Site icon Stable Investor

Should Everyone Try to Prepay their Home Loans Fast?

You take a 20-25 year home loan and then you want to get rid of it as soon as possible. And to do that, you start making regular prepayments. I have written about the best home loan prepayment strategies several times and to be fair, there is nothing wrong with prepayments.

After all, who doesn’t want to be free of the loan burden?

But does it make sense for everyone to try to start prepaying the home loan?

The answer is no.

And this is despite the (mathematical) fact that home loan prepayment helps reduce the interest burden (i.e. total interest paid) substantially and thereby, reducing the actual landed cost of the house.

To give a simple example of how prepayments help reduce cost first will be useful.

Suppose you purchased a Rs 1 crore house. You paid Rs 20 lakh in downpayment and took another Rs 80 lakh home loan for 20 years at 8.5%. The landed cost of your house (ignoring the time value of money for simplicity) is Rs 1.86 Cr (which is Rs 20 lakh downpayment + Rs 80 lakh home loan principal + Rs 86.8 lakh in interest payments over 20 years).

Now suppose you made Rs 2 lakh extra prepayment each year. In this case, the interest paid over the reduced 14-year tenure would be a much lower Rs 51 lakh. So the landed cost of your house is reduced in case of prepayments.

Coming back to why everyone shouldn’t be prepaying home loans aggressively.

People who for different reasons become super-obsessed with prepaying home loans (like trying to clear a 25-year home loan in less than 10 years), forget (or rather ignore) the fact that there are other things in life as well that need money:

Now let’s say you earn well and even after considering all the above points, you still have money left. What should you do then?

In this case, you need to first look inward and assess your risk appetite.

If you are a conservative person, then you can start making prepayments. That will keep things simple and you at peace. The other option for more aggressive risk-profiled people is to invest this surplus money elsewhere where you can get better returns than post-tax-benefits home loan rates. This will not only help better optimize your returns but also help you build up a sort of buffer that you can use to make larger prepayments (or even one-shot loan closure) in future if home loan rates rise and become costly.

But as I said, this approach and choosing to invest vs prepaying loan is not for everyone, and only suited for those with higher risk appetite.

Exit mobile version