₹50 lakh Education Loan EMI for 7 Years

Financing a ₹50 lakh education loan repaid over 7 years at 10.5% interest gives a monthly EMI of roughly ₹84,303. Your annual interest payment is deductible under Section 80E for 8 years — saving approximately 30% of interest as tax benefit under the old tax regime. This effectively reduces your true borrowing cost. Start simple interest payments during moratorium to avoid capitalization.

Monthly EMI
₹84,303
Total Interest
₹20,81,483
Total Payment
₹70,81,483

Rate Comparison for ₹50 lakh / 7 Years

RateMonthly EMITotal InterestTotal Payment
8%₹77,931₹15,46,210₹65,46,210
10%₹83,006₹19,72,497₹69,72,497
12%₹88,264₹24,14,148₹74,14,148
15%₹96,484₹31,04,637₹81,04,637

About This Scenario

Financing a ₹50 lakh education loan repaid over 7 years at 10.5% interest gives a monthly EMI of roughly ₹84,303. Your annual interest payment is deductible under Section 80E for 8 years — saving approximately 30% of interest as tax benefit under the old tax regime. This effectively reduces your true borrowing cost. Start simple interest payments during moratorium to avoid capitalization.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the maturity of ₹50 lakh monthly RD for 7 years?

At 7% quarterly-compounded, a ₹50 lakh monthly RD for 7 years matures at ₹84,303. Of this, ₹20.8 lakh is interest earned.

Is RD interest taxable?

Yes. Treated exactly like FD interest — taxable under 'Income from Other Sources' at your slab rate. TDS applies if annual interest from the bank exceeds ₹40,000 (₹50,000 for senior citizens).

RD vs SIP — which is better?

RD gives guaranteed but lower returns (6–7.5%) with sovereign-level safety. SIP in equity mutual funds targets 11–14% historically with market risk. For 5+ year horizons, SIP typically creates 2–3x more wealth.

Can I skip an RD instalment?

Most banks allow 2–4 missed instalments without penalty, but later missed instalments can lead to account closure. Set up auto-debit to avoid the issue.