How Much Home Loan Can I Afford - The 30% + 5x Rules (India 2026)

How Much Home Loan Can I Afford – The 30% + 5x Rules (India 2026)

In short: Two rules govern home loan affordability in India: the 30% rule (EMI under 30% of take-home) and the 5x rule (home loan principal under 5x annual gross income). Most Indians stretch beyond both and discover the consequences during job loss, health event, or kid expenses. This guide gives the exact math by salary bracket, the hidden costs banks ignore in their eligibility calculation (down payment, stamp duty, registration, interiors, ongoing maintenance), the EMI vs SIP trade-off, and what your real affordable property price actually is.

The Two Rules That Matter

Rule 1: EMI under 30% of take-home

Lenders allow up to 50-65% of take-home; this is the MAXIMUM, not the recommended. At 50%+ EMI, you have no room for:

  • Existing EMIs (car, personal loan)
  • Kid school fees (Rs.20-50K/month for private school)
  • Parents care (Rs.10-30K/month)
  • SIPs for retirement
  • Emergency fund / sinking funds
  • Lifestyle expenses

The 30% rule is the affordable ceiling. Aspirational ceiling can stretch to 35%; absolute upper limit 40%.

Rule 2: Home loan under 5x annual gross income

Loan amount = price – down payment. Keep this under 5x annual gross income.

Example: Rs.25 lakh annual gross income → max loan Rs.1.25 crore → with 25% down payment, max property price Rs.1.67 crore.

Both rules must pass

If only one passes, you are stretching. If neither passes, the property is unaffordable regardless of how the bank assesses it.

Affordable Property Price by Take-Home

Take-homeMax EMI (30%)Max loan @ 8.5%, 20 yrsWith 25% down, max property
Rs.50,000Rs.15,000Rs.17.4 lakhRs.23 lakh
Rs.75,000Rs.22,500Rs.26 lakhRs.35 lakh
Rs.1,00,000Rs.30,000Rs.35 lakhRs.46 lakh
Rs.1,50,000Rs.45,000Rs.52 lakhRs.69 lakh
Rs.2,00,000Rs.60,000Rs.69 lakhRs.92 lakh
Rs.3,00,000Rs.90,000Rs.1.05 croreRs.1.4 crore
Rs.5,00,000Rs.1,50,000Rs.1.75 croreRs.2.3 crore

This is conservative. Aspirational max (35% EMI): add ~17%. Absolute max (40% EMI): add ~33%.

Costs Banks Ignore in Eligibility Math

Bank says you can afford Rs.1 crore property; bank is calculating only EMI capacity. Real upfront cost of buying a Rs.1 crore property:

ItemCost
Property priceRs.1,00,00,000
Stamp duty (5-7% state-dependent)Rs.5-7 lakh
Registration charges (~1%)Rs.1 lakh
Brokerage (1-2%)Rs.1-2 lakh
Loan processing fee (0.5-1%)Rs.50K-1 lakh
Loan documentation, mortgage chargesRs.25-50K
Interior + furniture (essential)Rs.5-15 lakh
GST on under-construction (if applicable)5% = Rs.5 lakh
Move-in expenses (packers, paint touch-up)Rs.50K-1 lakh
Total upfront over property priceRs.13-32 lakh

You need Rs.13-32 lakh ABOVE the property price + your 25% down payment in cash. Many first-time buyers discover this gap only after they have signed the booking agreement.

Ongoing Costs After Possession

ItemMonthly
Society maintenanceRs.3,000-15,000
Property tax (annual / 12)Rs.500-3,000
Home insurance (annual / 12)Rs.500-1,500
Repair reserve (Rs.20K/yr / 12)Rs.1,700
Paint refresh (Rs.2L every 5 years / 60)Rs.3,300
Total ongoing beyond EMIRs.9,000-25,000

Add this to EMI when calculating monthly outflow. A Rs.50K EMI is actually Rs.60-75K monthly cost of ownership.

The Honest Affordability Formula

Honest affordable property price =

  1. Your monthly take-home × 30% = max EMI
  2. Max EMI × 130 (for 20-year loan at 8.5%) = max loan
  3. Max loan ÷ 0.75 (assuming 25% down payment) = max property price
  4. BUT subtract 15-20% for hidden costs you need to fund
  5. Final = (Max property price × 0.80-0.85)

Example: Rs.1.5L take-home

  • Max EMI = Rs.45K
  • Max loan = Rs.45K × 130 = Rs.58.5 lakh
  • Max property = Rs.78 lakh
  • After hidden costs adjustment = Rs.65-70 lakh affordable property

The bank may sanction Rs.1 crore. Honest affordable price = Rs.65-70 lakh.

EMI vs SIP — The Opportunity Cost

When you take Rs.50K EMI, that Rs.50K is no longer available for SIPs. Lifetime opportunity cost:

Foregone SIP25-year cost (12% return)
Rs.20K/monthRs.3.4 crore
Rs.40K/monthRs.6.8 crore
Rs.60K/monthRs.10.2 crore

Buying a Rs.1.5 crore property and replacing equity SIP with EMI = Rs.6-10 crore foregone equity corpus. The property may appreciate to Rs.4-5 crore in 25 years, but the foregone equity is Rs.6-10 crore. Net wealth loss of Rs.1-5 crore vs renting + investing.

This does not mean do not buy. It means understand the trade. Buy when the non-financial value (stability, kid roots, emotional security) justifies the wealth difference.

Quick Decision Rules

  • Income under Rs.50K take-home: Renting is almost always better. Wait for income growth.
  • Income Rs.50K-1L take-home: Tier-2/3 cities, modest property (Rs.40-70 lakh range) can work. Tier-1 metros, keep renting.
  • Income Rs.1-2L take-home: Tier-1 affordable range Rs.70 lakh – 1.2 crore. Stretch territory above that.
  • Income Rs.2-4L take-home: Tier-1 affordable range Rs.1.2-2.5 crore. Premium properties up to Rs.3-4 crore at the stretch.
  • Income Rs.4L+ take-home: Most properties become affordable on the math. Decision becomes about lifestyle and goals, not capacity.

Bank Eligibility vs Actual Affordability

Bank calculation typically:

  • EMI up to 50-65% of take-home (50% for moderate income, 65% for high income with no existing EMIs)
  • Loan amount up to 8-10x annual gross income
  • Property loan-to-value (LTV) up to 75-90% depending on price tier

This is the bank is risk tolerance, not your safety margin. Banks make money on EMIs; they want to lend the maximum. Use bank eligibility as upper bound; use the 30% / 5x rule as actual affordability.

When Stretching Beyond 30% Is OK

Some situations justify going to 35-40%:

  • Both spouses earning (combined EMI calculation; if one income covers 30%, second income provides cushion)
  • Expected significant income growth (early-career, getting promoted, joining higher-paying job)
  • Last-time buy decision (settling forever; quality matters more than tightness)
  • Inheriting some funds in next 2-3 years that will reduce loan significantly

When NOT to Stretch

  • Single income family
  • Income volatility (founder, freelancer, sales commission)
  • Existing significant EMIs (car loan, personal loan)
  • Kids in school years with rising fees
  • Parents needing financial support
  • Job/industry uncertainty
  • No emergency fund built

The 10-Year Stress Test

Before committing, stress-test the EMI:

  • What if one spouse loses job for 6 months?
  • What if interest rates rise 1.5%? (EMI increases by ~10%)
  • What if kid school fees rise 12%/year?
  • What if parent has major medical event requiring Rs.10 lakh contribution?
  • What if you change jobs and take 6 weeks of unpaid notice period buyout?

If any single shock would put you at 40%+ EMI, you are over-stretched. Buy a smaller property.

FAQs

Should I take a longer tenure to lower EMI? Tenure of 20 years is standard. Going to 25-30 years lowers EMI but doubles total interest. Better: shorter tenure (15-18 years) if income supports; consider partial prepayment annually.

Bank approved me for Rs.1.2 crore but I am thinking Rs.80 lakh — is that wasteful? No, that is smart. Bank approval is what they will lend; your affordable is what you should borrow. Buying smaller property leaves room for life flexibility, SIPs, and unexpected events.

What if I have a joint home loan with spouse? Combined income for affordability calc. Be conservative — if either income stops, can the other carry EMI alone? Joint loans give tax benefits (both can claim Section 24 + 80C) but also joint exposure.

Should I include rental income in affordability calc? If you have existing rental income, yes. If you plan to rent out the new property, no — vacancy risk, maintenance burden, do not budget assumed rent into your affordability.

What about co-applicant with parents? Adds their income to eligibility but also their EMI risk to your retirement. Generally avoid unless absolutely needed; their resources should support their retirement, not your loan.

If I buy a Rs.1 crore property today vs Rs.60 lakh today and upgrade in 5 years? Math typically favors buying-once at the right size. Upgrade transaction costs (stamp duty + brokerage + interiors) eat Rs.10-20 lakh of net wealth. Buy what fits 10-year needs, not 3-year.

Is it OK to deplete equity SIPs for down payment? Generally no. Equity SIP corpus is your retirement engine; redeeming it for property down payment delays retirement by 5-10 years typically. Save dedicated down payment over 3-5 years in debt funds.

Next Steps

Calculate your honest affordable property price using the formula above. Compare to what bank is willing to sanction. The honest number is usually 20-40% lower than the bank number — and that gap is your safety margin against life unexpected events.

Related guides:

Affordability varies by family stage, city, lifestyle. Educational guide; not personalised property advice. Use bank pre-approval as one input, not the only one.

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