EMI Calculator

Calculate monthly EMI for home, car, or personal loans instantly

Loan Details

Enter loan details and click Calculate

Monthly EMI

Principal Amount

Total Interest

Total Payment

How to Use

  1. Enter Loan Amount — type the principal amount you wish to borrow (e.g., ₹50,00,000 for a home loan).
  2. Enter Interest Rate — input the annual interest rate quoted by your bank (e.g., 8.5%).
  3. Enter Tenure — choose loan duration in months or years (e.g., 20 years = 240 months).
  4. View Results — your Monthly EMI, Total Interest Payable, and Total Amount Payable are calculated instantly.
  5. Check Amortization — scroll down to see the month-by-month breakdown of principal vs. interest in each EMI.

What is an EMI Calculator?

An EMI (Equated Monthly Instalment) Calculator is a financial tool that tells you exactly how much you will pay every month for a loan. The monthly EMI remains constant throughout the loan tenure and is composed of two parts: a portion that repays the principal and a portion that covers the interest.

Whether you are planning a home loan, a car loan, a personal loan, or an education loan, the EMI Calculator gives you the answer in seconds — helping you decide how much you can comfortably borrow.

EMI Formula

The standard formula used by all Indian banks and financial institutions is:

EMI = P × r × (1 + r)ⁿ / [(1 + r)ⁿ – 1]

  • P = Principal loan amount
  • r = Monthly interest rate (Annual rate ÷ 12 ÷ 100)
  • n = Loan tenure in months

For example, a ₹30 lakh home loan at 8.5% p.a. for 20 years (240 months): r = 8.5/12/100 = 0.007083. EMI = 30,00,000 × 0.007083 × (1.007083)²⁴⁰ / [(1.007083)²⁴⁰ – 1] = ₹26,035 per month.

What Does the EMI Calculator Show?

  • Monthly EMI: The fixed amount you pay every month.
  • Total Interest Payable: The total interest cost over the full loan tenure.
  • Total Amount Payable: Principal + Total Interest — what the loan actually costs you.
  • Amortization Schedule: A month-by-month table showing how much of each EMI goes toward principal vs. interest.

How EMI Changes With Loan Parameters

Higher principal → higher EMI. A ₹50L loan has roughly 1.67× the EMI of a ₹30L loan at the same rate and tenure.

Higher interest rate → higher EMI. Moving from 8% to 9% on a ₹30L / 20-year loan increases the EMI by about ₹1,900/month.

Longer tenure → lower EMI but higher total interest. Stretching a ₹30L loan from 15 to 20 years reduces the EMI but increases total interest paid by nearly ₹5 lakh.

Use Cases for Indian Borrowers

  • Home Loan Planning: Compare EMIs from multiple lenders before choosing. Even 0.25% difference in rate saves ₹50,000+ over a 20-year loan.
  • Car Loan: Check if the monthly EMI fits within 15–20% of your take-home salary — the standard affordability guideline used by banks.
  • Personal Loan: Personal loan rates in India range from 10.5% to 24%. The EMI calculator shows the true cost of borrowing at different rates.
  • Prepayment Impact: Use the amortization schedule to understand how a lump-sum prepayment reduces your outstanding principal and future interest.

Tips for Reducing Your EMI

  1. Negotiate the rate — even 0.5% lower can save lakhs over 20 years.
  2. Pay a larger down payment — reduces principal, directly reduces EMI.
  3. Choose a longer tenure carefully — lowers EMI but increases total interest paid.
  4. Make part-prepayments — extra payments go entirely toward principal, reducing future interest.

Frequently Asked Questions

EMI uses the reducing-balance method — each month you pay interest only on the outstanding principal, which decreases over time. Simple interest is calculated on the original principal throughout. EMI results in lower total interest than a flat-rate simple interest loan of the same amount and tenure.

Yes — a longer tenure spreads the principal over more months, lowering each EMI. However, you pay significantly more total interest. A ₹30 lakh home loan at 9% over 10 years has EMI ₹38,000 and total interest ₹15.6 lakh. Over 20 years: EMI ₹27,000 but total interest ₹34.8 lakh — more than double.

Yes — the EMI formula is the same for all reducing-balance loans. Just enter the loan amount, the applicable interest rate (car: 8.5–12%, personal: 10.5–24%), and tenure. The calculator works for any loan type.

Most financial planners recommend keeping your total EMI obligations below 35–40% of your net monthly income (take-home salary). Banks typically approve loans up to 50% FOIR (Fixed Obligation to Income Ratio). Staying below 35% leaves room for savings, investments, and emergencies.

Three options: (1) Part-prepayment — reduces outstanding principal, so future EMIs cover more principal and less interest; (2) Balance transfer — move the loan to a lender offering a lower rate; (3) Loan restructuring — request a tenure extension from your lender (lowers EMI but increases total interest).

For fixed-rate loans: yes. For floating-rate loans (common for home loans): the rate changes with RBI repo rate changes. When rates rise, your EMI increases (or tenure extends). When rates fall, you benefit. Most home loans in India are floating-rate.