Calculate your monthly loan installment, total interest, and see a complete month-by-month amortization schedule.
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Monthly EMI
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Principal
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Total Interest
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Total Amount
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Amortization Schedule
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EMI
Principal
Interest
Balance
Frequently Asked Questions
EMI (Equated Monthly Installment) is a fixed monthly payment made to a lender. Each payment covers part of the principal and the interest accrued that month.
EMI = P × r × (1+r)^n / ((1+r)^n - 1), where P = principal, r = monthly interest rate (annual rate ÷ 12 ÷ 100), n = total months.
You can reduce EMI by: making a larger down payment (lower principal), choosing a longer tenure, or negotiating a lower interest rate. Note that a longer tenure reduces EMI but increases total interest paid.
An amortization schedule is a table showing how each EMI payment is split between principal and interest over time. Early payments have more interest; later payments have more principal repayment.
⚠️ Disclaimer: EMI figures are indicative estimates calculated using a standard reducing-balance formula. Actual EMI, applicable interest rate, processing fees, and loan terms may differ significantly based on your lender's policies. Consult your bank or financial institution for exact figures before committing to a loan.
Understanding EMI (Equated Monthly Installment)
Enter the loan amount, interest rate (annual), and loan tenure in months or years.
Click Calculate to see your monthly EMI, total interest payable, and total amount you'll pay over the loan period.
View the amortization schedule to see how much of each payment goes toward principal vs. interest.
When You Need This
Planning a home loan — see exactly what your monthly payment will be before applying.
Comparing car loan offers from different banks to find the best deal.
Deciding how long a loan tenure to choose — longer tenures mean lower EMIs but much more total interest.
Understanding how a small difference in interest rate compounds over 10–20 years.
Good to Know
A 0.5% difference in interest rate doesn't sound like much, but on a 20-year home loan of 50 lakhs, it can mean 3–4 lakhs in extra interest. Always compare the total cost of the loan, not just the monthly EMI. Shorter tenures save dramatically on interest — a 15-year loan costs far less in total than a 20-year loan, even though the monthly payment is higher.