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Repayment Strategy · 2026

How to Reduce Home Loan Tenure by Increasing Your EMI

Adding ₹3,000/month to your EMI on a ₹50L loan can close it nearly 3 years early and save ₹7+ lakhs. Here is exactly how to calculate the benefit and make the request to your bank.

Last updated: Published 16 May 2026 · Updated 16 May 2026

How to Reduce Home Loan Tenure by Increasing Your EMI
VG
Vishal Gupta

Published 16 May 2026 · Updated 16 May 2026

EMI increase vs part-prepayment: what is the difference?

Increasing your EMI formally means your bank restructures the amortisation schedule — a higher fixed payment each month with a shorter end date. A part-prepayment means a one-time or irregular additional payment applied directly to the principal. Both save interest, but they work differently and have different processes at the bank.

When your income increases — salary hike, rental income, a new source — you may want to direct more money toward your home loan. You have two main levers: formally request a higher EMI (tenure reduction), or simply make additional part-prepayments whenever you have surplus.

A formal EMI increase changes your standing instruction with the bank. The new (higher) EMI is debited every month automatically. You need to request this formally and your lender will issue a revised sanction or schedule.

An extra part-prepayment is more flexible — you pay extra when you can, as a lump sum, but your regular EMI does not change. This is often easier and more flexible for most borrowers, but requires more discipline to execute consistently.

How much does increasing your EMI save?

The interest savings from a higher EMI depend on how much you increase it, how early in the loan tenure you make the change, and your current outstanding balance.

Monthly EMI increaseLoan: ₹50L at 8.5%, 20yr remainingInterest savedTenure reduced
₹1,000/month₹43,391 → ₹44,391~₹3.2L~12 months
₹2,000/month₹43,391 → ₹45,391~₹5.8L~22 months
₹3,000/month₹43,391 → ₹46,391~₹7.9L~31 months
₹5,000/month₹43,391 → ₹48,391~₹11.8L~47 months

These figures are illustrative. Your actual savings depend on your outstanding principal, current rate, and remaining tenure. Use KlearPay to calculate your exact saving before approaching your bank.

One key insight from the table: even a modest ₹2,000/month EMI increase on a ₹50L loan saves nearly ₹6 lakhs and closes the loan almost 2 years early. The compounding effect of earlier principal reduction is significant.

How to formally request a tenure reduction (EMI increase)

The process for formally increasing your EMI and reducing tenure typically involves:

  • Write a letter or submit a digital request to your home loan servicing branch or relationship manager, stating that you want to increase your EMI amount and reduce your remaining tenure accordingly.
  • Your lender will prepare a revised amortisation schedule reflecting the higher EMI and shorter tenure. Review it carefully — confirm the new end date matches your expectation.
  • Update your standing instruction (auto-debit mandate) to the new higher amount. Some banks require a fresh NACH mandate; others can change it internally.
  • No charge applies for this request on floating-rate loans — lenders cannot charge for tenure restructuring at the borrower's request.

Some lenders allow this change digitally through their apps; others require a branch visit. See the bank-wise process below.

Bank-wise process for requesting EMI increase

BankDigital option?Contact for EMI increase
HDFC BankMyLoan portal / call 1800-11-2211Preferred: MyLoan portal or relationship manager
SBIYONO / branchVisit branch with written request or YONO request
ICICI BankiMobile Pay / 1860-120-7777Contact customer care or submit a service request in iMobile
Axis BankAxis Mobile / branchSubmit a service request via Axis Mobile or branch
Kotak Mahindra BankKotak app / branchContact Kotak home loan servicing via app or branch
LIC Housing FinanceBranch (limited digital)Written request at servicing branch
PNBPNB ONE / branchPNB ONE app service request or branch visit
Canara BankCanara AI1 / branchBranch visit with written request recommended

After the EMI change is processed, verify on your next statement that the new amount is debiting correctly and that the revised end date matches the schedule issued by the bank.

When to increase your EMI: the best timing

The earlier in your loan tenure you increase the EMI, the more you save — because more of your loan has interest-heavy early EMIs where the principal is high. The benefit diminishes as you approach the end of the loan.

Good triggers for an EMI increase:

  • Annual salary increment: allocate a portion of the increment (e.g., 30–50% of the monthly take-home increase) toward a higher EMI.
  • After a major household expense is paid off (car loan, children's school fees, renovation): redirect that freed-up cash to the home loan.
  • Interest rate increase by RBI: if your floating-rate EMI rises, consider absorbing it voluntarily rather than requesting a tenure extension.

One caution: do not increase your EMI to the point where you have no emergency fund. Maintain at least 6 months of expenses liquid before putting extra money toward the home loan.

The easier alternative: regular extra prepayments

If your lender's EMI change process is cumbersome, or if your income is variable, you can achieve the same effect through regular extra prepayments instead of a formal EMI revision.

Example: instead of formally increasing your EMI by ₹3,000, simply transfer ₹3,000 extra toward your loan account every month as a part-prepayment. The interest savings over time are nearly identical.

The advantage: flexibility. You can prepay ₹3,000 in good months and skip it if you have an unexpected expense. A formal EMI increase locks you into a higher mandatory payment every month.

The disadvantage: it requires discipline. Without an auto-debit for the extra amount, many borrowers skip the extra payment when other expenses come up. A formal EMI increase ensures consistency.

KlearPay helps you plan and track both approaches. See monthly vs yearly prepayment comparison for a side-by-side analysis.

Frequently asked questions

Yes — through part-prepayments. If you make a part-prepayment and ask your bank to reduce tenure (not EMI), the outstanding principal falls and the loan closes earlier while your EMI stays the same. This is the most common prepayment outcome chosen by Indian borrowers.

No. There is no charge for requesting a tenure restructuring at the borrower's request on a floating-rate home loan. If your bank tries to charge a fee, ask them to show the clause in your sanction letter — there generally is none.

A common approach: allocate 30–50% of any net income increase toward the home loan and keep the rest for lifestyle or investments. On a ₹15,000 net increase, adding ₹5,000–7,000 to your EMI can save ₹10–15 lakhs and close your loan 4–6 years early, depending on your outstanding balance. Run your specific numbers on KlearPay.

Most banks allow you to request a reduction in EMI (back to the original or a higher floor) if your financial situation changes. This typically requires a branch visit and a fresh amortisation schedule. However, it is easier to use extra part-prepayments for EMI increases (since they are voluntary) rather than changing the standing instruction.

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