A
home loan helps you reduce your tax burden
besides offering the pleasure of owning a
house and living in it.
Home is where the heart is, and in today's
world, home is what takes up a good part of
your income as well. Most people, young and
old, have equated monthly installments to worry
about, which makes home loans a subject of
pressing concern.
First the benefits, apart from the obvious one
of having the pleasure of owning a house in
due course of time. Taking a home loan is a
great way to reduce your tax burden. Resident
Indians are eligible for tax benefits on
principal and interest components of a loan
under the Income Tax Act, 1961. The tax
deduction can be claimed on interest payments
subject to an upper limit of Rs 1,50,000 for a
financial year.
Moreover, you can get added tax benefits under
section 88 on repayment of principal amount
upto Rs 20,000 per annum which can further
reduce your tax liability by Rs 4,000 per
annum (tax rebate of 20 per cent on the
principal repaid, subject to a principal
ceiling of Rs 20,000 per year).
Benefits aside, most of us still have to
grapple with the fine print of a loan
agreement.
Increasing your loan eligibility
The greater your tenure, the bigger the loan
eligibility. Since the monthly installment per
lakh is lower for longer-tenure loans, banks
disburse a higher loan for the same income.
Another way to increase eligibility is to club
incomes of allowable relatives such as spouse
or parents or children or siblings.
If you have the funds and can invest higher
down payment amounts then take a smaller
percentage of the cost of the house as a loan.
Show proof of repayment track record for a
past loan (car/home/personal loan) or a credit
card with a large recognised lender. The bank
may be persuaded to increase the income-based
eligibility after examining the repayment
track record.
Other things being equal, your existing bank
(especially a private sector bank) is likely
to give you higher loan eligibility than
others because it is privy to your savings
account.
Funding your down payment requirement
If you are not able to fully finance the
margin amount, you can also take a personal
loan along with your home loan. This can
happen if your monthly income is above Rs
10,000, or if you are a practicing
professional. But personal loans -- being
expensive and for a short tenure -- are likely
to drain your monthly resources.
Take this option only when you have resources
to pay off the personal loan from sources
other than those taken into account for your
home loan.
You can provide adequate additional security
by pledging liquid financial assets such as
shares, securities, fixed deposits, insurance
policies with existing high surrender values,
etc. in lieu of the 10-15 per cent margin
money expected from you.
You can obtain a loan against the surrender
value of your life insurance policy from the
life insurance company or from a bank.
You could also take a loan from your employees
provident fund account if you have had such an
account for more than five years.
How to get the best rate for your loan
Unless loan amount is a constraint, approach
prospective lenders only after the property is
finalised and disbursement is required in the
next few days. Most lenders reserve their best
rates for immediate disbursement cases.
Bundle your loan request with the loan
requirements of your friends and colleagues
and thus offer a larger loan portfolio to the
bank. This can be specially powerful if the
property is in the same building since the
legal and technical costs can be reduced which
can then be passed on as a benefit to you.
If the property is being bought from a reputed
builder, you can also employ the month-end
trick by negotiating till the 23rd or 24th of
the month. Every bank has monthly targets for
its staff and as the month-end nears the bank
offers slightly better terms to enable them to
fulfil their target.
Remember all rates are negotiable. Check
around in the market before finalising your
lender.
Can one get both exemption of HRA as well as
deduction of interest payable on the home
loan?
A number of salaried consumers take a home
loan to acquire a residential property but do
not stay in that property for various reasons.
They stay in rented premises for which they
pay rent.
If they are receiving a house rent allowance
from their employer a question frequently
arises whether they can claim exemption of
their HRA based on the rent actually paid by
them as well as the interest payable on the
loan taken to acquire the owned property. To
answer this question we need to look at the
relevant part of the Income Tax Act and the
rules.
The exemption of HRA is covered under section
10 (13A).
Simply speaking the only conditions for
allowing the exemption of HRA are:
Rent must actually be paid by the assessee
(legal term for the person whose tax liability
is being worked out) for the rented premises,
which he occupies.
The rented premises must not be owned by him.
As long as the rented premises are not owned
by the assessee the exemption of HRA will be
available upto the limits specified in the
relevant rules. There is no mention here about
any effect on the exemption because of
ownership of any other property.
Let us now turn to the deduction of interest
payable on a home loan. Contrary to popular
perception the interest is not a straight
deduction allowed from the salary income. The
deduction is actually allowed while
calculating the 'income from house property'
though the effect (given below), in the case
of self occupied property, is the same as
allowing it as direct deduction from salary
income.
The relevant sections are section 22 to
section 27. Again putting it very simply the
calculation of 'income from house property' is
done as under:
Income from house property (H) = A-S-I, where
A = annual value = rental income (net of
municipal taxes), less S = 30 per cent of A as
a standard deduction, less I = interest
payable on any loan taken for acquisition or
construction of this property.
The point that we must remember is that
"income" can also be negative or in other
words include a calculation of loss.
In the case of self occupied property the
annual value 'A' is taken as 'nil' (therefore
'S' automatically becomes nil as 30 per cent
of 0 is 0) and 'I' is restricted to a maximum
of Rs 1,50,000. Therefore in the case of self
occupied property the result of calculation of
'income from house property' or 'H' will
always be a loss to the extent of the interest
payable on the home loan or Rs 1,50,000
whichever is lower.
Where the property is given on rent the annual
value will be calculated based on the rental
and the final income (or loss) from house
property will be calculated as given above.
Please note that in such a case there is no
restriction on the maximum amount of deduction
available in respect of 'I'.
'Income from house property' is either taxed
(if it is positive) or if it is a loss, it is
allowed to be set off against the income from
other heads including salary (and hence the
popular misconception that interest on home
loans is allowed as a deduction from salary
income as the impact, in the case of self
occupied properties, is the same as a direct
deduction of the interest from salary income).
There is nothing in the section that affects
the exemption of HRA at all.
Also there are no conditions that restrict the
availability of deduction of interest based on
the assessee's stay in any other premises.