Home loan eligibility calculation based on salary with EMI chart and financial planning concept

Home Loan Eligibility: How Much Can You Borrow on Your Salary?

Dasadia Editorial Team · Updated June 2026

“How much home loan can I get on my salary?” is the first question almost every buyer asks — and the answer is far less mysterious than it feels. A bank does not agonise over your application; it runs your numbers through three or four well-defined ratios and the output is your sanction amount. Understand those ratios and you can estimate your eligibility before you ever walk into a branch — and, more usefully, pull the levers that raise it.

This guide breaks down exactly how lenders decide what you can borrow: the income rule (FOIR), the property rule (RBI’s LTV caps) and the salary multiplier, with salary-wise estimates for 2026 and clear steps to increase your eligible amount.

Key Takeaways

What Is Home Loan Eligibility?

Home loan eligibility is simply the maximum amount a bank or housing finance company is willing to lend you, based on your ability to repay and the value of the property. Lenders arrive at it using three checks, and your final sanction is the lowest figure the three allow:

Whichever of these gives the smallest number becomes your eligible loan. For most salaried buyers, the FOIR check is the binding one.

Source: Jarviix · Numerral

How Much Loan Can You Get on Your Salary?

Here are indicative eligibility figures for salaried buyers with no existing EMIs, calculated at a 50% FOIR, an 8.5% reference rate and a 20-year tenure:

The pattern is steady: at these assumptions, every extra ₹10,000 of net monthly salary adds roughly ₹5.8 lakh to your eligibility (equivalently, every ₹10,000 of EMI capacity supports about ₹11.5 lakh of loan). These are starting estimates — your actual sanction depends on your credit score, employment and the property.

Source: Author calculation using the EMI formula · method per HisabhKaro · Easy Home Finance

FOIR: The Income Rule

The Fixed Obligation to Income Ratio is the single most important number in your application. It measures how much of your income is already committed to debt:

FOIR = (existing EMIs + new home-loan EMI) ÷ net monthly income

Most lenders want this to stay within about 40–50% (higher earners are sometimes allowed up to 55–60%). To find your borrowing power, the bank works it backwards: available EMI = (net salary × FOIR cap) − existing EMIs, then converts that available EMI into a loan amount over your tenure at the reference rate. For example, on ₹1,00,000 income at a 50% cap with no other EMIs, your ₹50,000 of EMI capacity supports a loan of about ₹57.6 lakh at 8.5% over 20 years.

LTV: The Property Rule

Even if your income supports a large loan, RBI’s Loan-to-Value caps limit how much of the property’s value a bank can finance. The balance is your down payment:

So on a ₹50 lakh home, the maximum bank loan is ₹40 lakh (80%) and you fund ₹10 lakh yourself. One catch that surprises many buyers: stamp duty, registration charges and GST are not counted in the property value for LTV, so you pay those entirely from your own pocket, on top of the down payment.

What Else Lenders Check

Beyond the ratios, several factors shape your eligibility and the rate you are offered:

How Existing EMIs and Tenure Change Your Number

Existing EMIs. They come straight off your capacity. On a ₹1,00,000 income (50% FOIR), a ₹10,000 car-loan EMI cuts your available EMI from ₹50,000 to ₹40,000 — dropping eligibility from about ₹57.6 lakh to ₹46.1 lakh. Clearing a small loan before you apply can instantly add several lakh back.

Tenure. A longer tenure lowers the EMI per lakh borrowed, so the same income supports a bigger loan — at the cost of more lifetime interest. For a ₹75,000 salary (₹37,500 EMI capacity):

Source: Author calculation · CalcBaba

How to Increase Your Home Loan Eligibility

Plan for the Full Out-of-Pocket Cost

Your eligibility tells you the loan; it does not tell you the cash you need on day one. Because the LTV cap excludes them, you must fund the down payment plus stamp duty (broadly 4–7% of value, depending on the state), registration (around 1%), GST on under-construction homes, and legal and documentation charges — all from your own funds. On a ₹1 crore home, that can mean roughly ₹32–35 lakh out of pocket before the loan even disburses. Budget for the full number, not just the 25% down payment.

Source: HisabhKaro · Numerral

Verified Key Facts

Frequently Asked Questions

With no existing EMIs and a 50% FOIR, roughly ₹28–30 lakh at an 8.5% rate over 20 years. A longer tenure, a co-applicant or a higher credit score can increase this; existing EMIs reduce it.

Around ₹57–60 lakh with no other EMIs (50% FOIR, 8.5%, 20 years). The figure rises with a longer tenure or co-applicant and falls if you already pay other EMIs.

They apply three checks — FOIR (total EMIs within ~40–50% of income), the RBI LTV cap on the property, and an income multiplier of about 55–65× monthly salary — and sanction the lowest of the three, adjusted for credit score, age and employment.

FOIR (Fixed Obligation to Income Ratio) is the share of your monthly income going to all EMIs, including the proposed home loan. Lenders typically keep it within 40–50%. A lower FOIR means more room to borrow.

Per RBI, up to 90% for property valued up to ₹30 lakh, 80% for ₹30–75 lakh, and 75% above ₹75 lakh. The remainder is your down payment, and it excludes stamp duty and registration.

There is no fixed national minimum, but many lenders look for around ₹20,000–₹30,000 net monthly income, depending on the city and your profile. Stable income and a good credit score matter more than a specific figure.

Yes. A longer tenure lowers the EMI per lakh borrowed, so the same income supports a larger loan. The trade-off is more total interest, which you can offset with prepayments later.

Add an earning co-applicant, clear existing loans, choose a longer tenure, improve your credit score, declare all stable income, and make a larger down payment.

Yes. Every running EMI is deducted from your FOIR capacity. On a ₹1 lakh income, a ₹10,000 existing EMI can lower eligibility by roughly ₹11 lakh.

A CIBIL score of 750 or above gives the best approval chances and the lowest interest rates. Lower scores can still be approved but often at a higher rate or reduced amount.

Yes, provided income is stable and tax returns are filed regularly. Lenders typically expect about three years of business continuity and ITRs, and may use a multiple of net annual income.

No. On top of the down payment, you must pay stamp duty, registration, GST (for under-construction homes) and legal charges from your own funds, since the LTV cap excludes them.

Conclusion and Next Steps

Your home loan eligibility is formulaic, not mysterious — a function of your income (FOIR), the property’s value (LTV) and a salary multiple, fine-tuned by your credit score, age and existing debts. Knowing the maths lets you estimate your number in advance and, crucially, improve it before you apply.

Next step: calculate your FOIR capacity at your own salary and rate, subtract any existing EMIs, and check the result against the RBI LTV cap for your target budget. Then plan the full out-of-pocket amount — down payment plus stamp duty and charges — so your eligibility translates into a purchase you can comfortably afford.

Disclaimer

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice or a loan pre-approval. Eligibility figures are indicative estimates based on the FOIR method, an 8.5% reference rate and stated assumptions; actual sanction is decided by the lender after a full credit appraisal and may differ. Interest rates, RBI norms and lender policies are current as of June 2026 and may change — verify with your lender and on the official RBI website before any decision.

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