Home Loan Prepayment vs SIP: Where Should Your Extra ₹10,000 Go?
Home Loan Prepayment
vs SIP:
Where Should Your
Extra ₹10,000 Go?
Every month, that extra money sits quietly waiting for a decision. The choice you make could mean the difference of ₹50 lakh or more over 20 years. Let’s settle this — with real numbers.
You’ve just logged into your salary account. After rent, groceries, EMIs, and everything else, there it is again — ₹10,000 sitting quietly, waiting for a decision. Two voices compete in your head: one says “kill the debt,” the other says “let compound interest work its magic.” Both are right. Both are wrong. And the real answer depends entirely on who you are, what stage of life you’re in, and one number you’ve probably never calculated.
This isn’t a theoretical debate. Across India, millions of middle-class families are navigating exactly this choice — a 35-year-old software engineer in Bangalore, a teacher in Jaipur, a young couple in Pune who just got their first home. The stakes are real, and this guide will give you the clearest, most honest breakdown you’ll find anywhere.
Before anything else, you need to understand one fundamental concept: the effective return comparison. When you prepay your home loan, you aren’t “earning” a return — you’re avoiding interest. But that avoided interest is mathematically equivalent to earning a risk-free return equal to your loan interest rate.
If your home loan carries an interest rate of 9% per annum — typical post-2024 for most floating-rate loans — then every rupee you prepay saves you exactly 9% per year, guaranteed, for the remaining tenure. There’s no market risk, no fund manager to second-guess, and no volatility to endure at all.
Now consider a good diversified equity mutual fund SIP. Historically, large-cap equity funds in India have delivered 11–14% CAGR over 10+ year periods. A blended assumption of 12% is reasonable for long-term planning, though past performance never guarantees future results. The spread between 12% (SIP expected return) and 9% (loan rate saved) is roughly 3%. That gap is where the SIP argument lives — but it’s not as clean as it sounds.
Let’s anchor this in reality. Suppose you have a home loan with the following parameters:
Outstanding principal: ₹40 lakh · Rate: 9% p.a. · Remaining tenure: 15 years · Monthly EMI: ₹40,600 · Extra money available: ₹10,000/month
🏠 If You Prepay ₹10,000/Month
Directing ₹10,000 every month toward prepayment reduces your principal aggressively. In this scenario, your loan closes approximately 5 years and 4 months earlier, saving you roughly ₹18.7 lakh in total interest. That’s not a projected figure — it’s a guaranteed, contractual saving the moment you reduce the principal.
📈 If You SIP ₹10,000/Month Instead
Investing ₹10,000 monthly into an equity mutual fund SIP for 15 years at 12% CAGR would grow to approximately ₹50.5 lakh. However, you would still pay the full loan interest — roughly ₹33.3 lakh over the original tenure. The net “extra wealth created” by the SIP approach works out to ₹15–25 lakh depending on actual market returns. At 12%, SIP wins. At 10%, it’s nearly a wash. At 8–9%, prepayment definitively wins.
| Factor | 🏠 Prepayment | 📈 SIP |
|---|---|---|
| Return certainty | Guaranteed (= loan rate) | Market-linked, variable |
| Risk level | Zero — fixed outcome | Moderate to high equity risk |
| Tax efficiency | Capped at 24(b)/80C limits | LTCG at 10% above ₹1L/yr |
| Liquidity | Very low — equity in property | High — redeem in 2–3 days |
| Psychological benefit | Massive — debt-free peace | Depends on market mood |
| Opportunity cost | Foregoes market upside | Pays more total interest |
| Wealth creation | Moderate — saves interest | Higher if market returns 12%+ |
| Discipline required | Low — autopay handles it | High — must not exit in dips |
Tax arguments are frequently misunderstood in this debate. Under Section 24(b), you can claim up to ₹2 lakh per year in interest deduction on a self-occupied property. Under Section 80C, principal repayment counts — but the ₹1.5 lakh cap is almost always exhausted by PF, LIC, and school fees. If you’re in the 30% tax bracket, ₹2 lakh of interest saving equals ₹60,000 in actual tax saved — roughly ₹5,000 per month — and it does meaningfully lower the effective cost of your loan.
After tax benefits at 30% bracket, a 9% loan effectively costs around 6.3%. A SIP returning 12% with 10% LTCG tax nets approximately 10.8%. The spread becomes more compelling for SIPs — but only if you actually earn 12%. Every percentage point of underperformance narrows that gap significantly.
The “right” answer isn’t universal — it’s deeply personal. Here are four archetypal situations, each with a clear recommendation grounded in real behavioral finance and planning experience.
The Debt-Anxious Professional
You lose sleep over the loan. Market crashes make you want to redeem everything. You’ve checked your SIP NAV twelve times this week. Prepay the loan. Psychological peace has enormous real value that spreadsheets cannot capture.
The Long-Horizon Investor
You’re 30, loan tenure is 20 years, and you’ve read about equity’s long-term track record. You won’t panic-sell in downturns. SIP wins mathematically — but only if you actually stay invested through every storm without blinking.
The Pre-Retirement Planner
You’re 48, the loan runs till 60, and retirement is in sight. Carrying debt into retirement is a serious risk. Aggressively prepay so you enter retirement completely debt-free with full monthly cash flow restored.
The Early Career Builder
Your loan rate is below 8.5%, you have 18+ years left, and no investment portfolio yet. Split the amount — ₹5,000 in SIP for equity exposure, ₹5,000 toward prepayment to hedge both risk types simultaneously.
“The question is never ‘prepayment or SIP.’ The real question is: Am I disciplined enough to stay invested for 15 years no matter what the market does?”— D. Kush, Certified Financial Planner · 14 Years Experience
Most financial planners, when pressed, will recommend a hybrid rather than a purist approach. And they’re right — not because the math is fuzzy, but because life is complex and real people have multiple goals running in parallel.
₹4,000–5,000 toward loan prepayment + ₹5,000–6,000 into a diversified equity SIP. This reduces your loan tenure meaningfully, builds a parallel wealth corpus, and manages both financial and psychological risk simultaneously.
The hybrid works particularly well because it forces you to build an investment habit while also deleveraging. Many Indians who go all-in on prepayment find themselves loan-free at 50 with zero investment corpus. Many who go all-in on SIP struggle when they hit a volatile year and emotionally exit. The split hedges both failure modes — and real-world behavioral data shows most investors need exactly this structured balance to succeed long-term.
There are specific circumstances where prepayment dominates, and they’re worth naming explicitly. First, if your loan interest rate is above 9.5%, the hurdle for equity to beat it after tax becomes significantly harder — at 10.5% loan rate, you’d need consistent 14%+ equity returns to clearly justify the SIP, a high bar by any measure.
Second, if you’re within 7–8 years of retirement and still carry a substantial loan balance, eliminating that liability takes priority over portfolio building. Third, if your only existing investments are in low-yield instruments like FDs and PPF and you have no emergency fund, prepayment builds home equity that provides far more financial security than adding equity SIP exposure when your foundation is shaky.
Loan rate is above 9.5% · Retirement is within 8 years · No emergency fund exists · You’ve previously exited investments during market falls · High-cost debt (credit cards, personal loans) has already been cleared before this decision.
Conversely, several conditions tilt the scales firmly toward SIP. If your loan rate is at or below 8.5% — achievable for those with high credit scores — the after-tax effective rate can drop to around 6%, making it one of the cheapest capital you’ll ever access. At 6% effective cost versus 12% expected equity return, the case for staying invested is arithmetically compelling and hard to argue against.
A ₹10,000/month SIP at 12% CAGR grows to ₹99.9 lakh over 20 years, but only ₹50.5 lakh over 15 years, and just ₹23.2 lakh over 10 years. Starting earlier isn’t just better — the difference is non-linear and permanent. A 6-year delay in starting costs you over ₹49 lakh in terminal wealth.
Additionally, if you have no investment portfolio and are approaching 35–40, your window for maximum equity compounding is narrowing every year. The power of starting a ₹10,000 SIP at 32 versus 38 can mean a difference of ₹30–40 lakh at retirement — an opportunity cost that is real, permanent, and absolutely cannot be recovered later regardless of how much you save.
Rather than a one-size answer, use this step-by-step checklist to arrive at your own best decision. Each question meaningfully narrows the field and brings you closer to the right choice for your specific situation.
If no — build this first. Neither prepayment nor SIP matters if a medical emergency forces you to break both. Park the money in a liquid fund or high-yield savings account before proceeding to this decision.
Below 8.5% → lean 70% toward SIP. Between 8.5–9.5% → consider a 50-50 split. Above 9.5% → prepayment has the stronger case, especially when factoring in post-tax effective costs and guaranteed outcomes.
More than 15 years → SIP has adequate time to compound and recover from volatility. Fewer than 10 years → prioritize debt reduction and capital protection over wealth creation aggressively.
Recall 2020’s COVID crash (Nifty fell 38% in weeks) or 2008 (fell 60%). If you’d have redeemed then, the SIP return math simply does not apply to you. Choose prepayment or build real behavioral discipline before committing.
The debate itself causes many people to make a third, worse choice: doing nothing. Extra money sits in a savings account at 3.5%, neither reducing the loan nor compounding in equity. This is the worst financial outcome of all — and it’s extremely common because the analysis paralysis of “which is better?” leads to indefinite deferral and years of lost compounding.
Another frequent mistake is prepaying a loan that still has significant tax deduction headroom. If you’re paying ₹1.8 lakh per year in interest and claiming the full ₹2 lakh deduction under Section 24(b), your effective cost is already very low. Prepaying when you still have this tax shield gives up cheap, tax-subsidized debt for no compelling reason.
Start a SIP while carrying credit card debt at 24–36% p.a. or a personal loan at 18%+. No equity return can justify keeping such high-interest debt alive. Always eliminate expensive debt completely before either prepaying a home loan or starting any SIP.
If your home loan rate is below 9%, your investment horizon is 15 years or more, and you can commit to staying invested through market corrections without touching your SIP — then mathematically, equity SIPs win. This is the view of most quantitatively-oriented financial planners, and the numbers support it fully when the conditions hold.
However, if your loan rate is above 9%, you’re within a decade of retirement, or you know from experience that you panic-sell in downturns, then prepayment delivers superior real-world outcomes. The “guaranteed 9%” return from prepayment is deeply underrated precisely because it carries absolutely no downside scenario whatsoever.
The hybrid approach — splitting ₹10,000 roughly equally between prepayment and SIP — is the most robust choice for the largest number of people. It removes the all-or-nothing anxiety, builds both equity wealth and loan-free peace, and can be adjusted over time as your loan balance, income, and market conditions evolve naturally.
The ₹10,000 question has no single right answer. But it has a right process: understand your loan rate, know your timeline, be honest about your behavioral biases, and choose the path you’ll actually stick to for the next 15 years. Because consistency beats optimization every single time, without exception.