How Much Home Loan Can I Get on ₹1 Lakh Salary?
Banks will lend you roughly ₹50–58 lakhs on a ₹1 lakh gross salary. Here's the exact formula banks use, what affects your eligibility, and whether you should borrow the maximum.
The short answer: on a ₹1 lakh gross monthly salary with no existing loans, most banks will approve a home loan between ₹50–60 lakhs at current interest rates (8.5–9.5% for 2026). Here’s exactly how they calculate it and what you can do to maximise or protect that number.
How Banks Calculate Loan Eligibility
Banks use a Fixed Obligation to Income Ratio (FOIR) — typically 50–55% of gross monthly income. This is the maximum they’ll allow as total monthly EMI obligations.
On ₹1 lakh gross salary:
- Maximum EMI capacity: ₹50,000–55,000/month
- If you have existing EMIs (car loan, personal loan): subtract those first
At 8.75% interest for 20 years, a ₹50,000 EMI corresponds to a loan of approximately ₹56 lakhs.
At 9.25% interest (slightly higher rate), the same EMI gets you closer to ₹52 lakhs.
Use the calculator above to run your specific numbers.
What Actually Affects Your Eligibility
Credit Score
The single biggest variable after income. A CIBIL score above 750 typically gets you the best interest rates — sometimes 0.25–0.5% lower than the standard rate. Below 700 and some banks won’t lend at all; others will but at a punishing rate. Check your CIBIL score before applying (one free check per year at cibil.com).
Co-applicant Income
Adding a spouse or parent as a co-applicant and clubbing income is the most effective way to increase eligibility. If your spouse earns ₹75,000/month, the combined FOIR calculation may allow a loan of ₹90+ lakhs.
Existing Obligations
Every ₹10,000 in existing EMI reduces your home loan eligibility by approximately ₹10 lakhs. Close all avoidable credit card dues and personal loans before applying.
Employment Type
Salaried employees at established companies get the best terms. Self-employed applicants face higher rates and more documentation scrutiny. Government employees often qualify for subsidised PMAY schemes.
Should You Borrow the Maximum?
Almost certainly not.
The maximum the bank will lend you is calibrated to the point where you probably won’t default — not the point where you’ll be financially comfortable. A ₹55,000 EMI on a ₹1 lakh salary leaves ₹45,000 for rent (if construction is ongoing), groceries, utilities, medical, children’s education, and savings.
A more prudent approach: target a loan where the EMI is 30–40% of take-home pay, not 50–55% of gross. On ₹1 lakh gross (~₹75,000 take-home after tax and PF), that’s an EMI of ₹22,000–30,000, corresponding to a loan of roughly ₹25–35 lakhs.
This leaves room for SIP investments, an emergency fund, and life.
2026 Rates: What to Expect
Home loan rates in 2026 range from 8.5% to 10%+ depending on bank and credit profile:
| Bank | Current Rate (Approximate) |
|---|---|
| SBI | 8.5–9.15% |
| HDFC | 8.75–9.5% |
| ICICI | 8.75–9.5% |
| Kotak | 8.75–9.25% |
| LIC Housing | 8.65–9.25% |
A 0.5% rate difference on a ₹50 lakh loan over 20 years is approximately ₹3.5 lakhs in total interest. Always negotiate. Banks have more flexibility on rate than they admit.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I get a home loan on ₹50,000 salary?
Yes. Banks will lend approximately ₹25–30 lakhs on a ₹50,000 salary with a clean credit profile and no existing loans. This is achievable for properties in tier-2 cities and suburban areas.
Does Provident Fund deduction affect loan eligibility?
Yes. Banks typically calculate FOIR on gross salary before PF deduction but some use net take-home. Clarify this with your bank — it can affect eligibility by ₹3–5 lakhs.
Should I opt for longer tenure to lower EMI?
Only if necessary. A 25-year loan vs 20-year loan on ₹50 lakhs at 8.75% reduces your EMI by approximately ₹2,500/month — but costs you approximately ₹8–10 lakhs more in total interest. If the lower EMI is what you need to qualify or to keep monthly cash flow comfortable, it’s defensible. Otherwise, go shorter.
Can I prepay a home loan without penalty?
For floating rate home loans (which is what most people have in India), RBI guidelines prohibit prepayment penalties. You can prepay any amount at any time without charge. Do it in the first half of the tenure for maximum impact.