Education Loan + Section 80E — Best Banks and Tax Benefits (2026)
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Education Loan + Section 80E — Best Banks and Tax Benefits (2026)

Last verified: April 2026, against current rate cards from major Indian banks and NBFCs (SBI, BoB, PNB, ICICI, HDFC Credila, Avanse, Auxilo, Prodigy Finance) and Section 80E provisions.

Education loans are one of the few unsecured-feeling loans that come with a meaningful tax benefit: Section 80E lets you deduct the entire interest paid (no upper limit) for up to 8 years. For a ₹40 lakh international MS loan at 11%, that’s ₹4-5 lakh of interest annually for the first few years — fully deductible. This guide compares the best banks for education loans, when to opt for collateral vs collateral-free, and how to maximise the 80E benefit.

Education loan landscape in India

Lender Interest rate (2026) Loan limit Collateral Notable feature
SBI Scholar Loan 8.55-10.55% ₹50 L domestic / ₹1.5 Cr abroad Required above ₹7.5 L Lowest rates; girl child concession 0.5%
Bank of Baroda 8.85-11.5% ₹80 L domestic / ₹1.5 Cr abroad Required above ₹7.5 L Tie-ups with major B-schools (IIM, ISB)
PNB Saraswati 8.55-10.65% ₹50 L domestic / ₹1.5 Cr abroad Required above ₹7.5 L Lower processing fees
HDFC Credila 10.5-13% Up to ₹1 Cr Optional / negotiable Faster processing for premium institutes
ICICI Bank 10.25-12.25% Up to ₹2 Cr Optional Pre-approved for select institutes
Avanse Financial 10.5-13.5% Up to ₹1.5 Cr Optional / negotiable Specialised in study-abroad
Auxilo Finserve 11-13.5% Up to ₹1 Cr Optional NBFC; flexible for newer institutes
Prodigy Finance (international) 10-15% (USD-linked) USD 100K typical None For top US/Europe schools; FX risk

Section 80E — the unlimited interest deduction

Section 80E allows deduction of the entire interest paid on education loan in a financial year. No upper limit on the deduction (unlike the ₹2 L cap on home loan interest). Available for 8 consecutive years from the year repayment starts.

Conditions:

  • Loan must be from a financial institution or approved charitable institution (most schedule commercial banks and major NBFCs qualify)
  • Loan must be for higher education (graduation, post-graduation, vocational courses) of self, spouse, or children, or a person for whom you’re a legal guardian
  • Course must be after senior secondary (Class 12)
  • Repayment must have started — pre-EMI / moratorium period interest deduction begins at first EMI

Available only in old regime

Like Section 24(b) and 80C, Section 80E works only in the old tax regime. New regime taxpayers don’t get this benefit. See tax regime comparison.

Worked example — ₹40 L study-abroad loan

You take a ₹40 L education loan at 11% APR for MS in the US. 1-year course + 1-year moratorium = repayment starts in Year 3. 7-year repayment tenure.

Year of repayment Interest paid 80E deduction Tax saved (30% slab + cess)
1 ₹4,30,000 ₹4,30,000 ₹1,34,160
2 ₹3,75,000 ₹3,75,000 ₹1,17,000
3 ₹3,15,000 ₹3,15,000 ₹98,280
4 ₹2,50,000 ₹2,50,000 ₹78,000
5 ₹1,80,000 ₹1,80,000 ₹56,160
6 ₹1,05,000 ₹1,05,000 ₹32,760
7 ₹25,000 ₹25,000 ₹7,800
Total ₹17,80,000 ₹17,80,000 ₹5,24,160

Over 7 years, the 80E deduction effectively reduces the borrower’s net interest cost by ~30% (the slab tax saved). Effective post-tax interest rate: ~7.7% instead of 11%.

Collateral vs collateral-free — when each makes sense

Collateral-backed (loans above ₹7.5 L typically)

Collateral options: Property, FD, LIC policy, mutual fund units. Typical LTV: 50-90% of collateral value.

Pros: Lower interest (200-300 bps less than collateral-free), higher loan limit, longer tenure.

Cons: Risk of collateral seizure on default, paperwork-heavy.

Collateral-free (NBFC primarily)

Pros: Faster processing (1-2 weeks vs 3-4 weeks), no collateral risk, suitable for first-time loan-takers.

Cons: Higher interest (2-3% above collateral-backed), often capped at ₹40-50 L, may require co-borrower with strong credit.

The “premium institute” advantage

Lenders categorise educational institutions by tier:

  • Tier-1 (IIT, IIM, ISB, Harvard, Stanford, MIT, Oxford): Pre-approved, fastest processing, lowest rates, often collateral-free up to ₹50 L+
  • Tier-2 (NIT, top management schools, mid-ranked US universities): Standard rates, collateral required above ₹7.5 L
  • Tier-3 (other institutes): Higher rates, more collateral, longer processing

Apply to multiple lenders if at tier-2 or below — the variance in approved rate is ~150-300 bps across competitors.

Repayment moratorium — interest still accrues

Education loans typically include moratorium during course + 6-12 months grace post-graduation. EMIs start after that. But interest accrues during moratorium and adds to principal.

Example: ₹40 L loan at 11%. 2-year course + 1-year grace = 3 years of moratorium. Interest accrued: ₹40 L × 11% × 3 = ~₹13.2 L. After moratorium, your effective principal is ₹53.2 L, not ₹40 L.

Some borrowers pay simple interest during moratorium (avoiding capitalisation) — saves substantial total interest if you can afford ₹30-40K monthly while studying.

How to apply for an education loan

  1. Get admission letter from the institute (provisional / confirmed both work)
  2. Estimate total cost — tuition, hostel, books, travel, living. Most lenders fund 80-100%.
  3. Approach 3-4 lenders. Compare rate cards, processing fees, foreclosure terms.
  4. Submit documents: admission letter, fee structure, KYC (you + co-borrower), income proof of co-borrower (parents typically), collateral docs if applicable
  5. Loan sanction in 2-4 weeks for tier-1 institutes; 4-8 weeks otherwise
  6. Disbursement directly to institute or as per fee schedule

Linked deep-dives

FAQs

Can I claim 80E for my child’s education loan if it’s in my name?

Yes — Section 80E allows deduction for loans taken for higher education of self, spouse, or children, or a student for whom you’re a legal guardian. Loan in your name + paying interest qualifies for your 80E.

Is 80E available for vocational courses?

Yes, post-Class-12 vocational courses qualify. Pre-Class-12 courses don’t.

Can I claim 80C and 80E together?

Yes — different sections, different limits. 80C is ₹1.5 L cap on principal investments. 80E is unlimited deduction on education loan interest.

What if I prepay my education loan?

Most lenders allow prepayment without penalty. Your 80E deduction reduces accordingly (less interest paid = less deduction). Compare prepayment cost vs investment opportunity at 11% APR.

Can NRIs claim 80E?

NRIs can claim 80E only against income subject to Indian tax. If your only Indian income is rental income at slab rate, you can deduct interest from that. Most NRI students claim post-return when they become resident.

Is moratorium-period interest deductible under 80E?

The deduction starts in the year of first EMI payment. Interest accrued during moratorium gets capitalised; subsequent EMI interest portion is what’s deductible.

Sources & references

  • Section 80E of the Income Tax Act
  • Major bank / NBFC education loan rate cards (April 2026)
  • Indian Banks’ Association Model Education Loan Scheme

Last verified: April 2026. Education loan rates and 80E provisions are stable; we re-verify each Budget cycle.

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