Prepayment

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DEFINITION

Prepayment means paying off part or all of an outstanding loan before the scheduled date. Partial prepayment reduces outstanding principal and can either lower EMI or shorten tenure. Full prepayment (foreclosure) closes the loan entirely.

Under RBI guidelines, banks cannot charge prepayment penalties on floating-rate home loans. Fixed-rate and NBFC loans may have charges (2-5% of prepaid amount).

Strategic prepayments in the early years — when outstanding principal is highest — yield substantial interest savings. Financial advisors recommend using bonuses or surplus savings for prepayments.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Is there a penalty for prepaying a home loan?
No penalty on floating-rate home loans per RBI guidelines. Fixed-rate loans may attract 2-4% penalty on the prepaid amount.
Should I prepay or invest surplus money?
If after-tax investment returns are lower than your loan rate, prepaying is more beneficial. For 8-9% home loans, prepayment usually wins.
What is the difference between prepayment and foreclosure?
Prepayment is a partial additional payment. Foreclosure means paying off the entire remaining balance and closing the loan completely.

WHY IT MATTERS

Prepayments are one of the most effective ways to reduce total borrowing cost. Even small early prepayments on long-tenure loans can save lakhs in interest.

HOW NIHAL FINTECH USES IT

Nihal Fintech advises clients on prepayment strategies that maximize interest savings, helping understand prepayment terms and calculate savings.

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