAdditional ₹1.5 lakh/year on affordable housing loans (stamp value ≤ ₹45 lakh, first-time buyer)Closed to new loans — only available for loans sanctioned between April 1, 2019 and March 31, 2022, claimable for the remaining tenure of those specific loans

If you took your loan after March 31, 2022, Section 80EEA does not apply to you regardless of how affordable the property is — your available benefits are limited to Section 80C and 24(b), and only under the Old Tax Regime.

PMAY — Current Status

Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana (PMAY) was launched in 2015 to support affordable housing. Its Credit Linked Subsidy Scheme (CLSS) — the component that gave interest subsidies directly on home loans — has been discontinued for new applicants: the MIG (middle-income) category subsidy ended March 31, 2021, and the EWS/LIG category subsidy ended March 31, 2022. A newer PMAY-U 2.0 framework exists with its own eligibility structure and components, distinct from the original CLSS interest subsidy. If PMAY relevance matters to your purchase, check current eligibility and component details directly on the official PMAY portal (pmay-urban.gov.in) before assuming a subsidy applies — scheme structures have changed materially since 2022 and continue to evolve.

Specialized Home Loan Topics

Fixed vs Floating Interest Rate

A fixed rate stays constant for a set period (often the entire tenure or a few years before reverting to floating), giving payment certainty but usually at a rate premium. A floating rate moves with the lender’s benchmark (now almost always repo-linked), meaning your EMI or tenure can change when the RBI moves the repo rate. Most home loans in India today are floating by default — fixed-rate home loans are less common and typically come at a meaningfully higher starting rate. For most long-tenure home loans, floating tends to work out cheaper over time, but it requires comfort with EMI variability.

Balance Transfer — When It’s Worth Switching

A balance transfer moves your outstanding loan to a new lender, usually to capture a lower rate. It’s generally worth considering if the rate difference is meaningful (even 0.4-0.5% can matter on a large, long-tenure loan) and you’re still early enough in the tenure that a meaningful chunk of interest savings remains. Factor in the new lender’s processing fee and any charges from the transfer itself — the savings need to outweigh these costs, not just look good on the headline rate.

Top-Up Loan

A top-up loan lets existing home loan borrowers with a good repayment track record borrow additional funds — often for renovation, another investment, or personal needs — usually at rates much closer to home loan rates than personal loan rates, since it’s secured against the same property. It’s frequently the cheapest form of large borrowing available to an existing homeowner.

Prepayment & Foreclosure

Prepayment (paying down part of the principal ahead of schedule) and foreclosure (closing the loan entirely early) both reduce total interest paid, since interest is calculated on the reducing balance. RBI regulations prohibit lenders from charging prepayment or foreclosure penalties on floating-rate loans taken by individual borrowers — if a lender tries to charge one, that’s worth challenging directly. The earlier in the tenure you prepay, the greater the interest saved, since early EMIs are interest-heavy.

Why Home Loan Applications Get Rejected

  • CIBIL score below the lender’s threshold (commonly 650-700)
  • FOIR exceeding the bank’s cap once the new EMI is added to existing obligations
  • Property lacking clear title, RERA registration, or legal clearances
  • Inconsistent or undeclared income, especially for self-employed applicants
  • Frequent job changes or short employment tenure for salaried applicants
  • Existing loan defaults or settled/written-off accounts on the credit report

How to Increase Your Loan Eligibility

  • Add a co-applicant with independent income — typically a working spouse — to boost combined eligibility
  • Pay down or close existing EMIs before applying, directly lowering your FOIR
  • Opt for a longer tenure to reduce the EMI-to-income ratio (though this increases total interest paid)
  • Improve your CIBIL score in the months before applying rather than after a rejection
  • Choose a lender whose income assessment method favors your specific profile (salaried vs self-employed criteria differ meaningfully across lenders)

Joint Home Loans

Applying jointly with a spouse, parent, or sibling combines incomes for eligibility purposes and can meaningfully increase the loan amount you qualify for. Both co-applicants can also independently claim tax benefits (Section 80C and 24(b), under the Old Tax Regime) on their respective shares of the EMI, provided both are co-owners of the property — effectively doubling the usable deduction ceiling for a couple.

Women Home Loan Benefits

Many lenders offer a small interest rate concession — commonly around 0.05% — when a woman is the sole applicant or a co-applicant/co-owner. Beyond the rate benefit, several states (though specifics vary) offer reduced stamp duty when a property is registered solely or jointly in a woman’s name, which can meaningfully lower registration costs. Confirm current stamp duty rebate rules for Punjab directly with your sub-registrar’s office, as these are state-specific and can change.

Home Loans for NRIs

NRIs can avail home loans in India for property purchase, subject to additional documentation — overseas employment/income proof, NRE/NRO account statements, and often a registered Power of Attorney authorizing someone in India to handle property-related processes on their behalf. Loan tenure for NRIs is sometimes capped shorter than for resident Indians, and lenders may require a local co-applicant in some cases. Repayment must flow through NRE/NRO banking channels as per FEMA guidelines.

Home Loans for Self-Employed Professionals & Business Owners

Self-employed applicants are assessed on income stability over 2-3 years of ITRs rather than a single year’s figure, along with business vintage (usually a minimum of 3 years) and sector risk profile. Fluctuating income is common and expected — what lenders look for is a consistent or growing trend rather than volatility, and clean, well-maintained financial documentation (CA-certified P&L and balance sheet) makes a material difference to how favorably the application is assessed.

Not Sure Which Route Fits You?

Whether you’re salaried, self-employed, an NRI, or applying jointly, we can help map out which lender and loan structure actually fits your specific situation — before you submit a single application.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Basics

What is a home loan?
A home loan is borrowed money from a bank or housing finance company used to buy, construct, or renovate a residential property, repaid through monthly EMIs over an agreed tenure, with the property held as security.
How do I get a home loan in India?
Get an in-principle approval based on income and documents, select your property, complete the bank’s legal and technical verification, receive a sanction letter, and get disbursement after registration.
How do I apply for a home loan?
Apply directly at a bank branch, through the lender’s website or app, or via a loan aggregator, submitting income and identity documents along with the property details.
What is the best bank for a home loan?
There’s no single “best” bank — it depends on your profile. Public sector banks often have lower processing fees, private banks tend to process faster, and HFCs are more flexible for self-employed applicants. Compare all three for your specific situation.
Where can I get the lowest home loan interest rate?
The lowest rates typically go to applicants with a CIBIL score above 750, stable income, low existing debt, and a woman co-applicant. Compare offers across 3-4 lenders rather than assuming one bank is always cheapest.

Eligibility & Documents

What is the minimum CIBIL score for a home loan?
Most lenders look for at least 650-700, with the best rates reserved for scores above 750. Below 650, approval becomes difficult regardless of income.
Is there a minimum salary required for a home loan?
There’s no universal minimum — eligibility depends on your FOIR (how much of your income is already committed to EMIs) relative to the loan amount sought, not a fixed salary threshold.
What documents are required for a home loan?
PAN, Aadhaar, income proof (salary slips/ITR), bank statements, and property documents — self-employed and NRI applicants need additional business or overseas income proof.
Can I get a home loan for a joint purchase?
Yes — joint home loans combine incomes for higher eligibility, and both co-owners can independently claim tax benefits under the Old Tax Regime.
Can self-employed people get home loans?
Yes, assessed on 2-3 years of ITRs and business vintage rather than a single year’s income — consistent documentation matters more than peak earnings.
Can NRIs get home loans in India?
Yes, with additional documentation — overseas income proof, NRE/NRO account statements, and typically a registered Power of Attorney for an India-based representative.
What is FOIR and why does it matter?
FOIR (Fixed Obligation to Income Ratio) is the share of your income already committed to EMIs and obligations. Most banks cap it at 40-50% of net income, and exceeding this shrinks your eligible loan amount.
What is the maximum age limit for a home loan?
Most lenders require the loan to be repaid before age 60-70 (salaried) or 65-70 (self-employed), which caps your available tenure based on your current age.

EMI & Calculations

How is EMI calculated?
EMI = P × r × (1+r)ⁿ ÷ ((1+r)ⁿ − 1), where P is principal, r is the monthly interest rate, and n is the number of monthly instalments.
Does a longer tenure always mean paying more interest?
Yes — a longer tenure lowers your monthly EMI but increases total interest paid over the loan’s life, since you’re borrowing the money for longer.
What is Pre-EMI vs Full EMI?
Pre-EMI (interest-only payments during construction, for under-construction property) starts once disbursement begins; Full EMI (principal + interest) starts once the full loan is disbursed, typically at possession.
Can I use an EMI calculator before applying?
Yes — use the interactive calculator on this page to estimate your EMI, total interest, and total payment for any loan amount, rate, and tenure combination.

Rates, Charges & Fixed vs Floating

Should I choose fixed or floating interest rate?
Floating rates are more common and tend to be cheaper over a full tenure, but come with EMI variability as the RBI’s repo rate changes. Fixed rates offer certainty at a rate premium.
What processing fee do banks charge?
Typically 0.25%-1% of the loan amount plus GST — this is often negotiable, so ask before assuming it’s fixed.
Is loan insurance mandatory?
Usually not — it’s frequently presented as compulsory but is often optional or available from a separate insurer at a lower premium. Always ask explicitly.
Are there hidden charges in home loans?
Legal and technical charges, MOD (mortgage deed stamp duty), and GST on fees are commonly overlooked — always ask for a complete charges breakdown before signing.

Balance Transfer, Top-Up & Prepayment

What is a home loan balance transfer?
Moving your outstanding loan to a new lender, usually to get a lower interest rate — worthwhile if the rate difference and remaining tenure justify the transfer costs.
What is a top-up loan?
Additional borrowing on top of an existing home loan, at rates much closer to home loan rates than personal loan rates, available to borrowers with a good repayment record.
Can I prepay my home loan without penalty?
Yes — RBI prohibits prepayment or foreclosure penalties on floating-rate loans for individual borrowers. If a lender tries to charge one, that’s worth challenging.
Is it better to prepay early in the loan tenure?
Yes — early EMIs are interest-heavy, so prepaying in the first few years saves significantly more total interest than prepaying the same amount later.

Rejection & Eligibility Improvement

Why do home loan applications get rejected?
Common reasons include low CIBIL score, high FOIR from existing EMIs, unclear property title, inconsistent income documentation, or a poor credit history including settled/written-off accounts.
How can I increase my home loan eligibility?
Add a co-applicant with independent income, clear existing EMIs, improve your CIBIL score beforehand, or opt for a longer tenure to reduce the EMI-to-income ratio.
Can I reapply after a home loan rejection?
Yes, but address the specific rejection reason first — reapplying immediately without fixing the underlying issue (CIBIL, FOIR, documentation) usually leads to another rejection.

Tax & Government Schemes

What tax benefits are available on home loans?
Under the Old Tax Regime: up to ₹1.5 lakh/year on principal under Section 80C, and up to ₹2 lakh/year on interest under Section 24(b) for a self-occupied property. These are not available under the New Tax Regime.
Is Section 80EEA still available for new home loans?
No — 80EEA only applies to loans sanctioned between April 1, 2019 and March 31, 2022. New loans taken after that window don’t qualify, regardless of the property’s affordability.
Is PMAY subsidy still available?
The original CLSS interest subsidy component is discontinued for new applicants (MIG ended March 2021, EWS/LIG ended March 2022). Check the official PMAY portal for current PMAY-U 2.0 eligibility before assuming a subsidy applies.
Do women get any home loan benefits?
Many lenders offer a small rate concession (commonly around 0.05%) for women applicants, and several states offer reduced stamp duty for property registered in a woman’s name.

Glossary of Home Loan & Banking Terms

EMIEquated Monthly Instalment — fixed monthly repayment covering principal and interest
PrincipalThe original loan amount borrowed, excluding interest
TenureThe total repayment period of the loan, in months or years
Repo RateThe rate at which RBI lends to commercial banks, the benchmark most floating home loan rates track
RLLRRepo Linked Lending Rate — a lending rate directly tied to the RBI repo rate
EBLRExternal Benchmark Lending Rate — the broader framework RLLR falls under
CIBIL ScoreA 300-900 credit score reflecting repayment history and credit behavior
FOIRFixed Obligation to Income Ratio — the share of income committed to EMIs and obligations
LTV RatioLoan-to-Value — the percentage of property value a bank will finance
Margin MoneyThe portion of property value the buyer must fund, not covered by the loan
Sanction LetterA formal letter confirming loan approval, amount, rate, and tenure
DisbursementRelease of loan funds, in full or in construction-linked stages
Pre-EMIInterest-only payments during construction, before full disbursement
Full EMIPrincipal + interest payments after full loan disbursement
Balance TransferMoving an existing loan to a new lender, usually for a better rate
Top-Up LoanAdditional borrowing on an existing home loan at home-loan-like rates
Loan Against Property (LAP)Borrowing against an owned property for any purpose
PrepaymentPaying down loan principal ahead of the scheduled EMI plan
ForeclosureClosing out the entire outstanding loan before tenure ends
Processing FeeA one-time charge levied by the lender to process the loan application
MOD ChargesMemorandum of Deposit — stamp duty on mortgage deed registration
Title DeedThe legal document establishing ownership of a property
Encumbrance CertificateA document confirming a property is free of legal/monetary liabilities
RERAReal Estate Regulatory Authority — the regulatory body overseeing real estate projects
Occupation Certificate (OC)Certifies a building is legally fit for occupancy
Completion Certificate (CC)Certifies construction is complete as per sanctioned plans
JamabandiPunjab’s periodic land record documenting ownership and land rights
MutationUpdating land revenue records to reflect a change in ownership
CLUChange of Land Use — legal conversion of agricultural land for other use
Power of Attorney (POA)A legal authorization for someone to act on another’s behalf, common for NRI transactions
Stamp DutyA state government tax levied on property transaction documents
Registration ChargesGovernment fee for legally registering a property transaction
GST on Under-Construction PropertyTax applicable on under-construction property purchases, not on ready-to-move properties
PMAYPradhan Mantri Awas Yojana — government affordable housing scheme
CLSSCredit Linked Subsidy Scheme — PMAY’s interest subsidy component (largely discontinued for new applicants)
Section 80CIncome tax section allowing deduction on home loan principal repayment
Section 24(b)Income tax section allowing deduction on home loan interest
Old vs New Tax RegimeTwo parallel tax systems in India; home loan deductions apply only under the Old Regime
NRE AccountNon-Resident External account for income earned outside India, fully repatriable
NRO AccountNon-Resident Ordinary account for income earned within India, subject to repatriation rules
FEMAForeign Exchange Management Act — governs cross-border financial transactions, including NRI property dealings
AmortizationThe gradual reduction of loan principal over time through scheduled payments
Fixed RateAn interest rate that stays constant for a set period or the full tenure
Floating RateAn interest rate that moves with the lender’s benchmark rate over time

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The Bottom Line

ROYALS EXPERT OPINION

A home loan isn’t just a number on a sanction letter — it’s a 15-30 year financial relationship. The lowest advertised rate isn’t always the cheapest loan once processing fees, insurance, and prepayment terms are factored in, and the “best” bank depends entirely on your income type, credit profile, and how soon you might want to prepay or switch. We help Tricity buyers work through this before they walk into a branch, not after a rejection or a regretted balance transfer.

Whether you’re a first-time salaried buyer in Mohali, a self-employed business owner in Zirakpur, or an NRI purchasing from abroad, the mechanics in this guide apply — the difference is in which lender and structure fit your specific profile. That’s the conversation worth having before you submit any application.

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