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AY 2026-27 · FY 2025-26

Home Loan Tax Benefits: Save Up to ₹3.5 Lakh

A home loan does double duty — the interest saves you up to ₹2 lakh under Section 24, and the principal up to ₹1.5 lakh under 80C. Here's how the two work, the self-occupied versus let-out split, and what the new regime keeps.

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Quick answer

A home loan gives you two tax breaks under the old regime: up to ₹2 lakh on the interest (Section 24) and up to ₹1.5 lakh on the principal (Section 80C) — up to ₹3.5 lakh in all. For a let-out property the interest is fully deductible, and the new regime keeps only that let-out interest benefit.

The two parts

Interest and principal, taxed differently

Your EMI splits into interest and principal — and each is claimed under its own section, with its own limit.

Section 24(b) ₹2,00,000

On the interest

Deduction for the interest you pay on a self-occupied home, capped at ₹2 lakh a year. For a let-out home, the interest is fully deductible.

Section 80C ₹1,50,000

On the principal

Repayment of the principal, plus stamp duty and registration in the year you buy — within your overall ₹1.5 lakh 80C limit.

It depends on the home

Self-occupied vs let-out

How much interest you can claim hinges on whether you live in the home or rent it out.

Self-occupied

Interest deduction is capped at ₹2 lakh a year. There's no rental income, so this is a straight deduction against your other income.

Let-out (rented)

The full interest is deductible against the rent. If that creates a loss, you can set off up to ₹2 lakh against other income each year, and carry the rest forward for eight years.

To get the full ₹2 lakh on a self-occupied home, construction must finish within five years of the loan — otherwise the cap drops to ₹30,000.

The regime question

What the new regime keeps

Most home-loan benefits are an old-regime story — but one piece survives in the new regime.

Old regimeNew regime
Interest — self-occupied₹2 lakhNot allowed
Interest — let-outFullFull*
Principal (80C)₹1.5 lakhNot allowed

*In the new regime, let-out interest is deductible against the rent — but a resulting house-property loss can't be set off against your salary or other income. For most homeowners with a self-occupied home, the old regime is where the home-loan saving lives.

Easy to miss

Three things buyers overlook

Pre-construction interest

Interest paid before you get possession isn't lost — claim it in five equal instalments from the year construction completes (within the ₹2 lakh cap).

Joint home loan

Co-borrowers who are also co-owners can each claim up to ₹2 lakh interest and ₹1.5 lakh principal — potentially doubling the benefit for a couple.

First-time buyers

Older loans may carry extra interest deductions under Section 80EE or 80EEA — check if your sanction date qualifies.

Old or new?

A home loan often tips it to the old regime

With up to ₹3.5 lakh in interest and principal — and HRA or 80C on top — a home loan is one of the strongest reasons to stay on the old regime. But it only pays if your total deductions beat the new regime's lower rates. Run both with your real numbers.

Claim it all, correctly

Make your home loan work hardest at tax time

Pre-construction interest, joint-owner splits, the let-out loss rules and the right regime — a home loan has more moving parts than most deductions. Send your loan and salary details on WhatsApp and a Chartered Accountant claims every rupee you're entitled to and files for you.

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Common questions

Home loan tax benefits — FAQs

How much tax can I save on a home loan?

Up to ₹3.5 lakh a year under the old regime — ₹2 lakh on interest under Section 24(b) for a self-occupied home, plus ₹1.5 lakh on principal under Section 80C. Joint owners can each claim these separately.

What is the Section 24 limit on home loan interest?

₹2 lakh a year for a self-occupied property. For a let-out property there's no cap — the full interest is deductible against the rental income.

Is a home loan deductible in the new tax regime?

For a self-occupied home, no — neither the Section 24 interest nor the 80C principal is allowed in the new regime. For a let-out property, the interest is still deductible against rental income.

Can I claim both HRA and a home loan?

Yes, in genuine cases — for example, if you rent in your work city while owning a home elsewhere, or your own home is let out. Both can be claimed together under the old regime.

What is pre-construction interest?

Interest paid before you get possession of the property. It isn't lost — you claim it in five equal instalments starting the year construction is complete, within the overall interest limit.

Does principal repayment qualify for deduction?

Yes, under Section 80C up to ₹1.5 lakh a year, along with stamp duty and registration in the year of purchase — but only in the old regime, and within the overall 80C limit.

Turn your EMI into a tax saving

Send your home-loan interest certificate and salary details on WhatsApp — a Chartered Accountant claims your full Section 24 and 80C, picks the right regime, and files an optimised return.

File with my home-loan claim

This explainer on home loan tax benefits is for AY 2026-27 (FY 2025-26) and is for general information only — not tax, legal or financial advice. Limits, conditions and regime rules are governed by the Income-tax Act and may change. Confirm your position, or consult a Chartered Accountant, before filing.