Loans & Insurance · Debt Syndication & Loan Advisory
Home Loan Services
Buying a home is one of the largest financial commitments most families make — and the home loan decision is where eligibility maths, bank selection, tax planning, and paperwork all collide at once.
Chartered Accountants · Chennai · Hyderabad · Bangalore · Dubai · Since 1986
Buying a home is one of the largest financial commitments most families make — and the home loan decision is where eligibility maths, bank selection, tax planning, and paperwork all collide at once. PNPC Global's Home Loan Advisory helps you work out realistic eligibility before you fall in love with a property, compares lenders on genuine total cost rather than headline rate, and gets your documentation right the first time — so sanction, disbursement, and possession happen on your timeline, not the bank's.
What it costs
No hidden charges. The exact figure is set in your engagement letter.
Home Loan Advisory is a structured, CA-led engagement that helps individuals and families navigate the entire home financing journey — from working out how much loan they can realistically qualify for and service comfortably, through comparing lenders on the metrics that actually matter, to assembling the income, property, and KYC documentation a bank or housing finance company (HFC) requires before sanction. Home loans in India are regulated differently depending on the lender: bank home loans fall under Reserve Bank of India (RBI) guidelines, while housing finance companies are regulated by the National Housing Bank framework now folded into RBI's HFC regulatory oversight since 2019. Both categories offer broadly similar products, but differ meaningfully in processing speed, documentation flexibility for self-employed and informal-income borrowers, and pricing.
Eligibility itself is not a single number — it is the lower of two independent calculations. The income-based calculation typically caps the Equated Monthly Instalment (EMI) at a proportion of monthly income (commonly referenced around 40-50% of gross monthly income across existing and proposed EMIs, though the exact multiple varies by lender, income stability, and credit profile) using a method called Fixed Obligation to Income Ratio (FOIR). The property-based calculation is the Loan to Value (LTV) ratio, which under RBI's prudential guidelines is capped at 90% for loans up to ₹30 lakh, 80% for loans between ₹30 lakh and ₹75 lakh, and 75% for loans above ₹75 lakh — meaning the borrower must fund the balance as margin money or down payment regardless of how strong their income profile is. A borrower who is income-eligible for a larger loan can still be constrained by the LTV cap on a high-value property, and vice versa.
Interest rate structuring is the next major decision point. Nearly all home loans sanctioned today are on a floating rate linked to an External Benchmark Lending Rate (EBLR) — most commonly the RBI repo rate — plus a spread that reflects the lender's credit risk assessment of the borrower (credit score, income stability, loan-to-value, employment type). This structure, mandated by RBI since October 2019 for retail floating-rate loans, means the effective rate moves automatically when the RBI changes the repo rate, and the borrower's actual EMI or tenor adjusts accordingly. The spread itself is negotiable and varies meaningfully between lenders for an identical borrower profile, which is precisely where comparing 3-4 lenders on total cost — not just the advertised starting rate — creates real savings over a 15-20 year tenor.
The tax dimension is where a CA-led approach adds distinct value beyond what a loan broker or bank sales team typically offers. Home loan interest and principal repayment carry specific, and frequently confused, income-tax benefits: principal repayment qualifies within the overall Section 80C deduction limit of ₹1.5 lakh per year (shared with other 80C investments such as PF, ELSS, and life insurance premium), while interest paid on a self-occupied property loan is deductible under Section 24(b) up to ₹2 lakh per year — but only under the old tax regime; the new tax regime under Section 115BAC does not permit the Section 24(b) interest deduction for a self-occupied property (interest on a let-out property remains deductible against rental income under both regimes, subject to the overall loss set-off restrictions). First-time buyers meeting specific conditions may also examine Section 80EEA benefits for affordable-housing loans sanctioned in the window that scheme covered, though this benefit's continued relevance depends on the loan sanction date and should be verified against current applicability rather than assumed. Choosing the tax regime, structuring joint ownership between spouses to maximise combined deduction claims, and timing possession relative to the assessment year are all decisions a CA reviews in the context of the borrower's full tax position — not in isolation.
When home loan advisory adds real value
You are shortlisting a property and want a realistic, lender-verified eligibility figure before making an offer or paying a booking token — not just an online EMI-calculator estimate
You have offers from multiple banks/HFCs and want a genuine total-cost comparison (rate, processing fee, prepayment terms, insurance bundling) rather than comparing headline interest rates alone
You are self-employed, a professional, or have income from multiple sources, and standard salaried-employee documentation formats do not straightforwardly apply to your income proof
You want to structure joint ownership between spouses or co-borrowers to optimise combined Section 80C and Section 24(b) tax benefits across both applicants
You are deciding between the old and new tax regime and want the home loan interest deduction factored into that comparison specifically, not as an afterthought
You are buying an under-construction property and need to understand pre-EMI interest treatment, disbursement-linked payment schedules, and how tax deduction timing works before possession
You already have a home loan and want to evaluate a balance transfer to a lower-rate lender, factoring in transfer costs, foreclosure charges on the existing loan, and the real payback period
You are an NRI or have a co-applicant who is an NRI, and need to understand the specific eligibility, documentation, and repatriation rules that apply to NRI home loan borrowers under FEMA
When this engagement is not the right starting point
You have already finalised the property, the loan, and the lender, and simply need document notarisation or a specific certificate — a narrower, lighter-touch support may suffice rather than a full advisory engagement
You are purchasing purely as a rental-yield investment with no self-occupation intention and your primary question is investment structuring rather than loan eligibility — investment or real estate advisory may be the more relevant starting point
The property itself has unresolved title, encumbrance, or approval issues — those require legal or property due diligence first; a home loan cannot be properly structured around a property with unresolved legal risk
You need business or commercial property financing for income-generating commercial real estate — that falls under commercial/LAP (Loan Against Property) or business loan advisory, a distinct product category with different eligibility norms
Your primary need is refinancing an existing personal loan or unsecured debt using home equity — that is a Loan Against Property engagement, not a fresh home purchase loan
You are years away from actually buying and want only generic, non-specific budgeting guidance — a broader personal financial planning conversation may be more useful before a lender-specific eligibility exercise
Home loan sources and structures compared
| Feature | Public Sector Bank | Private Sector Bank | Housing Finance Company (HFC) | Balance Transfer (Refinance) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Typical processing speed | Slower — 15-25 working days typical | Faster — 7-15 working days typical | Often fastest for straightforward salaried cases; flexible for self-employed | Depends on both existing and new lender's processing |
| Rate competitiveness | Often competitive on repo-linked spread for strong profiles | Competitive; sometimes premium pricing for perceived service/speed | Can be marginally higher spread but more flexible eligibility | Rate reduction is the core objective, net of transfer costs |
| Self-employed / informal income flexibility | Generally stricter income documentation requirements | Moderate flexibility, varies by bank policy | Typically most flexible — many HFCs specialise in this segment | Same flexibility as new-loan lender chosen |
| Regulatory framework | RBI-regulated bank | RBI-regulated bank | RBI-regulated HFC (NHB regulatory functions transferred to RBI in 2019) | Governed by both transferring and receiving lender's norms |
| Processing fee (indicative) | Often lower flat fee or percentage, sometimes waived in promotions | Percentage-based, typically 0.5%-1% of loan amount plus GST | Percentage-based, sometimes slightly higher than banks | New processing fee applies at new lender; may partly offset by lower rate |
| Prepayment/foreclosure charges (floating rate, individual borrower) | Nil, per RBI direction for floating-rate individual loans | Nil, per RBI direction for floating-rate individual loans | Nil, per RBI direction for floating-rate individual loans | Existing loan foreclosure charge should also be nil if floating rate; verify loan-specific terms |
| Under-construction property financing | Standard disbursement-linked (construction-linked) schedule | Standard disbursement-linked schedule; some offer subvention schemes | Standard disbursement-linked schedule | Not applicable — transfer typically done post-possession |
| Best suited for | Salaried applicants with clean, well-documented income and rate-sensitivity | Applicants prioritising speed and digital process over marginal rate savings | Self-employed, first-time formal borrowers, or those with non-standard income | Existing borrowers on an older, higher-rate loan seeking to reduce cost |
This table gives directional guidance only. Actual rates, fees, and eligibility norms vary by lender, borrower credit profile, property type and location, and change periodically with RBI policy. A CA-led comparison across your specific shortlisted lenders, quoted in writing, is the only reliable way to compare total cost for your situation.
| # | Stage & What PNPC Does | CA Advice Portals Never Give | Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Eligibility Diagnostic — Before you shortlist a property | We calculate your realistic eligibility using both the income-based FOIR method and the property-based LTV cap — not just an online calculator's optimistic single number. We factor in existing EMIs, credit card utilisation, any co-applicant income, and your credit score band, so the figure you carry into property-hunting is one a bank will actually sanction. | Week 1 |
| 2 | Credit Score & Report Review | We review your credit bureau report (CIBIL/Experian/Equifax/CRIF) for errors, old settled-loan flags, or utilisation patterns that could affect your rate or sanction — issues that are far cheaper to fix before applying than to explain after a rejection. | Week 1 |
| 3 | Tax Regime & Ownership Structuring | Before you apply, we model whether the old or new tax regime is more beneficial given the interest deduction under Section 24(b), and whether joint ownership between spouses (with proportionate EMI contribution) improves your combined tax outcome. This decision is easiest to structure correctly before the loan agreement is signed, not after. | Week 1-2 |
| 4 | Lender Shortlisting & Comparison | We compare 3-4 shortlisted lenders on genuine total cost — spread over the external benchmark, processing fee, mandatory insurance bundling, prepayment terms, and disbursement flexibility for under-construction property — not just the headline advertised rate. | Week 2 |
| 5 | Documentation Assembly | Income documentation for self-employed and professional applicants (ITR, GST returns, profit-and-loss statements, bank statements) is assembled in the format each specific lender expects — a mismatch here is the single most common cause of processing delay for non-salaried applicants. | Week 2-3 |
| 6 | Property Legal & Technical Due Diligence Coordination | We coordinate with the lender's empanelled legal and technical valuation teams and independently flag title, encumbrance, or approval concerns before they surface as a lender-side rejection late in the process — particularly relevant for resale and under-construction properties. | Week 2-4 |
| 7 | Loan Application & Sanction | Application submitted with a complete document set assembled upfront, reducing the query-and-resubmission cycle that extends most home loan timelines. We review the sanction letter clause by clause — rate reset frequency, processing fee, prepayment terms, insurance requirements — before you accept it. | Week 3-5 — Sanction letter issued |
| 8 | Property Registration & Stamp Duty Planning | Stamp duty and registration charges vary by state (typically 5-7% of property value in most states, with some offering rebates for women co-owners) and are a significant, often under-budgeted cost. We factor this into your overall funding plan alongside the down payment. | Week 4-6 |
| 9 | Disbursement Coordination | For under-construction property, disbursement is linked to construction stage and requires coordination between builder, lender, and borrower. We track the disbursement schedule and the pre-EMI interest that accrues on partial disbursement, so there are no surprises in the interim cash flow. | Ongoing until full disbursement/possession |
| 10 | Home Loan Insurance Review | Home loan protection insurance (often bundled by the lender) is reviewed on its own merits — cover adequacy, premium-to-cover ratio, and whether a standalone term policy assigned to the lender would serve the same protection purpose more cost-effectively. | Week 4-6 |
| 11 | Tax Benefit Claim Setup | Once EMIs begin, we set up the annual tracking of principal (Section 80C) and interest (Section 24(b)) components from the lender's provisional interest certificate, so your ITR claim each year is accurate and supported by the correct documentation. | From first EMI, annually thereafter |
| 12 | Balance Transfer Evaluation (if applicable) | For existing borrowers, we periodically evaluate whether a balance transfer to a lower-rate lender makes financial sense after accounting for transfer processing fees, any applicable stamp duty on the transferred mortgage, and the remaining tenor — a transfer late in the loan tenor rarely pays back its own cost. | As needed, or annually on request |
| 13 | Possession & Post-Loan Advisory | At possession and beyond, we remain available for questions on prepayment strategy, EMI-versus-tenor-reduction decisions on rate resets, co-borrower changes, and any subsequent property-related tax events such as sale and capital gains. | Lifetime of the loan relationship |
Indicative timeline: 4-6 weeks from initial eligibility diagnostic to sanction letter for a straightforward salaried applicant with clean documentation; 6-10 weeks is common for self-employed applicants or under-construction properties requiring more extensive documentation and technical/legal due diligence. Actual timelines depend on lender processing capacity, property type, and documentation completeness.
PAN Card — mandatory for all applicants and co-applicants; name must match other KYC documents exactly
Aadhaar Card — linked to an active mobile number for OTP-based verification and e-KYC
Passport-size photographs — recent, as specified by the lender
Proof of current residential address — utility bill, passport, or bank statement, generally within the last 2-3 months as required by the specific lender
For NRI applicants — passport, valid visa/work permit, and Overseas Citizen of India (OCI) card if applicable
Last 3-6 months' salary slips
Form 16 or income tax returns for the last 2-3 financial years
Last 6 months' bank statements showing salary credit
Employment continuity proof or appointment letter, particularly for recent job changes
Any additional income documentation (rental income, other declared income sources) if being included in eligibility computation
Income Tax Returns (ITR) with computation of income for the last 2-3 financial years
Audited financial statements (Balance Sheet, Profit & Loss) if the business/profession is subject to tax audit, or CA-certified financials otherwise
GST returns for the last 12 months, where the business is GST-registered, to corroborate turnover
Business bank statements for the last 6-12 months
Proof of business existence — registration certificate, licence, or Udyam/MSME registration as applicable
Professional qualification certificate and practice registration, for doctors, CAs, architects, and similar professionals
Sale agreement or Agreement to Sell with the seller/builder
Title deed chain establishing clear, marketable title to the property
Encumbrance Certificate confirming the property is free of prior mortgages or legal claims
Approved building plan and, for apartments, the builder's RERA registration details and completion/occupancy certificate status
Property tax receipts for existing/resale properties
For under-construction property — copy of the builder-buyer agreement, payment schedule, and the project's RERA registration number
Statement of existing loans/EMIs and credit card outstanding, to compute the Fixed Obligation to Income Ratio (FOIR) accurately
Credit bureau report (CIBIL or equivalent) — reviewed for accuracy before formal application
Details of the source of down payment / margin money — savings, family gift, or sale of another asset, as some lenders require this trail
Details of any co-applicant's income and credit profile, since joint applications are assessed on combined eligibility
Existing loan sanction letter and latest loan account statement showing outstanding principal
Latest interest certificate from the existing lender
No-objection/foreclosure letter or consent to transfer from the existing lender
Original property documents held by the existing lender, to be transferred to the new lender upon takeover
| Phase | Triggered By | PNPC CA Guidance | Risk If Ignored |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-Property Search | Decision to buy a home | Realistic FOIR- and LTV-based eligibility calculation, credit report review, and tax-regime modelling before any property is shortlisted or token amount paid. | Falling in love with a property beyond realistic eligibility, losing a booking token when the loan does not sanction at the expected amount, or a rushed suboptimal lender choice under deal pressure. |
| Lender Comparison & Application | Property identified, ready to apply | Comparison of 3-4 lenders on total cost, not headline rate; documentation assembled in the exact format each lender expects, particularly for self-employed applicants. | Choosing on advertised rate alone while ignoring processing fees, insurance bundling, or prepayment terms; documentation mismatches causing weeks of delay and repeated resubmission. |
| Sanction & Agreement | Lender issues sanction letter | Clause-by-clause review of the sanction letter and loan agreement — rate reset terms, processing fee, prepayment/foreclosure terms, mandatory insurance — before acceptance. | Signing a loan agreement with unfavourable reset terms or hidden bundled-insurance cost that is difficult to unwind later without cost. |
| Disbursement (Under-Construction) | Construction milestones reached | Disbursement schedule tracking against the builder-buyer agreement, and monitoring of pre-EMI interest accrual on partial disbursement. | Cash-flow surprises from unplanned pre-EMI interest; disputes with the builder over disbursement-linked milestones without independent verification. |
| Registration & Possession | Sale deed execution / possession handover | Stamp duty and registration cost planning factored into the overall funding plan; confirmation that all property documents are correctly transferred and recorded. | Under-budgeting for stamp duty and registration (typically 5-7% of property value), causing a late funding gap at a critical stage. |
| Repayment — Annual Tax Claim | First and subsequent EMIs | Annual tracking of principal (Section 80C, within the ₹1.5 lakh combined limit) and interest (Section 24(b), up to ₹2 lakh for self-occupied property under the old regime) from the lender's provisional certificate, reconciled against the chosen tax regime. | Incorrect or missed tax deduction claims; claiming Section 24(b) interest deduction under the new tax regime where it is not permitted, resulting in an incorrect return. |
| Rate Reset / Repricing | RBI repo rate change or annual reset date | Review of whether the revised EMI or extended tenor better suits your cash flow, and whether your credit-profile-based spread still reflects your current standing with the lender. | Passive acceptance of an unreviewed spread for years even as your credit profile improves, or an unmanaged tenor extension quietly increasing total interest paid. |
| Balance Transfer / Prepayment Decision | Meaningful rate gap emerges, or surplus funds available | Total-cost analysis of a balance transfer (transfer fees, new processing fee, remaining tenor) versus prepayment of the existing loan; RBI-mandated nil foreclosure charge for individual floating-rate borrowers factored in. | Transferring late in the tenor where the transfer cost exceeds the interest saved, or missing the opportunity to prepay penalty-free and reduce the effective interest cost. |
| Sale / Loan Closure | Property sale or full loan repayment | Coordination of loan closure, release of original title documents, and capital gains tax planning if the property is sold, including exemption planning under Sections 54/54EC where applicable. | Delayed release of original property documents after closure; unplanned capital gains tax exposure on sale without exemption structuring. |
How much home loan can I actually get approved for?
Eligibility is the lower of two separate calculations. The income-based calculation caps your EMI (across existing and proposed loans) at a proportion of your gross monthly income — commonly discussed in a broad 40-50% range, though the exact figure depends on the lender, your income stability, and credit score. The property-based calculation is the Loan to Value (LTV) ratio — RBI prudential norms cap this at 90% for loans up to ₹30 lakh, 80% for ₹30-75 lakh, and 75% above ₹75 lakh. Whichever of the two produces the smaller loan amount is your realistic ceiling, not the larger of the two.
What is FOIR and why does it matter more than my gross income?
Fixed Obligation to Income Ratio (FOIR) measures your total monthly committed obligations — existing EMIs, credit card minimum payments, and the proposed new EMI — as a proportion of your gross monthly income. A high gross income with significant existing EMIs or credit card utilisation can produce a lower loan eligibility than a more modest income with no other obligations. Lenders assess FOIR, not gross income alone.
Should I choose a public sector bank, a private bank, or a housing finance company (HFC)?
It depends on your profile. Public sector banks are often competitive on rate for well-documented salaried applicants but can be slower to process. Private banks are typically faster with a smoother digital process, sometimes at a modest rate premium. Housing finance companies are often the most flexible for self-employed applicants, professionals, or those with less conventional income documentation, though the spread can be marginally higher. There is no universally 'best' choice — it depends on your income type, urgency, and rate sensitivity.
What is the difference between a fixed rate and a floating (repo-linked) rate home loan?
Since October 2019, RBI has mandated that new retail floating-rate loans, including home loans, be linked to an External Benchmark Lending Rate (EBLR) — most commonly the RBI repo rate — plus a lender-determined spread. Your EMI or tenor adjusts when the RBI changes the repo rate. Fixed-rate home loans exist but are less common for the full tenor and are typically priced at a premium, or fixed only for an initial period before reverting to floating. Nearly all long-tenor home loans in India today are floating-rate.
Can I prepay my home loan without a penalty?
For floating-rate home loans to individual borrowers, RBI has directed that banks and NBFCs/HFCs cannot levy foreclosure or prepayment charges, regardless of the source of the prepayment funds. This applies specifically to individual borrowers on floating-rate loans — fixed-rate loans, or loans to non-individual borrowers, may still carry prepayment charges as per the specific loan agreement. Always verify the exact terms in your sanction letter.
How do I claim tax benefits on my home loan?
Principal repayment qualifies for deduction under Section 80C, within the overall combined limit of ₹1.5 lakh per year shared with other 80C investments (PF, ELSS, life insurance premium, etc.) — available only under the old tax regime. Interest paid on a loan for a self-occupied property is deductible under Section 24(b) up to ₹2 lakh per year, also only under the old tax regime; the new tax regime under Section 115BAC does not permit this deduction for a self-occupied property. Interest on a let-out property remains deductible against rental income under both regimes, subject to loss set-off restrictions. Which regime is more beneficial for you depends on your overall income and deduction profile, not the home loan alone.
Can both spouses claim home loan tax benefits if we are co-owners and co-borrowers?
Yes. If both spouses are co-owners of the property and co-borrowers on the loan, and both contribute to the EMI (typically evidenced by proportionate payment from each individual's bank account), each can independently claim the Section 80C principal deduction (up to ₹1.5 lakh each) and the Section 24(b) interest deduction (up to ₹2 lakh each for a self-occupied property) under the old regime — effectively doubling the household's claimable benefit compared to a single applicant.
What is Section 80EEA and does it still apply to me?
Section 80EEA provided an additional interest deduction (over and above Section 24(b)) for first-time buyers of affordable housing, subject to conditions on property value, loan amount, and the sanction date falling within a specific legislative window. Whether this benefit is available to you depends entirely on your loan's sanction date and whether it falls within the period the provision covered — this needs to be verified against your specific loan documents rather than assumed to be currently available for a new loan.
What is pre-EMI and how does it work for under-construction property?
For an under-construction property, the lender typically disburses the loan in tranches linked to construction milestones rather than as a single lump sum. Until full disbursement, you pay 'pre-EMI' — interest only on the amount disbursed so far — rather than a full EMI covering both principal and interest. Full EMI (principal + interest) begins only after complete disbursement, usually around possession. Interest paid during the pre-EMI/construction period is not deductible in the year paid but can be claimed in 5 equal instalments starting from the year of possession, under Section 24(b), subject to the overall ₹2 lakh self-occupied property cap in that year.
Is a balance transfer to a lower-rate lender worth it?
It depends on the remaining tenor, the rate differential, and the transfer-related costs (new processing fee, any applicable stamp duty on mortgage transfer, and documentation costs). A meaningful rate reduction early in a long tenor can produce substantial interest savings; the same rate reduction late in the tenor, when the outstanding principal is small, may not recover its own transfer cost within a reasonable payback period. RBI has directed that foreclosure charges cannot be levied on individual floating-rate borrowers, which removes one cost variable from the existing loan side of the comparison.
Can an NRI get a home loan for property in India?
Yes. NRIs can obtain home loans for residential property in India from banks and HFCs authorised to lend to NRIs, subject to FEMA regulations. Documentation requirements include passport, valid visa/work permit or OCI card, and income proof from the country of residence (often requiring additional verification or a local co-applicant/guarantor). Loan repayment must be made through specific channels — NRE/NRO account remittances or rental income from the property — as prescribed under FEMA and RBI's regulations for lending to non-residents.
What credit score do I need for a home loan, and does it affect my interest rate?
Most lenders prefer a credit score of 750 and above for the most competitive rates, though sanctions do happen at lower scores with a higher spread or additional conditions. Since the interest rate spread over the external benchmark is explicitly risk-based, a stronger credit score directly translates into a lower spread and therefore a lower effective rate — this is not a minor factor, particularly over a 15-20 year tenor.
What documents does a self-employed applicant need that a salaried applicant does not?
Self-employed applicants generally need Income Tax Returns with computation of income for 2-3 years, audited financials (or CA-certified financials where tax audit does not apply), GST returns where applicable to corroborate turnover, business bank statements, and proof of business continuity and registration. Because self-employed income is inherently less standardised than a salary slip, lenders apply more scrutiny and sometimes a different (often more conservative) income-averaging method to arrive at eligible income.
How long does the entire home loan process typically take?
For a salaried applicant with clean, complete documentation, sanction can be achieved in roughly 2-4 weeks from application. Self-employed applicants, under-construction properties requiring builder-side documentation, or properties needing more extensive legal/technical due diligence commonly take 6-10 weeks. Registration, stamp duty payment, and possession timelines are additional and depend on the property transaction itself, not the loan process.
What is the RERA registration status and why should I check it before buying an under-construction property?
Under the Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Act, 2016 (RERA), most under-construction residential projects above a specified size threshold must be registered with the state's RERA authority, with details of approvals, timelines, and escrow-account handling of buyer payments publicly available on the RERA website. Lenders typically will not finance an under-construction property in an unregistered project. Checking RERA registration protects both your loan sanction prospects and your broader interest as a buyer in a project that may otherwise face delivery delays or fund misuse.
What stamp duty and registration costs should I budget for, beyond the loan and down payment?
Stamp duty and registration charges are levied by the state government and are separate from the loan amount and down payment — typically in the range of 5-7% of the property's market or agreement value in most states, though the exact rate, any rebate for women co-owners, and the specific calculation method vary meaningfully by state. This cost must be funded from your own resources; it is generally not covered by the home loan itself.
Can I get a joint home loan with a family member who is not my spouse?
Yes. Most lenders permit joint home loans with parents, siblings, or adult children as co-applicants, provided the co-applicant is also a co-owner of the property (a common lender requirement) or otherwise meets the lender's specific co-applicant policy. A joint application combines incomes for eligibility purposes and can meaningfully increase the sanctioned loan amount, but also creates joint liability — all co-borrowers are equally responsible for repayment regardless of the individual contribution ratio.
What happens to my home loan tax benefits if I rent out the property instead of self-occupying it?
For a let-out (rented) property, the entire interest paid is deductible against the rental income received, with no ₹2 lakh cap that applies to self-occupied property — but this creates a 'loss from house property' if interest exceeds rental income, and current law caps the set-off of such a loss against other income heads (such as salary) at ₹2 lakh per year, with any excess loss carried forward for set-off in subsequent years. Principal repayment continues to qualify under Section 80C in the same manner regardless of self-occupied or let-out status.
Does taking a top-up loan on my existing home loan affect my tax benefits?
A top-up loan's tax treatment depends on its stated purpose. If the top-up funds are used for the construction, repair, renovation, or reconstruction of the same house property, the interest portion continues to qualify for deduction under Section 24(b) within the applicable limits. If the top-up funds are used for an unrelated purpose (education, business, personal expenses), that portion of interest generally does not qualify for the home loan interest deduction. Lenders and borrowers should maintain clear documentation of the fund's actual use.
How does my existing personal loan or car loan affect my home loan eligibility?
Existing EMIs on a personal loan, car loan, or other secured/unsecured loan are included in the FOIR calculation as a fixed obligation, directly reducing the EMI capacity available for the new home loan and therefore the eligible home loan amount. Credit card outstanding, if not paid in full, is also typically factored in, sometimes as a notional EMI based on the outstanding balance.
What is a home loan insurance or credit-linked life insurance, and is it mandatory?
Many lenders offer (and in practice often bundle) a credit-linked insurance policy that pays off the outstanding loan balance if the borrower dies during the tenor, protecting the family from the liability. This is generally not a statutory or RBI-mandated requirement for the loan itself, though individual lenders may make it a strong sanction condition in practice. Borrowers should evaluate whether the bundled policy's premium-to-cover ratio is competitive compared to a standalone term life insurance policy assigned to the lender as security, which can sometimes achieve equivalent protection more cost-effectively.
Can I switch from a fixed rate to a floating rate loan, or vice versa, during the tenor?
Most lenders permit a one-time or periodic switch between fixed and floating rate options during the loan tenor, usually for a conversion fee. Since October 2019, RBI's external benchmark mandate applies specifically to new floating-rate retail loans; borrowers on an older loan structure (such as an MCLR-linked or base-rate-linked loan from before the benchmark mandate) can typically request migration to the external benchmark regime, sometimes for a nominal switching fee, which can be worthwhile if it results in a materially lower effective rate.
What is the difference between a home loan and a Loan Against Property (LAP)?
A home loan finances the purchase or construction of a residential property and is specifically linked to that transaction, generally carrying the most competitive rates among retail secured lending products and eligibility for the Section 80C/24(b) tax benefits described above. A Loan Against Property (LAP) is a general-purpose loan secured against an already-owned property (residential or commercial), typically carrying a somewhat higher rate than a home purchase loan and used for business expansion, education, medical expenses, or other purposes — it does not carry the same home-loan-specific tax benefits since it is not for property acquisition or construction.
Does PNPC help NRIs based in the UAE buy property in India?
Yes. PNPC has operating offices in Chennai, Bangalore, Hyderabad, and Dubai. For NRI clients based in the UAE purchasing property in India, we coordinate the India-side loan eligibility, documentation, FEMA-compliant repayment structuring (NRE/NRO account mechanics), and tax planning, alongside the UAE-side considerations relevant to the client's overall financial position — all under one engagement rather than split between disconnected advisors in each country.
What is the loan tenor I should choose — shorter for less interest, or longer for lower EMI?
A shorter tenor reduces total interest paid over the life of the loan but increases the monthly EMI burden; a longer tenor lowers the EMI but increases total interest paid, sometimes substantially, over the loan's life. The right choice depends on your income stability, other financial goals competing for the same monthly cash flow (retirement savings, children's education), and whether you intend to prepay opportunistically when surplus funds are available — which, given the RBI-mandated nil prepayment charge for individual floating-rate borrowers, is a genuinely available lever, not just a theoretical one.
What happens if I am unable to pay my EMI for a few months due to a temporary financial setback?
Missing EMI payments affects your credit score and, if it continues, can eventually lead to the loan being classified as a Non-Performing Asset (NPA) by the lender and, in a sustained default scenario, recovery action under the SARFAESI Act, 2002, which allows secured lenders to enforce their security (the mortgaged property) without court intervention in many circumstances, subject to prescribed notice and process. Communicating proactively with the lender at the first sign of difficulty — rather than after multiple missed payments — meaningfully improves the options available, including possible restructuring.
How does PNPC charge for home loan advisory — is it a percentage of the loan amount?
PNPC charges a fixed, agreed professional fee for the advisory engagement — covering eligibility assessment, lender comparison, tax-regime and ownership structuring, and documentation support — confirmed in writing before work begins. We are not paid a commission or percentage by any lender for directing business to them, which keeps our lender comparison genuinely independent rather than influenced by referral incentives.
Why should I use a CA firm for home loan advisory instead of a bank's own loan officer or a loan broker?
A bank's loan officer represents that specific bank's product and sanctioning interest, not an independent comparison across lenders. A loan broker may compare lenders but is frequently paid a commission by the lender that is ultimately selected, and typically does not integrate tax-regime modelling, joint-ownership structuring, or your broader financial position into the recommendation. A CA-led engagement starts from your complete financial and tax picture, compares lenders independently, and remains available for the tax and compliance questions that arise well after the loan is disbursed — a scope a bank officer or broker relationship does not typically cover.
What does the PNPC home loan advisory engagement actually include, end to end?
Eligibility diagnostic using both FOIR and LTV methods, credit report review, tax-regime and joint-ownership structuring advice, comparison of 3-4 shortlisted lenders on genuine total cost, documentation assembly in each lender's required format, coordination on property legal/technical due diligence, sanction letter review before acceptance, stamp duty and registration cost planning, disbursement tracking for under-construction property, home loan insurance review, and annual tax benefit claim setup once EMIs begin — with ongoing availability for balance transfer evaluation, rate reset reviews, and any subsequent property-related tax questions.
Is there a minimum or maximum loan amount PNPC advises on?
No fixed minimum or maximum — the advisory approach scales to the loan size and complexity involved. A modest loan for a first-time salaried buyer and a larger loan involving joint ownership, self-employed income, or an under-construction property with more extensive documentation both benefit from the same structured eligibility, tax, and lender-comparison process, just at proportionate depth and effort.
How does a co-applicant's poor credit score affect a joint home loan application?
Lenders typically assess the credit profile of all applicants and co-applicants jointly, and a co-applicant with a significantly weaker credit score or adverse credit history can affect either the sanctioned amount, the offered rate spread, or in some cases the overall sanction decision — even if the primary applicant's own profile is strong. It is generally advisable to review all co-applicants' credit reports before a joint application is submitted.
What is the impact of the property being in only one spouse's name on tax planning, if both are contributing to the EMI?
Tax deduction under both Section 80C (principal) and Section 24(b) (interest) can generally only be claimed by a person who is both a co-owner of the property and a co-borrower on the loan. If only one spouse is the registered owner, even if both contribute financially to the EMI, only the registered owner can typically claim the deduction — the other spouse's financial contribution does not by itself create an independent tax claim. Structuring joint ownership at the time of purchase, if the intention is to split the tax benefit, is far more straightforward than any correction afterward.
Can I use my home loan account interest certificate directly without any adjustment for my tax return?
Generally yes for a straightforward, fully disbursed loan on a self-occupied completed property — the lender's provisional interest certificate splits principal and interest for the financial year and can generally be used directly for the Section 80C and Section 24(b) claims, subject to the applicable caps. Adjustments are needed in specific situations: pre-construction interest being claimed in instalments post-possession, a let-out property with the loss-set-off cap, joint ownership with proportionate claims, or a partial-year claim where possession or repayment began mid-year.
| Feature | Bank Loan Officer / DSA | Online Loan Aggregator / Broker | PNPC Global |
|---|---|---|---|
| Whose interest is centred | The specific bank's product and sanction target | Often commission-driven toward whichever lender pays the referral fee | Your actual eligibility, tax position, and total cost — engaged independently of any lender |
| Lender comparison | Single-lender only | Multiple lenders shown, but incentive structure may bias recommendation | Genuine 3-4 lender comparison on total cost, disclosed transparently, with no referral commission earned by PNPC |
| Tax regime & ownership structuring | Not typically offered | Not typically offered | Modelled explicitly before application — old vs new regime, joint ownership, Section 80C/24(b) optimisation |
| Self-employed documentation support | Generic checklist, limited tailoring | Limited, varies widely by platform | Documentation assembled in each specific lender's required format by CA-qualified staff |
| Sanction letter & covenant review | Presented as standard terms | Rarely reviewed in depth | Clause-by-clause review before acceptance, in plain language |
| Ongoing tax benefit tracking | Not offered post-disbursement | Not offered post-disbursement | Annual reconciliation of principal/interest claims against your chosen tax regime, every year |
| Balance transfer / rate reset review | Not proactively offered | Occasionally, if it generates a new commission | Periodic, total-cost-based review — recommended only when it genuinely benefits you |
| India-UAE coordination for NRIs | Not applicable | Rarely available | Coordinated from Chennai/Bangalore/Hyderabad and Dubai offices under one engagement |
| Fee transparency | No advisory fee, but incentive is bank-side | Often free to borrower, funded by lender commission | Fixed, agreed professional fee confirmed in writing — no lender commission earned |
What the PNPC package includes
- 01
FOIR- and LTV-based eligibility diagnostic before you shortlist a property
- 02
Credit bureau report review for accuracy and improvement opportunities before application
- 03
Old-regime versus new-regime tax modelling specifically incorporating home loan interest deduction
- 04
Joint ownership and EMI-contribution structuring to optimise combined Section 80C and Section 24(b) claims
- 05
Independent comparison of 3-4 shortlisted lenders on genuine total cost, not headline rate
- 06
Documentation assembly tailored to each lender's specific underwriting format, including full support for self-employed and professional applicants
- 07
Coordination on property legal and technical due diligence to flag issues before they cause a late-stage rejection
- 08
Clause-by-clause sanction letter and loan agreement review before acceptance
- 09
Stamp duty, registration, and full funding-plan cost mapping ahead of registration
- 10
Disbursement schedule tracking and pre-EMI interest management for under-construction property
- 11
Home loan insurance review against standalone term insurance alternatives
- 12
Annual tax benefit claim reconciliation from the lender's interest certificate through to your ITR
- 13
Periodic balance transfer and rate reset evaluation on genuine total-cost terms
- 14
Direct contact with your engagement CA — not a call centre or a one-time transaction relationship
Talk to a PNPC Chartered Accountant before you make an offer on your next home. Not a bank loan officer selling one product, not a broker earning a lender commission — a practising CA who calculates your real eligibility, compares lenders independently, structures your tax position correctly, and stays engaged for every EMI, reset, and return that follows.