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Home Loan Tax Benefits India: 80C & 24(b) Explained | InfoBuddy

🏠 Tax & Compliance
🏦
Home Loan Tax Benefits β€” Save Up to β‚Ή1,05,000 Per Year
Section 80C: β‚Ή1.5L principal deduction Β· Section 24(b): β‚Ή2L interest deduction Β· Old regime only Β· FY 2025-26
β‚Ή3.5L
“Every year I meet salaried professionals with running home loans who are filing ITR under the new tax regime without realising they are leaving β‚Ή70,000 to β‚Ή1,05,000 in tax savings unclaimed. The combination of Section 80C and Section 24(b) is the most powerful tax benefit available to a salaried homeowner in India β€” but only if you are in the old regime and know exactly how to claim it.” β€” Anshuman Kumar, FP&A Manager & Finance Expert, InfoBuddy
Who this guide is for: Any salaried Indian repaying a home loan who wants to understand exactly how to claim Section 80C and Section 24(b) deductions, how much tax they can save, whether old or new regime is better for them, and what documents are needed for ITR filing before July 31, 2026.

Your home loan EMI has two parts every month β€” principal repayment and interest payment. What most homeowners do not realise is that both parts save you tax under different sections of the Income Tax Act β€” but only under the old tax regime. Furthermore, if you have taken a joint home loan with your spouse, both of you can claim these deductions independently β€” effectively doubling the household tax savings.

However, the new tax regime β€” which is the default from FY 2023-24 β€” offers neither of these deductions for self-occupied property. Therefore, the home loan tax benefit is one of the strongest reasons to choose the old regime, provided your total deductions cross the break-even point.

Home Loan Tax Benefits β€” Two Sections, Two Deductions

Section 80C β€” Principal
β‚Ή1,50,000
βœ…Principal repayment in your EMI
βœ…Stamp duty + registration charges (year of purchase)
⚠️Shared with EPF, PPF, ELSS, LIC β€” combined β‚Ή1.5L cap
⚠️Property must not be sold within 5 years
❌Not available under new tax regime
Section 24(b) β€” Interest
β‚Ή2,00,000
βœ…Interest paid on home loan (self-occupied)
βœ…No limit for let-out / rented property
βœ…Pre-construction interest β€” 5 equal instalments
βœ…Separate from 80C β€” additional deduction
❌Not available for self-occupied under new regime
βœ…
Combined power: Under the old tax regime, a homeowner can claim up to β‚Ή3.5 lakhs total deduction β€” β‚Ή1.5L under 80C + β‚Ή2L under 24(b) β€” every year. At the 30% tax slab, that saves β‚Ή1,05,000 in tax annually. At 20% slab, β‚Ή70,000. This is on top of standard deduction β€” not instead of it.

How Much Tax Does Your Home Loan Actually Save? β€” Real Numbers

Tax Saving Calculation β€” β‚Ή50L Home Loan at 8.5% Β· FY 2025-26
Annual Home Loan Interest (Year 1) β‚Ή4,14,000
Section 24(b) Claimable (max) β‚Ή2,00,000
Annual Principal Repayment (Year 1) β‚Ή1,08,000
Section 80C β€” Principal (within β‚Ή1.5L) β‚Ή1,08,000
Total Home Loan Deduction β‚Ή3,08,000
Tax Saved at 20% slab (+ 4% cess) β‚Ή64,064
Tax Saved at 30% slab (+ 4% cess) β‚Ή96,096

On a β‚Ή50 lakh home loan, you save β‚Ή64,000 to β‚Ή96,000 in tax every single year β€” just by being in the old regime and claiming both sections correctly. Over 10 years of your loan, that is β‚Ή6.4 to β‚Ή9.6 lakhs in cumulative tax savings.

Section 24(b) β€” Interest Deduction Explained in Detail

Section 24(b) allows you to deduct interest paid on your home loan from your taxable income. However, the rules differ based on how you use the property:

Property TypeMax DeductionConditionNew Regime?
Self-Occupied (you live in it)β‚Ή2,00,000/yearConstruction complete, loan for purchase/construction❌ Not allowed
Let-Out (rented out)No upper limitFull interest deductible from rental income⚠️ Limited
Deemed Let-Out (second home)No upper limitTreated as let-out even if vacant❌ Restricted
Under ConstructionZero (during construction)Pre-construction interest claimed in 5 instalments after possession❌ Not allowed
ℹ️
Pre-construction interest rule: If your property was under construction, you paid interest before getting possession. This “pre-EMI interest” can be claimed in 5 equal annual instalments starting from the year you get possession β€” subject to the β‚Ή2 lakh annual cap. For example, β‚Ή3 lakh pre-construction interest = β‚Ή60,000/year deduction for 5 years after possession.

Section 80C β€” Principal Deduction and the Shared Limit Problem

Your home loan principal repayment qualifies for Section 80C deduction. However, this is the most misunderstood aspect β€” the β‚Ή1.5 lakh 80C limit is shared across ALL 80C investments including EPF, PPF, ELSS, LIC, and your home loan principal.

πŸ“Š 80C Limit Usage β€” β‚Ή60,000 Basic Salary/Month Homeowner
Total 80C Limit
β‚Ή1,50,000
EPF (12% Γ— β‚Ή60K Γ— 12)
β‚Ή86,400
Home Loan Principal (Year 1)
β‚Ή63,600
EPF + Principal = Limit Exceeded!
β‚Ή1,50,000 βœ“
πŸ’‘
Key insight: If your EPF + home loan principal already exceeds β‚Ή1.5 lakhs, your 80C is fully utilised automatically β€” without buying any additional 80C product. You do NOT need to invest in PPF, ELSS, or LIC additionally. Check your EPF + principal total before buying any tax-saving product in January-February.

Joint Home Loan β€” The Tax Benefit Multiplier

Taking a home loan jointly with your spouse is one of the most effective tax planning strategies available to salaried couples in India. Both co-borrowers who are also co-owners can claim the full deductions independently.

Joint Home Loan Tax Benefit β€” Couple Example Β· β‚Ή60L Loan Β· 8.5%
Annual interest (combined) β‚Ή4,92,000
Person A β€” Section 24(b) claim β‚Ή2,00,000
Person B β€” Section 24(b) claim β‚Ή2,00,000
Combined 24(b) household deduction β‚Ή4,00,000
Combined 80C principal deduction β‚Ή3,00,000 (β‚Ή1.5L each)
Total household deduction β‚Ή7,00,000/year
⚠️
Critical condition: Both partners must be co-owners on the property AND co-borrowers on the loan to claim deductions independently. Being only a co-borrower (not co-owner) or only a co-owner (not co-borrower) does not qualify for individual deductions. Get this right before registering the property.
πŸ“– Real Example β€” Arjun’s β‚Ή96,000 Annual Tax Saving in Hyderabad

Arjun, a 34-year-old software engineer in Hyderabad, earning β‚Ή12 lakhs annually, took a β‚Ή60 lakh home loan at 9% for 20 years in 2024. His monthly EMI was β‚Ή53,970. He had been filing ITR under the new regime since FY 2023-24 β€” his employer auto-defaulted him to it.

In January 2026, during a financial planning session, Anshuman ran the numbers. Arjun’s annual home loan interest was β‚Ή5,18,000 β€” of which β‚Ή2,00,000 was deductible under Section 24(b). His principal repayment was β‚Ή1,26,000, and EPF contribution was β‚Ή72,000 β€” totalling β‚Ή1,98,000 under 80C (within the β‚Ή1.5L cap, so full β‚Ή1.5L claimed). Total old regime deduction: β‚Ή3.5 lakhs. Tax saved: β‚Ή3,50,000 Γ— 30% Γ— 1.04 = β‚Ή1,09,200 per year.

Under the new regime, Arjun had been paying β‚Ή1,09,200 in avoidable tax every year. Over the 5 years he had been paying the home loan, that was β‚Ή5.46 lakhs in unnecessary tax. He switched to old regime immediately for FY 2025-26 ITR filing.

Home Loan Tax Benefits β€” Common Myths Busted

❌ Myth
“New regime is always better for homeowners since tax rates are lower”
βœ… Fact
For income above β‚Ή15L with a home loan, old regime almost always saves more. The β‚Ή3.5L deduction at 30% = β‚Ή1.05L saved β€” far more than new regime rate advantage.
❌ Myth
“I can claim full interest even if it exceeds β‚Ή2L for self-occupied property”
βœ… Fact
For self-occupied property, Section 24(b) is capped at β‚Ή2L. Excess interest cannot be carried forward. For let-out property, no limit applies.
❌ Myth
“Interest during construction period is lost β€” cannot claim it”
βœ… Fact
Pre-construction interest is claimable in 5 equal annual instalments after possession under Section 24(b), subject to the β‚Ή2L annual cap.
❌ Myth
“Since employer auto-submitted new regime TDS, I cannot switch to old regime”
βœ… Fact
You can switch to old regime when filing your ITR β€” regardless of which regime your employer used for TDS. Excess TDS will be refunded after ITR processing.

How to Claim Home Loan Deductions β€” Step by Step

1
Get Interest Certificate from Your Bank

Your bank issues an annual “Interest Certificate” or “Home Loan Statement” showing the exact principal and interest paid during the financial year. SBI, HDFC, ICICI β€” all banks issue this by April–May. Download it from net banking or request from your branch. This is your primary document for claiming both deductions.

2
Submit to HR Before January Deadline

Your employer deducts TDS monthly based on estimated tax. Submit your home loan interest certificate and principal repayment details to HR or payroll between December and January. This reduces your monthly TDS deduction for the remaining months of the financial year.

πŸ’‘
Missed the HR deadline? No problem β€” you can still claim the full deduction when filing your ITR directly. The excess TDS already deducted will be refunded after ITR processing. File before July 31, 2026.
3
Choose Old Regime in Your ITR

When filing your ITR (ITR-1 or ITR-2), actively select the old tax regime. The new regime is the default β€” you must manually opt for old regime to claim these deductions. Use our Income Tax Calculator to confirm old regime saves you more before filing.

4
Fill Income from House Property Section

In your ITR form, go to “Income from House Property” section. Enter: property address, whether self-occupied or let-out, annual interest paid (from bank certificate), and the principal repayment amount. For ITR-1 filers β€” only one self-occupied property can be declared. For multiple properties use ITR-2.

Do’s and Don’ts β€” Home Loan Tax Claims

βœ… Always Do This
βœ…Download interest certificate from bank every April–May
βœ…Compare old vs new regime before filing β€” use calculator
βœ…Check EPF + principal total before buying extra 80C
βœ…Register as co-owner if taking joint home loan with spouse
βœ…Keep all loan documents for 7 years minimum
❌ Never Do This
❌File new regime when you have a running home loan above β‚Ή15L income
❌Sell property within 5 years β€” all 80C deductions reversed
❌Claim more than β‚Ή2L interest for self-occupied property
❌Take joint loan without making spouse co-owner on property
❌Forget to claim pre-construction interest after possession

Home Loan Tax Benefits β€” Frequently Asked Questions

Can I claim both HRA exemption and home loan tax benefits simultaneously?
Yes β€” in specific situations. If you own a home in one city (say Mumbai) but work and live on rent in another city (Bengaluru), you can claim HRA exemption for the Bengaluru rent AND home loan deductions for the Mumbai property. However, if your owned property is in the same city where you are paying rent, the Income Tax Department may scrutinise the claim. You need a valid reason β€” like the owned property being too far from your workplace. Read our HRA Exemption Guide for the exact calculation.
My home loan interest is β‚Ή4 lakhs per year. Can I claim all of it?
For a self-occupied property, Section 24(b) is capped at β‚Ή2 lakhs per year β€” regardless of actual interest paid. The remaining β‚Ή2 lakhs cannot be claimed or carried forward for a self-occupied property. However, if your property is rented out (let-out), there is no upper limit on the interest deduction from rental income β€” though the resulting loss from house property that can be set off against salary income is still capped at β‚Ή2 lakhs per year, with remaining loss carried forward for 8 years.
What happens to 80C deductions if I sell my home within 5 years?
If you sell the property within 5 years of getting possession, all Section 80C deductions claimed for principal repayment in previous years are reversed β€” they are added back to your taxable income in the year of sale. This can result in a large unexpected tax liability. However, Section 24(b) interest deductions are NOT reversed even if you sell early. The 5-year rule applies only to 80C principal deductions.
Is home loan tax benefit available under the new tax regime?
For self-occupied property, NO β€” neither Section 80C (principal) nor Section 24(b) (interest up to β‚Ή2L) is available under the new tax regime. For let-out property, interest deduction against rental income is still available under the new regime, but the loss set-off against salary income is restricted. This is why having a home loan is one of the strongest reasons to choose the old regime β€” provided your total deductions (home loan + 80C + HRA + 80D) cross the break-even point for your income level.
Can I claim home loan tax benefits for an under-construction property?
Not during construction. Section 80C (principal) and Section 24(b) (interest) can only be claimed after you receive possession of the property. However, interest paid during the construction period β€” called pre-EMI or pre-construction interest β€” is not lost. After possession, you can claim this accumulated amount in 5 equal annual instalments under Section 24(b), subject to the β‚Ή2 lakh annual cap. Keep all interest payment records from the date of first disbursement for this purpose.
What documents do I need to claim home loan tax benefits in ITR?
You need: (1) Annual Interest Certificate from your bank β€” shows exact interest and principal paid during the financial year, (2) Loan sanction letter β€” for first-time claims, (3) Property registration document, (4) Possession letter β€” especially for under-construction property, (5) For joint loans β€” co-owner’s PAN and their share of the loan. The Income Tax Department may ask for these during scrutiny β€” keep them for at least 7 years after the assessment year.

Your home loan is not just a liability β€” it is a tax planning instrument. The combination of Section 80C and Section 24(b) can save you β‚Ή64,000 to β‚Ή1,05,000 every year under the old regime. For a couple with a joint home loan, that doubles to β‚Ή1.28 to β‚Ή2.1 lakhs saved annually.

Download your interest certificate. Compare both regimes in the Income Tax Calculator. Switch to old regime in your ITR if the numbers support it. Submit proof to HR before January. File before July 31, 2026.

The tax you save on your home loan is not a bonus β€” it is money the government has specifically set aside for homeowners. Claim every rupee of it.

πŸ“€ Home loan hai toh yeh zaroor share karo β€” July 31 deadline! Twitter
AK
Anshuman Kumar
FP&A Manager | MBA Finance, Bharti Vidyapeeth | 10+ Years in Financial Planning & Taxation
Anshuman Kumar is a Financial Planning & Analysis professional with over 10 years of experience in Indian income tax, home loan planning, TDS compliance, and payroll. He has helped hundreds of salaried homeowners choose the right tax regime and claim maximum deductions on their home loans. He writes and reviews all tax and finance content on InfoBuddy.
Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only based on Income Tax Act 2025 provisions and CBDT notifications current as of May 2026. Tax laws, deduction limits, and regime rules are subject to change. All calculations are indicative β€” actual tax savings depend on your specific income, deductions, and applicable slab rate. Always verify with your Chartered Accountant before filing ITR or making tax planning decisions. InfoBuddy is not a SEBI-registered advisor or CA firm.

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