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  4. Education Loan Calculator
  5. Delhi
Loans

Education Loan Calculator — Delhi

A Rs 15 lakh education loan at 9.5% accumulates Rs 2,85,000 in moratorium interest before repayment even begins. After a 2-year moratorium, the 5-year EMI is Rs 37,488/month. Delhi's starting salary of ~Rs 5.8 lakh makes this 104% of your first take-home. Calculate your education loan below.

Verified Formula|Source: Reserve Bank of India & National Housing Bank|Last verified: April 2026Methodology
Loans

Education Loan EMI Calculator

Calculate your education loan EMI after the moratorium period, total interest including moratorium, and Section 80E tax benefit. Supports India and abroad courses with realistic rate presets.

Loan Details

Presets adjust defaults for typical loan profiles

Rs.

Typical range: 1L (India) to 1Cr (abroad)

%
7%14%

SBI: 8.50%, HDFC Credila: 9.50%, Prodigy: 10.5%

mo
12 mo60 mo

Moratorium = course duration + 6 months

yrs
5 yrs15 yrs

After moratorium ends

Moratorium Period

During the moratorium (42 months), no EMI is due. However, interest accrues and is added to your principal. Your effective loan amount becomes ₹12.97 L.

Monthly EMI

₹0

After 42-month moratorium

Total Interest

₹0

Including moratorium interest

Total Payment

₹0

Principal + all interest

Moratorium Interest

₹0

42 months of accrued interest

Section 80E Tax Benefit

₹0

Full interest deductible for 8 years (no cap)

Payment Breakup

Principal (51.8%)Repayment Interest (32.8%)Moratorium Interest (15.4%)

Amortization Schedule

120 months (post-moratorium)
MonthEMIPrincipalInterestBalance
1₹16,087₹6,897₹9,191₹12,90,603
2₹16,087₹6,945₹9,142₹12,83,658
3₹16,087₹6,995₹9,093₹12,76,664
4₹16,087₹7,044₹9,043₹12,69,619
5₹16,087₹7,094₹8,993₹12,62,525
6₹16,087₹7,144₹8,943₹12,55,381
7₹16,087₹7,195₹8,892₹12,48,186
8₹16,087₹7,246₹8,841₹12,40,940
9₹16,087₹7,297₹8,790₹12,33,643
10₹16,087₹7,349₹8,738₹12,26,295
11₹16,087₹7,401₹8,686₹12,18,894
12₹16,087₹7,453₹8,634₹12,11,440

Related Calculators

Home Loan EMIPersonal Loan EMIBalance TransferPrepayment Benefit

Education Loan Planning in Delhi: What Students and Parents Must Know

Delhi's economy — driven by Government, IT Services, Media — creates strong demand for skilled graduates and postgraduates. Students from Delhipursuing higher education at top institutions nationally or abroad rely on education loans to bridge the gap between family savings and total course costs. Unlike most other loans, education loans have a unique "moratorium period" during which repayment is deferred — but interest is not. This silent accumulation during college years is the most under-estimated feature of education lending.

The Hidden Cost: Moratorium Interest on Your Delhi Education Loan

Education loans carry a moratorium period equal to the course duration plus 6 months (or 1 year, whichever your bank's terms specify). During this period, you make no EMI payments — but interest accrues on the outstanding principal and is typically capitalised at the end of the moratorium. For a Rs 15 lakh loan at 9.5%:

  • Original loan amount: Rs 15,00,000
  • Moratorium period: 24 months (2-year course)
  • Interest accumulated during moratorium (simple): Rs 2,85,000
  • Effective principal at start of repayment: Rs 17,85,000
  • EMI for 5-year repayment at 9.5%: Rs 37,488/month
  • Total interest paid over the loan lifecycle: Rs 7,49,280

The total interest — Rs 7,49,280 — on a Rs 15,00,000 loan is significant. Paying simple interest during the study period (rather than letting it capitalise) is strongly recommended if your parents can afford it. A Rs 11,875/month interest-only payment during the moratorium would eliminate the capitalisation and reduce the repayment-phase principal back to Rs 15,00,000.

Education Hubs in Delhi and Typical Fee Structures

Delhi is home to significant educational institutions across its key sectors of Government and IT Services. Management institutes in Delhi and nearby cities charge fees of Rs 8–25 lakh for MBA programmes. Engineering colleges under premier universities charge Rs 2–6 lakh per year. Medical college fees in Delhi NCR range from Rs 5 lakh (government) to Rs 20+ lakh per year (private). For overseas education — popular among Delhi's aspirants targeting the UK, USA, Canada, and Australia — total costs frequently exceed Rs 40–80 lakh, requiring loans well above our Rs 15 lakh reference.

For loans above Rs 8 lakh, most banks require a parent or guardian as co-applicant. For loans above Rs 20 lakh, banks typically require collateral (property or fixed deposits). In Delhi, parents who own property in localities like Dwarka or Rohini can use it as collateral to unlock better rates (typically 0.5–1% lower) and avoid the risk of rejection on income-only assessment.

Starting Salary vs EMI: The Delhi ROI Calculation

The true measure of an education loan's value is whether the salary it enables comfortably services the EMI. In Delhi, entry-level salary in the dominant industries (Government, IT Services) typically runs at approximately Rs 5.8lakh annually — around 55% of the city's average salary (which includes experienced professionals).

  • Estimated Delhi starting salary: Rs 5,77,500/year
  • Monthly take-home (after PF and tax): ~Rs 36,094
  • Education loan EMI (5yr repayment after 2yr moratorium): Rs 37,488
  • EMI as % of starting take-home: 104%

At 104% of starting take-home, the Rs 15 lakh loan represents a significant portion of a fresh Delhi graduate's income. Students should either aim for higher-paying roles before graduation, take a longer 7–10 year repayment tenure to reduce EMI, or consider partial prepayment in Year 2–3 as salary grows at the 9% annual growth rate typical in Delhi's dominant sectors.

Section 80E Tax Benefit: The Education Loan Advantage

The interest component of education loan repayment is fully deductible under Section 80E of the Income Tax Act — with no upper limit on the deduction amount, for up to 8 consecutive assessment years from the year of first repayment. This applies under both the old and new tax regimes. In the first year of repayment, the interest component for our Rs 15 lakh loan (after capitalisation) is approximately Rs 1,69,575.

  • At 30% tax bracket: Section 80E saves Rs 50,873 in the first year — reducing effective loan rate from 9.5% to 6.65%
  • At 20% tax bracket: Section 80E saves Rs 33,915 in the first year — reducing effective rate to 7.60%

A Delhi professional earning above Rs 10 lakh annually (common in Government after 2–3 years of experience) will typically be in the 20–30% tax bracket, making the Section 80E deduction materially valuable. Keep all loan interest certificates from your bank — they are required for claiming this deduction when filing your ITR.

Government Schemes for Delhi Students

Two major government-backed education loan schemes are relevant for Delhi students:

  • Vidya Lakshmi Portal (vidyalakshmi.co.in): A single portal to apply to multiple banks simultaneously for education loans. Students from Delhi can apply for loans up to Rs 40 lakh from 45+ registered lenders. Particularly useful for students who lack banking relationships with multiple institutions.
  • Central Sector Interest Subsidy (CSIS): Students whose family income is below Rs 4,50,000/year qualify for full interest subsidy during the moratorium period on loans up to Rs 7.5 lakh from scheduled banks. This effectively makes the loan interest-free during study — saving Rs 1,42,500 on a Rs 7.5L loan over a 2-year moratorium.
  • PM-USHA and state scholarship portals: Delhi NCR may offer additional merit-cum-means scholarships — check the state higher education department's portal for Delhi-specific schemes.

Public sector banks (SBI, Bank of Baroda, Canara Bank) offer education loans under IBA's Model Education Loan Scheme at regulated rates — typically 8.5–10.5% for government bank loans, lower than private bank equivalents. On a Rs 10 lakh loan at 8.5%, the 5-year EMI is Rs 20,517/month. Private bank rates run 1–2% higher but offer faster processing — relevant for admission deadline scenarios.

Disclaimer

EMI calculations are indicative. Actual loan amounts, rates, and moratorium terms depend on the institution attended, lender policy, and borrower's/co-applicant's creditworthiness. Section 80E benefit depends on the borrower's tax regime choice and income. Starting salary estimates are approximations based on city-level data. Government scheme eligibility criteria are subject to change — verify current terms on the official scheme portals. This is not financial or educational advice.

FAQs — Education Loan in Delhi

What is the EMI on a Rs 15 lakh education loan after completing my course in Delhi?

After a 2-year moratorium at 9.5%, interest of Rs 2,85,000 gets added to the principal, making the effective loan Rs 17,85,000 at the start of repayment. Over 5 years, the monthly EMI is Rs 37,488. Total interest paid across the full loan lifecycle (moratorium + repayment) is Rs 7,49,280. To reduce this, you can pay simple interest of Rs 11,875/month during the study period — eliminating the capitalisation effect and lowering the final repayment burden.

Can a fresh Delhi graduate afford to repay this loan on a starting salary?

At an estimated starting salary of Rs 5,77,500/year in Delhi's key sectors (Government, IT Services), the monthly take-home is approximately Rs 36,094. The Rs 15 lakh loan EMI of Rs 37,488 represents 104% of this take-home. This is on the higher side — consider a longer repayment tenure (7–10 years) to reduce the initial EMI burden while you grow your income. Delhi's salary growth rate of 9% annually means the EMI-to-income ratio improves significantly within 2–3 years.

How much tax does Section 80E save on an education loan in Delhi?

Section 80E allows full deduction of education loan interest — no upper cap — for up to 8 assessment years from first repayment. For our Rs 15 lakh loan, first-year interest during repayment is approximately Rs 1,69,575. A Delhi professional in the 30% tax bracket saves Rs 50,873 in the first year from this deduction. At 20%, the saving is Rs 33,915. This deduction applies even under the new tax regime — one of the very few deductions that do. Claim it annually by obtaining the interest certificate from your bank and reporting it in your ITR.

Do I need a co-applicant for an education loan in Delhi?

For loans up to Rs 4 lakh, banks can approve without collateral but may still require a co-applicant. For Rs 8 lakh to Rs 7.5 lakh, most banks require a parent or guardian as co-applicant. Above Rs 8 lakh, a co-applicant with stable income is mandatory, and above Rs 20 lakh, tangible collateral (property, FDs) is typically required. Parents owning property in Delhi's established localities like Dwarka or Rohini can use it as collateral to access loans at 0.5–1% lower rates — materially reducing the total interest cost over the loan lifetime.

Delhi's education loan landscape is dominated by the city's premium institution density — IIT Delhi, Delhi University's top colleges (SRCC, LSR, Hindu), IIM Delhi (IIML Executive MBA), JNU, Jamia Millia, and the medical institutions (AIIMS Delhi, Maulana Azad Medical). The Central Government's education-heavy policy environment creates strong subsidy frameworks: the Central Sector Interest Subsidy (CSIS) scheme provides full interest subsidy during moratorium for family income below Rs 4.5L; the Pradhan Mantri Vidyalakshmi portal aggregates all public bank education loans into a single application. Delhi's dominant education loan profile is the first-generation university student from lower-middle-income Delhi NCR families who need Rs 2-10L for Delhi University undergrad plus living expenses — very different from the Rs 40-90L international education loans common in Mumbai's BFSI families.

Key Insight — Delhi

Delhi's defining education loan insight is the AIIMS Delhi MBBS paradox — where the most valuable medical education in Asia (5.5-year MBBS + PG residency pipeline) costs effectively Rs 0 in fee (AIIMS Delhi charges Rs 1,628/year for MBBS, one of the world's lowest fees for any medical degree) meaning students need no education loan for the degree itself but require Rs 3-5L for living expenses and books over 5.5 years — making the 'education loan' for an AIIMS Delhi student purely a living-expense bridge loan at very low interest, with repayment beginning as a Rs 67,500/month senior resident at AIIMS (virtually zero EMI burden), fundamentally different from a private medical college education loan of Rs 50-80L. The AIIMS vs private medical college loan comparison: AIIMS MBBS loan (Rs 3L living expenses, 5.5 years): Rs 3L at 8.5% for 5 years post-MBBS: EMI Rs 6,170/month. Private medical college MBBS (Rs 10L/year + Rs 2L management quota = Rs 55L total): Rs 50L loan at 11.5% for 15 years: EMI Rs 58,000/month. On Rs 67,500 AIIMS senior resident stipend: AIIMS loan burden 9.1% vs private college burden 86%! AIIMS student is functionally debt-free; private college student is debt-constrained for their entire residency period.

Delhi's Financial Context and Education Loan Calculator

Delhi education loan context — Central Government hub: PM Vidyalakshmi: single portal for all scheduled bank education loans. CSIS (Central Sector Interest Subsidy): zero interest during moratorium for income below Rs 4.5L/year (loan up to Rs 7.5L). SBI Scholar: 8.15% for IITs, IIMs (top 100 NIRF). PNB Udaan: competitive for Delhi NCR institutions. UCO Bank, Bank of India: legacy government bank presence in Delhi. IIT Delhi fee: approximately Rs 2L/year (subsidized by government). AIIMS Delhi: effectively zero fee for MBBS (government subsidized). Delhi University colleges: Rs 20,000-50,000/year (low fee). Private Delhi institutions (Amity, Sharda): Rs 2-5L/year. DU SOL (School of Open Learning): Rs 15,000-20,000/year (extremely low, no loan needed). Central schools (JNU, Jamia): subsidized fees. SBI concessional: DU merit list students may access SBI campus finance desk at university.

Delhi's DU College First-Generation Student — CSIS Subsidy and Financial Planning

Delhi University's top colleges (SRCC, Hindu, Ramjas, Miranda House) accept students at Rs 20,000-50,000/year fee — but the majority of DU students from lower-middle-income NCR families (Lajpat Nagar, Rohini, Uttam Nagar) need support for living expenses, coaching, and books rather than tuition. For these students, the CSIS education loan scheme is transformative: any student from family with income below Rs 4.5L/year can take an education loan up to Rs 7.5L and pay ZERO interest during the course period (government pays the bank). Post-course, they repay principal only in the first year, then interest begins. The DU CSIS loan for Sharma family (household income Rs 3.8L): Son at SRCC BCom (Hons): fee Rs 30,000/year. Living: Rs 6,000/month. Course 3 years. Total need: Rs 90,000 fee + Rs 2.16L living = Rs 3.06L. CSIS loan Rs 3.06L at 8.5% (SBI): interest during 3 years: Rs 78,030 (paid by government under CSIS). Post-course moratorium 1 year (interest subsidized by CSIS up to this point): repayment on Rs 3.06L principal only + interest from year 5. If son earns Rs 30,000/month (Delhi NCR starting salary, commerce graduate): EMI Rs 7,800 for 4 years. At 26% of entry salary — manageable. The CSIS subsidy saved: Rs 78,030 in interest. This is government education infrastructure working exactly as designed — first-generation DU student with zero family savings gets college education with government-subsidized interest.

IIT Delhi to IIM Calcutta Education Loan Chain — The Five-Year Loan-Funded Education Path

Delhi's most ambitious education loan profile is the IIT Delhi (BTech, 4 years, Rs 2L/year fee + Rs 2L living = Rs 8L total) followed immediately by IIM Calcutta/Ahmedabad/Bengaluru MBA (2 years, Rs 23-25L fee + living Rs 6L = Rs 29-31L) — a 6-year education loan chain totalling Rs 37-39L that the student takes from age 18-23 before earning their first salary. The IIT→IIM loan chain management: Arjun from Dwarka, Delhi (family income Rs 8L — too high for CSIS, not rich enough to fund): IIT Delhi BTech loan: Rs 8L at 8.15% (SBI Scholar rate). Moratorium: 4 years course. IIM Calcutta loan: Rs 29L at 9.5% (private premier institution rate). Moratorium: 2 years MBA. Arjun's total education debt at age 23 at placement: Rs 37L. IIM Calcutta placement salary: Rs 28L median. Take-home: Rs 1.64L/month. Combined EMI for both loans (simultaneously): IIT loan (remaining balance after moratorium, now approximately Rs 9L with interest accrued): Rs 18,800/month for 4 years. IIM loan Rs 29L: Rs 37,500/month for 8 years. Simultaneous total EMI: Rs 56,300/month — 34.3% of take-home. High but manageable at IIM salary. 80E saving over life of loans: approximately Rs 3.5L total. The IIT-to-IIM path: education debt is genuine investment — the career premium (Rs 28L vs Rs 5L fresh BTech) makes the loan payment comfortable. Delhi's elite education chain is India's highest-ROI education loan path.

More Questions — Education Loan Calculator in Delhi

I'm a Delhi parent (income Rs 12L). My son got into Amity University (Rs 3.5L/year for BBA, 3 years = Rs 10.5L total). Should I take an education loan or pay from savings?

Delhi parent, Rs 12L income, Amity BBA Rs 10.5L total — loan vs savings: First, the honest assessment of Amity BBA value: Amity University is NAAC-A accredited but not in top-100 NIRF for BBA placement quality. Amity BBA average placement: Rs 3-5L CTC (some reports). The loan-to-placement ROI for Amity: Rs 10.5L loan at 9.5% for 8 years: EMI Rs 13,600/month. On Rs 25,000/month take-home (Rs 3L CTC post-BBA): EMI = 54% of take-home. Not serviceable. This is the warning sign: if the degree's expected placement salary cannot service the loan EMI, reconsider the degree-loan combination. Better options: (1) Delhi University BMS/BCom (Hons) via CUET — Rs 30,000-50,000/year fee. No significant loan needed. Far better placement ROI. (2) If Amity is chosen: parents pay from savings (Rs 12L income can save Rs 2-3L/year toward fee — 3 years to accumulate Rs 6-9L). Partial loan Rs 3-4L (not full Rs 10.5L). Loan structure if taking partial: SBI Rs 4L at 9% for 5 years post-course: EMI Rs 8,300/month. On Rs 25,000 take-home: 33% — painful but manageable. The Delhi education loan rule: education loan is justified when expected first salary × 24 months > total loan amount. Rs 10.5L loan justified when expected salary > Rs 3.5L/month (Rs 42L CTC). Amity BBA average places below this threshold. Consider DU or delay and prepare better for DU.

UPSC cleared. I'm 26, Delhi IAS officer. I have Rs 6L education loan outstanding from my graduation (Delhi University BBA). Should I repay it quickly or invest?

IAS officer, 26 years, Rs 6L education loan outstanding from DU BBA: Congratulations on UPSC. Let's address the Rs 6L loan: Loan details (estimated): Rs 6L at 8.5-9% (typical public bank education loan), approximately 3-5 years remaining. Remaining EMI: approximately Rs 10,000-13,000/month for 3-4 more years. IAS officer (Level 10, basic Rs 56,100 as IAS starting): take-home approximately Rs 72,000-78,000/month (generous HRA for metropolitan posting + DA). EMI Rs 12,000 = 15-16% of take-home. Manageable and appropriate. Should you prepay? Mathematical argument for investing: Rs 6L invested in Nifty 50 vs prepaying Rs 6L loan at 8.5%: Nifty 12% return > 8.5% loan = invest wins. Additionally: 80E interest deduction: you're in the 20% income tax bracket as IAS. 80E saves 20% of interest paid: Rs 12,000/month × 12 months × interest component × 20% ≈ Rs 12,000-18,000/year in tax. The 80E benefit effectively reduces your 8.5% loan to 6.8% effective rate. Nifty's 12% vs 6.8% effective loan: invest wins clearly. Recommendation: do NOT prepay. Continue EMI (it's affordable at 16% of take-home). Invest Rs 15,000-20,000/month in Nifty 50 SIP. Loan will self-liquidate in 3-4 years. The 80E deduction: file it every year — IAS officers often have chartered accountants file returns, ensure 80E is claimed. Don't miss it. After loan is paid: redirect the Rs 12,000/month to SIP.

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