Interest More Than Principal Amount! Home Loan EMIs Jump 20% In 2 Years, Says Report
Interest More Than Principal Amount! Home Loan EMIs Jump 20% In 2 Years, Says Report
Home buyers paying EMI of approx. Rs 22,700 in July 2021 now shelling out approx. Rs 27,300 - up approx. Rs 4,600 per month, or 20%

In the Indian residential real estate market, affordable housing suffered the greatest impact of the Covid-19 pandemic – and unlike the other segments, has not recovered in the last two years. With buyers of this segment increasingly desisting from purchase decisions, affordable housing sales are languishing, and developers have accordingly curtailed its supply, said real estate consultancy Anarock in a latest assessment.

Also Read: Home Loan Hurdles: Top Blunders To Avoid When Financing Your Dream Home

A recent report by Anarock finds that the share of affordable housing in overall sales in H1 2023 shrunk to approx. 20% – an 11% decrease against the corresponding period in 2022. Likewise, in the top 7 cities, this segment’s share in the overall housing supply in H1 2023 plunged to 18%, against 23% in H1 2022.

The mounting desolation is not helped by the fact that affordable home buyers have been paying almost 20% more in their EMIs over the last two years. The floating interest rates for home loans up to Rs 30 lakh have jumped up from 6.7% in mid-2021 to nearly 9.15% today.

Prashant Thakur, Regional Director & Head – Research, Anarock Group, says, “Home loan borrowers who were paying an EMI of approx. Rs 22,700 in July 2021 are now paying approx. Rs 27,300 today – an increase of approx. Rs 4,600 per month. This 20% increase in the EMI has resulted in a jump of approx. Rs 11 lakh in the overall interest component – from approx. Rs 24.5 lakh interest payable in 2021 to approx. Rs 35.5 lakh today.”

The total interest payable over a 20-year tenure is now more than the principal amount. If a buyer seeks to buy a property worth

“At this rate, the total repayment to the bank was approx. Rs 54.5 lakh, of which the interest component was approx. Rs 24.5 lakh – less than the total principal amount,” says Thakur. “Today, when home loan interest rates hover at around 9.15%, this buyer’s EMI is approx. Rs 27,300. The total repayment to the bank at this rate is now approx. Rs 65.5 lakh, of which the interest component will be approx. Rs 35.5 lakh – more than the total principal amount.”

Home loans are structured such that the payments in the early years are mostly interest. When more of their payment is going to interest rather than principal, it will take longer for home buyers to build equity and own more of the home. It also means that they have a reduced opportunity to benefit from appreciation if they sell the property, because less principal has been paid off.

It is not a good sign for either individual borrowers or the broader housing market if interest on home loans exceeds principal. This would need to be addressed in the next Union Budget or even earlier via a focused policy intervention, so that the affordable housing segment is not derailed further.

Sales numbers across the top 7 cities can improve which has consistently been falling ever since the pandemic. According to the latest Anarock Research, the total sales share of affordable homes went down to approx. 20% in H1 2023, against 31% in the corresponding period in 2022.

Pradeep Aggarwal, Founder and Chairman, Signature Global (India), said, “The rise in EMI for affordable housing buyers can be attributed to various factors. Among them, an increase in interest rates is significant, along with rising property prices due to higher demand, increased land costs, and construction expenses.”

“We believe that the government should offer special concessions to buyers in the affordable segment to alleviate the increased EMI burden. This will help in sustaining the demand in this price-sensitive segment,” Aggarwal added.

Of approx. 2.29 lakh units sold across the top 7 cities in H1 2023, just 20% or approx. 46,650 units were affordable homes. Back in H1 2022, of approx. 1.84 lakh units sold, over 31% or approx. 57,060 units were in the affordable category.

To fulfil its vision of ‘Housing for All’, Anarock urged that the government must make affordable housing more viable for the maximum number of buyers. It is, after all, this segment that has the maximum demand in the country. In the current urban housing shortage of approx. 11.2 million units, affordable homes priced.

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