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Home Affordability Calculator

Find out how expensive a home you can afford based on your income and savings.

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Combined household income before tax
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Car loans, personal loans, credit card minimums per month
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Cash you can put down (should include closing costs)
Current home loan rate
Duration of the home loan

Common questions

How much of my income should go towards home loan EMI?
General guideline: total debt obligations (all EMIs) should not exceed 40–45% of gross monthly income. If you have no other loans, you could stretch to 45% for the home loan EMI alone. Being more conservative (30–35%) gives you breathing room for rate increases and life events.
How much down payment do I need?
RBI mandates minimum 10–20% down payment for home loans (loan-to-value ratio max 80–90% depending on loan amount). Practically, a larger down payment means lower EMI, less interest, and potentially better loan terms. Aim for at least 20% of the property value.
What is the impact of credit score on home loan eligibility?
CIBIL score above 750: best rates, full loan amount. 700–750: slightly higher rate. 650–700: harder to get, higher rate. Below 650: most banks will decline. Your spouse's income (if applicable) combined with your income improves eligibility — both credit scores matter in a joint application.
Are there hidden costs I should factor in?
Yes. Beyond the price: stamp duty (3–8% of property value depending on state), registration (1%), property tax, maintenance/society charges, interior fit-out (₹500–2,000/sq ft), moving costs. Total out-of-pocket is typically 10–15% above the property price.
Should I buy or continue renting?
Use the price-to-rent ratio: Annual rent ÷ Property value. If below 3%, buying is usually better. If above 3%, renting + investing the difference may be better financially. But non-financial factors — stability, customisation, family — matter too. Use the rent-vs-buy calculator for a detailed comparison.

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