Home Loan Tax Benefits Explained🇮🇳 India • FY 2025-26
Your home loan is one of the biggest tax-saving tools available. Learn how to claim deductions on interest, principal, and stamp duty to save up to ₹5 lakh per year on taxes.
1. Tax Benefits at a Glance
Deduction
Section
Max Limit
Applies To
Interest on home loan
24(b)
₹2,00,000/year
Self-occupied property
Principal repayment
80C
₹1,50,000/year (shared)
Self-occupied or let-out
Stamp duty & registration
80C
Within ₹1.5L limit
Year of purchase only
First-time buyer extra
80EEA
₹1,50,000/year
Stamp value ≤ ₹45L
Interest (let-out property)
24(b)
No limit
Rented property
Maximum annual tax benefit: Up to ₹5,00,000 (₹2L Section 24 + ₹1.5L 80C + ₹1.5L 80EEA) = tax saving of ₹1,56,000 at 30% bracket + cess.
2. Section 24(b) — Interest Deduction
This is the biggest tax benefit of having a home loan. You can deduct up to ₹2,00,000 per year of home loan interest from your taxable income.
Conditions
Property must be self-occupied (you live in it or it's vacant)
Construction or purchase must be completed within 5 years from the end of the financial year in which the loan was taken
If construction not completed in 5 years, the limit drops to ₹30,000/year
Available only in the old tax regime
How much interest do you actually pay?
In the early years of a home loan, 70-80% of your EMI goes towards interest. On a ₹50 lakh loan at 8.5% for 20 years:
Monthly EMI: ₹43,391
Year 1 interest: ₹4,20,350 (but you can only claim ₹2,00,000)
The principal portion of your home loan EMI qualifies for deduction under Section 80C, up to ₹1,50,000 per year.
What counts under 80C for home loans
EMI principal component — The non-interest part of each EMI
Stamp duty and registration charges — Claimable in the year of purchase only
Important: The ₹1.5L limit is shared with other 80C investments (EPF, PPF, ELSS, insurance, etc.). If your EPF contribution already covers ₹72,000, you have only ₹78,000 left for principal repayment and other 80C items.
Condition: Don't sell for 5 years
If you sell the property within 5 years of possession, every 80C deduction claimed on principal repayment gets added back to your income in the year of sale. Plan accordingly.
4. Section 80EEA — First-Time Home Buyers
First-time home buyers get an additional ₹1,50,000 deduction on home loan interest (over and above Section 24).
Eligibility conditions
You should not own any other residential property on the date of loan sanction
Stamp duty value of property should not exceed ₹45 lakh
Loan must have been sanctioned between 1 April 2019 and 31 March 2022 (check for extension in latest budget)
Total interest deduction for first-time buyers: ₹2,00,000 (Section 24) + ₹1,50,000 (80EEA) = ₹3,50,000 per year. At 30% tax bracket, that's ₹1,09,200 annual tax saving on interest alone.
5. Pre-Construction Interest
If you take a home loan for an under-construction property, you pay pre-EMI interest during the construction period. This interest is not wasted — you can claim it as a deduction.
How it works
Total up all pre-construction interest from loan disbursement to completion of construction
Divide this total into 5 equal instalments
Claim each instalment as deduction starting from the year of completion, for 5 years
This is in addition to the regular Section 24 interest deduction (₹2L limit includes both)
Example
Pre-construction interest paid over 3 years: ₹6,00,000
Annual deduction for 5 years: ₹1,20,000/year (claimed under Section 24, within the ₹2L limit)
6. Joint Home Loan — Double the Benefits
If you take a home loan jointly with your spouse (both are co-borrowers and co-owners), each of you can claim separate deductions:
Deduction
Person 1
Person 2
Total
Section 24 Interest
₹2,00,000
₹2,00,000
₹4,00,000
Section 80C Principal
₹1,50,000
₹1,50,000
₹3,00,000
Section 80EEA
₹1,50,000
₹1,50,000
₹3,00,000
Total deduction
₹5,00,000
₹5,00,000
₹10,00,000
Requirements for joint loan benefit: Both persons must be co-owners of the property AND co-borrowers of the loan. The deduction is claimed in proportion to their ownership share (typically 50:50).
7. Second Property Tax Rules
If you own two properties:
One property is treated as self-occupied (you choose which)
Second property is deemed to be let out, even if vacant
You must declare notional rent as income from house property for the second property
For the deemed let-out property, there is no limit on interest deduction under Section 24
Strategy
Choose the property with the higher loan interest as let-out (no cap on interest deduction), and the property with lower interest as self-occupied (₹2L cap). This maximises your total interest deduction.
8. Rented Property — Unlimited Interest Deduction
If you buy a property and rent it out, the tax treatment is different:
Rental income is added to your total income
30% standard deduction on rental income for maintenance (no proof needed)
Entire home loan interest is deductible — no ₹2L limit
Municipal taxes paid are deductible
Example: ₹50L property, ₹40L loan at 8.5%
Rental income: ₹3,60,000/year (₹30,000/month)
Less 30% standard deduction: ₹1,08,000
Net rental income: ₹2,52,000
Less home loan interest: ₹3,36,000
Loss from house property: ₹84,000
This loss can be set off against salary income, reducing your taxable income. However, the maximum set-off is capped at ₹2,00,000 per year. Excess loss can be carried forward for 8 years.
9. Old vs New Regime Impact on Home Loan Benefits
Benefit
Old Regime
New Regime
Section 24 (Interest)
₹2L deduction
Not available (self-occupied)
Section 80C (Principal)
₹1.5L deduction
Not available
Section 80EEA
₹1.5L deduction
Not available
Let-out property interest
Unlimited
Unlimited (with rental income)
Loss set-off limit
₹2L
₹2L
If you have a home loan, the old regime is usually better because you get ₹2L+ in interest deductions that the new regime doesn't allow. Use our Tax Calculator to compare both regimes with your specific numbers.