Tax benefits for homebuyers in India showing home loan deductions under section 80C 24b and 80EEA with savings calculation

Tax Benefits for Homebuyers in India: A Complete 2026 Guide

By the Dasadia Editorial Team · Updated June 2026

For most Indian families, buying a home is the single largest financial decision they will ever make — and the Income Tax Act is designed to soften that cost. Between deductions on your home-loan interest, principal repayment, stamp duty and first-time-buyer concessions, a housing loan can be one of the most tax-efficient commitments in your portfolio. But there is a catch that trips up thousands of buyers every year: most of these benefits apply only under the old tax regime, and the framework shifted again with the new Income Tax Act, 2025.

This guide breaks down every major tax benefit available to homebuyers in India for FY 2025-26 and FY 2026-27 — what you can actually claim, under which regime, and the conditions attached. It is written to inform first, not to sell.

Key Takeaways

First, the Decisive Question: Old Regime or New?

The first question is not “which section do I claim?” but “which tax regime am I in?” Since FY 2023-24 the new tax regime (Section 115BAC) has been the default. It offers lower slab rates and, after Budget 2025, zero tax on taxable income up to ₹12 lakh — but in exchange it removes most deductions, including the home-loan interest deduction on a self-occupied property and the entire Section 80C basket. The old tax regime keeps these deductions but applies higher slab rates.

In practice, the old regime usually wins only when your combined deductions — home-loan interest, 80C, HRA and others — are large enough to outweigh the new regime’s lower rates. A buyer with a heavy interest outgo in the early years of a loan, plus a let-out property or joint ownership, may save meaningfully under the old regime. At lower incomes, the new regime is often better even with a home loan. The only reliable way to decide is to compute your tax both ways for the year.

A note on the law: for FY 2026-27 (AY 2027-28) onward, the Income Tax Act, 2025 replaces the 1961 Act. Familiar sections are renumbered — Section 24 becomes Section 22, and Section 80C is largely carried into Section 123 (Schedule XV) — but the deduction limits and old-vs-new-regime logic continue. Returns for FY 2025-26 are still filed under the 1961 Act.

Section 24(b): Deduction on Home-Loan Interest

Section 24(b) is the single most valuable home-loan tax benefit. It lets you deduct the interest component of your EMIs — up to ₹2,00,000 per year for a self-occupied property — from your taxable income, under the old regime. For a let-out (rented) property, the entire interest is deductible against rental income, though any resulting “loss from house property” you set off against salary or other income is capped at ₹2,00,000 a year, with the balance carried forward for up to eight years.

Two conditions matter. First, construction or acquisition must be completed within five years from the end of the financial year in which the loan was taken; miss that window and the self-occupied cap drops to ₹30,000. Second, pre-construction interest — the interest you pay before possession — is not lost: it is accumulated and claimed in five equal annual instalments starting from the year construction is completed, within the same ₹2,00,000 ceiling for self-occupied homes.

Section 80C: Principal, Stamp Duty & Registration

While Section 24(b) covers interest, Section 80C covers the principal you repay — up to ₹1,50,000 per year, again under the old regime. Importantly, this same limit also absorbs the stamp duty and registration charges you pay when buying, but only in the financial year the expense is actually incurred. Because the ₹1,50,000 cap is shared with EPF, PPF, ELSS, life-insurance premiums and other 80C items, many buyers find stamp duty alone exhausts it in the year of purchase.

One lock-in to remember: if you sell the property within five years of taking possession, every rupee of 80C principal deduction you claimed in earlier years is reversed and added back to your income in the year of sale.

Sections 80EE & 80EEA: Extra Relief for First-Time Buyers

First-time buyers can claim interest deductions over and above the Section 24(b) limit, if their loan falls in the right window. Section 80EE allows an extra ₹50,000 a year for loans sanctioned between April 2016 and March 2017, where the loan was ≤₹35 lakh and the property ≤₹50 lakh. Section 80EEA is more generous — an additional ₹1,50,000 a year — for loans sanctioned between April 2019 and March 2022, where the stamp-duty value is ≤₹45 lakh and you owned no other residential house on the sanction date.

Both are first-time-buyer benefits and can only be claimed once the Section 24(b) ceiling is fully used. Note that 80EEA was not extended for loans sanctioned after March 2022, so it applies to existing eligible loans rather than fresh ones — always confirm current eligibility before relying on it.

Quick Reference: Home-Loan Deductions at a Glance

Section

Covers

Max / year

Key condition

24(b)

Interest (self-occupied)

₹2,00,000

Old regime; complete in 5 yrs

24(b)

Interest (let-out)

No cap*

*Loss set-off vs other income capped ₹2L

80C

Principal + stamp duty/reg.

₹1,50,000

Old regime; shared cap; 5-yr lock-in

80EE

Extra interest (first-time)

₹50,000

Loans Apr’16–Mar’17; loan ≤₹35L

80EEA

Extra interest (first-time)

₹1,50,000

Loans Apr’19–Mar’22; stamp val ≤₹45L

Indicative; old tax regime unless stated. Verify the current position on incometax.gov.in before filing.

Joint Home Loans: Double the Benefit

Buying with a spouse or family member can effectively double your benefits. When two people are both co-owners of the property and co-borrowers on the loan, each can independently claim up to ₹2,00,000 under Section 24(b) and up to ₹1,50,000 under Section 80C, in proportion to their ownership and repayment share. For a couple, that is a combined ceiling of ₹4,00,000 in interest and ₹3,00,000 in principal each year. Both must contribute to the EMIs from their own income, and the split should match the ownership ratio recorded in the sale deed.

Stamp Duty, Registration & the Women-Buyer Concession

Beyond income-tax deductions, several states cut the upfront cost of buying. In Maharashtra, women buyers (as sole or joint owners) get a 1% concession on stamp duty — in Mumbai that means an effective rate of about 5% for women versus 6% for men, inclusive of the 1% metro cess. States such as Delhi, Haryana and Punjab offer similar concessions, with rates varying locally. As noted earlier, the stamp duty and registration you pay also feed into your Section 80C deduction in the year of payment.

On the indirect-tax side, GST applies only to under-construction homes — broadly 1% for affordable housing and 5% otherwise, without input-tax credit. Ready-to-move homes that have received their completion or occupancy certificate attract no GST, a real saving for buyers who can wait for possession.

Claiming Home-Loan Benefits Under the Old Regime: Pros & Trade-offs

Pros

Trade-offs

Frequently Asked Questions

The big ones are: interest deduction up to ₹2,00,000 under Section 24(b), principal plus stamp duty/registration up to ₹1,50,000 under Section 80C, extra first-time-buyer relief under 80EE/80EEA, and the ability for joint owners to claim these limits each. Most apply only under the old tax regime.

Up to ₹2,00,000 per year for a self-occupied home under Section 24(b) (old regime). For a let-out property the full interest is deductible against rent, but any loss set off against salary or other income is capped at ₹2,00,000 a year, with the rest carried forward.

Generally no for self-occupied interest and the entire Section 80C basket. For a let-out property, interest is still deductible against rental income, but the resulting loss cannot be set off against salary or other heads.

Yes — under Section 80C, within the overall ₹1,50,000 limit, and only in the financial year the payment is actually made. This benefit is available under the old tax regime.

Both give first-time buyers extra interest deduction over the Section 24(b) cap. 80EE allows ₹50,000 for loans sanctioned in FY 2016-17 (loan ≤₹35L, property ≤₹50L); 80EEA allows ₹1,50,000 for loans sanctioned between April 2019 and March 2022 (stamp value ≤₹45L).

Yes, if both are co-owners of the property and co-borrowers on the loan. Each can claim up to ₹2,00,000 (interest) and ₹1,50,000 (principal) per year in proportion to their share, effectively doubling the household benefit.

Yes. Interest paid before possession (“pre-construction interest”) is accumulated and claimed in five equal annual instalments from the year construction is completed, within the ₹2,00,000 self-occupied ceiling.

In several states, yes. Maharashtra gives women buyers a 1% concession — an effective rate of about 5% in Mumbai versus 6% for men. Delhi, Haryana and Punjab have similar provisions, with rates varying by location.

Only on under-construction homes — broadly 1% for affordable housing and 5% otherwise, without input-tax credit. Ready-to-move homes with a completion or occupancy certificate attract no GST.

Compute your tax both ways. The old regime tends to win when your total deductions (interest, 80C, HRA, etc.) are high; the new regime often wins at lower incomes. Use the official income-tax calculator before filing.

It renumbers the provisions from FY 2026-27 (Section 24 becomes 22, and 80C is carried into Section 123/Schedule XV) but keeps the deduction limits and old-vs-new-regime logic intact. Returns for FY 2025-26 are still filed under the 1961 Act.

Yes. Long-term capital gains on a residential house can be exempt if reinvested in another residential house under Section 54 (or via Section 54F / 54EC bonds), subject to conditions, caps and timelines. Verify the current rules before relying on them.

Fact Check — Verified Key Figures

Disclaimer: This article is for general information only and is not tax, legal or financial advice. Tax provisions, deduction limits and regime rules change frequently and depend on your individual circumstances. Figures reflect FY 2025-26 / FY 2026-27 as understood in June 2026. Always verify the current position on the official Income Tax Department portal (incometax.gov.in) and consult a qualified chartered accountant or tax advisor before making any decision.

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