Do Banks Still Charge You for Closing Your Loan Early?
Many borrowers assume early repayment is always free. Others expect a penalty for it. Both assumptions are only partly right, and the answer changed significantly on January 1, 2026.
That's when the RBI's new directive on prepayment fully came into effect. If you have a floating-rate home loan, the rules have shifted decisively in your favour. Here's exactly what changed, what hasn't, and how to decide between partial payment and full closure.
What Is Loan Foreclosure?
Loan foreclosure means paying off your entire outstanding principal before the scheduled end of your tenure.
Say you're in year 7 of a 20-year home loan and receive a large bonus. If you use it to clear the entire remaining balance in one payment, that's foreclosure. The loan closes, EMIs stop, and interest stops accruing immediately.
What Are Loan Foreclosure Charges?
When a lender gives you a loan, they earn interest over the full tenure. If you repay early, they lose that projected income. To compensate, lenders historically levied loan foreclosure charges, a fee calculated as a percentage of your outstanding principal at the time of closure.
Typical range: 1% to 3% for home and personal loans on fixed rates. On ₹44 lakhs outstanding, a 2% foreclosure charge means paying ₹88,000 just to exit the loan early. For years, this was a real deterrent.
RBI 2026 Rule: What Actually Changed
This is where most blogs are incomplete. Here's the precise picture.
The RBI's Pre-payment Charges on Loans Directions, 2025, effective January 1, 2026, changed the following:
Zero foreclosure charges on floating-rate loans for individuals (non-business):
Home loans, car loans, personal loans, education loans, if they carry a floating rate, no lender can charge you for early closure. This applies across all banks, NBFCs, and co-operative lenders. (RBI Circular)
Floating-rate business loans (individuals + Micro & Small Enterprises):
Also zero prepayment and foreclosure charges, but only for loans sanctioned or renewed on or after January 1, 2026. Older loans follow their original agreements.
Fixed-rate loans are not covered:
Lenders may still levy loan foreclosure charges on fixed-rate products, provided they're disclosed upfront in the sanction letter. Hidden or arbitrary penalties remain prohibited.
Old loans (pre-Jan 2026):
If your loan was sanctioned before this date and not yet renewed, your original contract terms still govern prepayment.
As, zero prepayment charges were among the most borrower-friendly changes of early 2026, alongside faster CIBIL updates and improved grievance timelines.
Partial Payment vs Full Foreclosure: Core Difference
Partial prepayment means paying a lump sum over your regular EMI to reduce the outstanding principal. The loan stays active, EMIs continue, but future interest is calculated on a smaller base.
Full foreclosure means clearing the entire remaining balance in one shot. The loan closes, you receive a No-Dues Certificate, and your original property documents are returned.
Factor | Partial Prepayment | Full Foreclosure |
|---|---|---|
Principal impact | Reduces balance | Eliminates balance |
EMIs | Continue | Stop immediately |
Charges (floating, post-Jan 2026) | Zero | Zero |
Charges (fixed rate) | 1%–3% may apply | 1%–3% may apply |
Flexibility | High, pay what you can afford | Requires full outstanding amount |
Interest saved | Proportional reduction | Maximum, all future interest eliminated |
Best for | Periodic surpluses, bonuses | Large windfalls, full debt freedom |
Real Example: ₹50 Lakh Home Loan at 7.9%
Loan: ₹50,00,000 | 7.9% floating rate | 20-year tenure | 7 years completed Outstanding principal at year 7: ₹44.2 lakhs
Scenario A - Partial Prepayment of ₹5 Lakhs
Home loan foreclosure charges: ₹0 (floating rate, post-2026)
Reduces outstanding to ₹39.2 lakhs
Opting to reduce tenure: saves approximately 2.3 to 2.8 years of EMIs
Estimated interest saved: ₹6–8 lakhs
Liquidity stays intact for emergencies or higher-return investments
Scenario B - Full Foreclosure of ₹44.2 Lakhs
Loan foreclosure charges: ₹0 (floating rate, post-2026)
All future EMIs eliminated immediately
Interest saved on remaining 13 years: approximately ₹27–31 lakhs
Requires ₹44.2 lakhs available upfront, significant liquidity impact
The difference in total savings between the two scenarios is stark. But full closure demands funds most people don't have sitting idle. Before deciding, it's worth comparing prepayment against investment returns, especially if your surplus is already earning strong returns elsewhere.
Run your own scenario on the prepayment calculator and see your exact interest savings.
When Do Loan Foreclosure Charges Still Apply in 2026?
Despite the RBI update, charges haven't disappeared entirely:
Fixed-rate home loans and personal loans: Lenders can still levy 1%–3% on fixed-rate products. Always check your sanction letter before making any early repayment decision.
Loans sanctioned before January 1, 2026: Old floating-rate loans still under their original agreement may carry prepayment clauses. These apply until the loan is renewed or refinanced.
Business loans outside the MSE category: Larger business loans or structured lending products may not fall under the zero-charge directive depending on the sanctioning institution.
Combination rate structures: If your loan started on a fixed rate and later switched to floating, the applicable charge depends on the rate type in effect at the time of prepayment. Check your current rate type before acting, here's how home loan interest rates are structured in 2026.
Do Foreclosure Charges Really Matter?
Here's the insight most content misses entirely.
Even before the 2026 rule, obsessing over foreclosure charges was often the wrong frame. The interest you save by closing a loan early almost always dwarfs the charge itself.
On the ₹44.2 lakh example above, a 2% foreclosure charge would have been roughly ₹88,400. The total interest saved by full closure? Upward of ₹27–31 lakhs. The charge was never the real cost. Staying in the loan was.
Now that charges are zero for most floating-rate borrowers, there are only three genuine reasons to hold back:
You don't have enough liquid cash and would be draining your emergency reserve
You're claiming tax benefits on your home loan (Section 24 / 80C), foreclosing eliminates those deductions
Your surplus money is generating returns higher than your loan rate, if your investments are significantly outperforming 7.9%, staying invested may make more sense
Want to understand what this means for your specific situation? The savings report tool generates a personalised breakdown based on your balance, rate, and remaining tenure.
Decision Framework: When to Choose What
Go for full foreclosure when:
You have a large lump sum, from an inheritance, property sale, or vested ESOPs
You're in the final 5–7 years of the loan (EMI is mostly principal anyway, but you want the closure)
You have no high-yield investment opportunity for those funds
Psychological debt-freedom matters to you and you want to reduce your loan tenure permanently
Stick to partial prepayment when:
You receive annual bonuses or periodic surpluses but can't arrange the full outstanding
You want to reduce your home loan interest without sacrificing all liquidity
You have a long tenure remaining, early part-payments compound their effect over time
You're exploring faster loan repayment strategies alongside investments
Not sure whether you've even taken the right loan size? Start with how much home loan you should actually take before optimising repayment.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q. What are loan foreclosure charges in India in 2026?
For floating-rate loans to individuals sanctioned or renewed on/after January 1, 2026, foreclosure charges are zero by RBI mandate. For fixed-rate loans, lenders may levy 1%–3% of outstanding principal, but must disclose this upfront in the loan agreement.
Q. Is home loan foreclosure free now?
Yes, for most borrowers. If your home loan carries a floating rate and was sanctioned or renewed after January 1, 2026, you can foreclose at any time with zero charges. Pre-2026 floating-rate loans may still be subject to original contract terms.
Q. What is the difference between prepayment and foreclosure?
Prepayment (part-payment) reduces your outstanding balance without closing the loan, EMIs continue on a lower principal. Foreclosure clears the entire balance and closes the account. Both are now charge-free for most floating-rate individual borrowers.
Q. When are foreclosure charges applicable in 2026?
Primarily on fixed-rate loans, on floating-rate loans sanctioned before January 1, 2026 with penalty clauses, and on certain business loans outside the individual/MSE category. Always verify your loan type before prepaying.
Q. How much can I save by foreclosing my home loan at 7.9%?
On ₹44.2 lakhs outstanding with 13 years remaining at 7.9%, full foreclosure can save approximately ₹27–31 lakhs in total interest. Use the prepayment calculator for your exact figure.
Q. Does loan foreclosure affect my CIBIL score?
A properly closed loan, with no defaults or overdue amounts, has a positive impact on your credit profile. Read the full breakdown in our guide on prepayment and CIBIL score.
Q. Should I foreclose my home loan or invest the money?
This depends on your loan rate vs your investment return rate, tax benefits, and liquidity needs. The prepayment vs investment guide covers this in full, including the break-even rate beyond which investing beats prepaying.
The Bottom Line
The 2026 RBI rule removed the biggest psychological barrier to early loan repayment for floating-rate borrowers: the fear of being penalised for it.
What remains is a straightforward financial question, do you have the funds, and is early repayment the best use of them right now?
If yes, the math strongly favours action. On most home loans at 7.9%, the interest you save by foreclosing or aggressively prepaying is significant enough to change your financial trajectory.
Start by knowing your numbers. Generate your personalised savings report → and get a clear, decision-ready picture of what partial payments or full closure would actually mean for you.