Even though many banks have not immediately reduced EMIs, home loan borrowers are still seeing benefits from changes in the repo rate, thanks to how floating-rate loans work and how banks adjust interest rates over time.

🏦 What is Repo Rate?

The repo rate is the interest rate at which the Reserve Bank of india (RBI) lends money to commercial banks.

When the repo rate changes:

  • Banks’ borrowing cost changes
  • Loan interest rates eventually move up or down
  • Home loan EMIs are affected (especially floating-rate loans)

📉 Why EMIs May Not Reduce Immediately

Even if the repo rate is cut:

  • Banks do not always reduce EMIs instantly
  • They may adjust the loan tenure instead of EMI
  • Internal pricing policies and margins delay transmission
  • Existing loan contracts may take time to reset

💡 How home Loan Holders Are Still Benefiting

Even if EMI looks unchanged, borrowers still gain in other ways:

1. 📅 Reduced Loan Tenure

  • EMI stays the same
  • More principal gets adjusted
  • Loan closes earlier

👉 This reduces total interest paid over time

2. 📉 Lower Interest Rate Reset (Floating Loans)

Most modern home loans in india are linked to external benchmarks like repo rate.

So when repo rate falls:

  • Interest rate gets recalculated at reset cycle
  • Future EMIs become cheaper

3. 💰 Faster Principal Reduction

When rates drop:

  • A larger portion of EMI goes toward principal
  • Loan balance decreases faster

4. 🔁 Refinancing Opportunities

Borrowers can:

  • Switch banks for lower rates
  • Reduce long-term interest burden

🏠 Example

Suppose:

  • Loan: ₹30 lakh
  • Rate drops from 9% to 8.5%

Even if EMI remains ₹25,000:

  • Earlier: more interest, less principal
  • Now: more principal, less interest
  • Loan ends earlier by several months/years

⚖️ Fixed vs Floating Loans

Type

Impact of Repo Rate

Fixed Rate

No immediate benefit

Floating Rate

Benefits over time

New Loans

Adjust quickly

Old Loans

Adjust at reset cycle

🧠 Final Takeaway

Even when banks do not immediately reduce EMIs, home loan borrowers still benefit from repo rate changes through:

  • Shorter loan tenure
  • Lower long-term interest
  • Faster principal repayment
  • Future EMI reductions

So the benefit is often hidden in loan structure rather than visible EMI cuts.

 

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The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of any agency, organization, employer, or company. All information provided is for general informational purposes only. While every effort has been made to ensure accuracy, we make no representations or warranties of any kind, express or implied, about the completeness, reliability, or suitability of the information contained herein. Readers are advised to verify facts and seek professional advice where necessary. Any reliance placed on such information is strictly at the reader’s own risk.

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