Credit & Borrowing

Foreclosure and Prepayment — When Paying Off Your Loan Early Actually Saves You Lakhs

Every loan you carry has a 'real cost' you can reduce by acting early. Here is the math — and the strategy.

Foreclosure and Prepayment — When Paying Off Your Loan Early Actually Saves You Lakhs

Most borrowers think about loans in terms of EMIs. As long as the EMI is manageable, the loan feels under control. But there is a more powerful way to think about a loan: in terms of total interest outflow over the tenure. And once you see that number, the incentive to repay early becomes very clear.

The interest savings from prepayment — the numbers

On a ₹50 lakh home loan at 9% for 20 years — the total interest paid over the tenure is approximately ₹58 lakh. If you prepay ₹5 lakh at the end of year 3, the total interest outflow drops to approximately ₹47 lakh — a saving of ₹11 lakh — and the tenure reduces by nearly 3 years. A single prepayment of ₹5 lakh saves ₹11 lakh. That is a 220% return on the prepayment — tax-free, risk-free.

HERE'S A THOUGHT

Most people put their annual bonus in an FD at 7%. Their home loan costs them 9%. They are borrowing at 9% and investing at 7%. After tax, the FD return is approximately 4.9% (in the 30% bracket). They are paying 9% to earn 4.9%. Every prepayment on a 9% loan is an instant, guaranteed 9% return — better than almost any safe investment available.

Foreclosure vs. Prepayment — the difference

Prepayment (Part-Payment)Foreclosure (Full Closure)
Pay a lump sum toward principalPay off the entire outstanding balance
Reduces tenure or EMICloses the loan account entirely
Can be done anytime (check charges)Usually involves foreclosure charges
Flexible — any amount above minimumRequires full outstanding principal + charges

What to watch for — prepayment charges

Home loans on floating rates from banks — by RBI mandate — cannot charge prepayment or foreclosure penalties. This means any extra payment you make on a floating-rate home loan costs you nothing extra. Fixed-rate loans and loans from NBFCs may have prepayment charges of 1–4%.

  • Always check your loan agreement for prepayment charges and lock-in periods.
  • Request a fresh amortisation schedule after every prepayment to see the revised saving.
  • If choosing between reducing EMI and reducing tenure — reducing tenure saves far more total interest.
THE BOTTOM LINE

Every rupee of prepayment on a loan is a guaranteed, risk-free return equal to your loan's interest rate. In a world where safe investments return 7–8%, prepaying a 9–12% loan is almost always the best use of surplus money. Do the math for your own loan. The number will be motivating.

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