How Much Car Loan EMI Can I Afford on My Salary in 2026? Complete Guide with Tables
A friend earns ₹80,000/month take-home. His Creta EMI is ₹38,000 — 47.5% of his salary. By the 15th of every month, he’s borrowing from next month’s salary. He chose the car based on “can I afford the EMI?” — not “is this EMI appropriate for my income?” These are two completely different questions. This guide answers the second one.
| Monthly Take-Home Salary | Max Car Expenses (15%) | Max EMI (after running costs) | Max Loan Amount (8.75%, 5yr) | Recommended On-Road Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ₹30,000 | ₹4,500 | ≈ ₹0 (can’t afford car loan) | Not recommended | Stick to used car or 2-wheeler |
| ₹50,000 | ₹7,500 | ≈ ₹2,500 | ≈ ₹1.2 lakh | Used car ₹3–5L only |
| ₹60,000 | ₹9,000 | ≈ ₹4,000 | ≈ ₹1.93 lakh | ₹4–6L used car; stretch to ₹8L new with large down payment |
| ₹75,000 | ₹11,250 | ≈ ₹6,250 | ≈ ₹3.02 lakh | ₹8–10L (Maruti Swift, WagonR, Tata Punch) |
| ₹1,00,000 | ₹15,000 | ≈ ₹9,000 | ≈ ₹4.35 lakh | ₹10–13L (Maruti Baleno, Hyundai i20, Tata Nexon) |
| ₹1,25,000 | ₹18,750 | ≈ ₹12,000 | ≈ ₹5.80 lakh | ₹12–16L (compact SUVs: Venue, Brezza, Punch EV) |
| ₹1,50,000 | ₹22,500 | ≈ ₹15,500 | ≈ ₹7.49 lakh | ₹14–18L (Nexon, Creta base, Seltos base) |
| ₹2,00,000 | ₹30,000 | ≈ ₹22,000 | ≈ ₹10.63 lakh | ₹18–24L (Creta top, Seltos, Harrier) |
| ₹2,50,000 | ₹37,500 | ≈ ₹29,000 | ≈ ₹14.02 lakh | ₹25–32L (Fortuner, Innova HyCross) |
| ₹3,00,000+ | ₹45,000+ | ≈ ₹36,000+ | ≈ ₹17.4 lakh+ | ₹30–40L+ (premium SUVs, luxury entry) |
| Parameter | Tata Nexon ₹13L (Sound Choice) | Hyundai Creta ₹19L (The Stretch) |
|---|---|---|
| On-road price | ₹13,00,000 | ₹19,00,000 |
| Down payment (20%) | ₹2,60,000 | ₹3,80,000 |
| Loan amount | ₹10,40,000 | ₹15,20,000 |
| Monthly EMI (5yr, 8.75%) | ₹21,567 | ₹31,542 |
| EMI % of ₹1L salary | 21.6% | 31.5% |
| Total EMI paid over 5 years | ₹12,94,020 | ₹18,92,520 |
| Monthly SIP headroom after EMI + ₹6K running | ₹72,433/month — healthy surplus | ₹60,458/month — constrained |
| Real cost of choosing Creta over Nexon (5yr) | ₹5.99L extra paid + ₹8.15L investment lost = ₹14.14 lakh total | |
| Tenure | Monthly EMI | Total Interest | Car Value at End | Being Underwater? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3 Years | ₹37,984 | ₹1,67,424 | ~₹7.2L (52% residual) | Never |
| 5 Years | ₹24,868 | ₹2,92,080 | ~₹5L (38% residual) | Year 2–4: possibly |
| 7 Years | ₹19,129 | ₹4,06,836 | ~₹3.6L (27% residual) | Year 1–6: very likely |
Your EMI is not simply “loan divided by months.” It’s calculated using compound interest via the reducing balance method:
P = Principal · r = Monthly rate (Annual rate ÷ 12 ÷ 100) · n = Tenure in months
EMI = ₹20,738/month · Total interest = ₹2,44,280 (not ₹4.37L as simple interest would suggest)
| Bank / NBFC | Starting Rate (2026) | Best For | Processing Fee | Prepayment Penalty |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bank of Baroda | 7.25% p.a. | Existing home loan customers, PSU employees | 0–0.5% | Nil (floating) |
| Union Bank of India | 7.40% p.a. | Eligible borrowers, lowest PSU rate | ₹1,000–0.5% | Nil (floating) |
| SBI | 8.50% p.a. | Salaried government employees, reliable processing | 0.25%+GST | Nil (floating) |
| ICICI Bank | 8.50% p.a. | Flexible tenure up to 84 months, tech-savvy process | ₹3,500–₹8,000 | 5% (fixed) |
| HDFC Bank | 8.75% p.a. | Fast approval, pre-approved for existing customers | ₹3,000–₹8,000 | 5–6% (fixed) |
| Axis Bank | 9.00% p.a. | Self-employed, good for borderline profiles | ₹3,500–₹7,500 | 5% (fixed) |
| Kotak Mahindra Bank | 9.25% p.a. | Luxury vehicles, higher loan amounts | ₹5,000–₹10,000 | 5% (fixed) |
| IDFC First Bank | 9.50% p.a. | Used cars, borderline CIBIL profiles | ₹3,500–₹7,500 | 5% (fixed) |
| Car (Approx. On-Road) | Loan Amount (80%) | 3-Year EMI | 5-Year EMI | Total Interest (5yr) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maruti Alto K10 — ₹5.5L | ₹4,40,000 | ₹13,987 | ₹9,120 | ₹1,07,200 |
| Maruti WagonR — ₹7L | ₹5,60,000 | ₹17,802 | ₹11,607 | ₹1,36,420 |
| Tata Tiago — ₹7.5L | ₹6,00,000 | ₹19,073 | ₹12,436 | ₹1,46,160 |
| Maruti Baleno — ₹9L | ₹7,20,000 | ₹22,888 | ₹14,923 | ₹1,75,380 |
| Hyundai i20 — ₹10L | ₹8,00,000 | ₹25,431 | ₹16,590 | ₹1,95,400 |
| Tata Punch — ₹10.5L | ₹8,40,000 | ₹26,702 | ₹17,420 | ₹2,05,200 |
| Car (Approx. On-Road) | Loan Amount (80%) | 3-Year EMI | 5-Year EMI | Total Interest (5yr) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tata Nexon — ₹13L | ₹10,40,000 | ₹33,060 | ₹21,567 | ₹2,54,020 |
| Hyundai Venue — ₹14L | ₹11,20,000 | ₹35,604 | ₹23,226 | ₹2,73,560 |
| Maruti Brezza — ₹14.5L | ₹11,60,000 | ₹36,876 | ₹24,056 | ₹2,83,360 |
| Kia Sonet — ₹15L | ₹12,00,000 | ₹38,147 | ₹24,885 | ₹2,93,100 |
| Hyundai Creta — ₹19L | ₹15,20,000 | ₹48,319 | ₹31,521 | ₹3,71,260 |
| Kia Seltos — ₹20L | ₹16,00,000 | ₹50,862 | ₹33,179 | ₹3,90,740 |
| Car (Approx. On-Road) | Loan Amount (80%) | 3-Year EMI | 5-Year EMI | Total Interest (5yr) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tata Harrier — ₹24L | ₹19,20,000 | ₹61,034 | ₹39,815 | ₹4,68,900 |
| MG Hector — ₹25L | ₹20,00,000 | ₹63,577 | ₹41,474 | ₹4,88,440 |
| Mahindra XUV700 — ₹28L | ₹22,40,000 | ₹71,207 | ₹46,451 | ₹5,47,060 |
| Toyota Fortuner — ₹52L | ₹41,60,000 | ₹1,32,243 | ₹86,267 | ₹10,16,020 |
⚡ Get your exact EMI including your actual down payment and rate with our Car Loan EMI Calculator — it also shows the full amortisation schedule so you see how interest vs principal distributes each month.
| Down Payment | Down Payment Amount | Loan Amount | 5-Year EMI | Total Interest | Interest Saved vs 10% |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10% | ₹1,90,000 | ₹17,10,000 | ₹35,272 | ₹4,16,320 | Baseline |
| 20% | ₹3,80,000 | ₹15,20,000 | ₹31,353 | ₹3,69,180 | ₹47,140 saved |
| 30% | ₹5,70,000 | ₹13,30,000 | ₹27,434 | ₹3,22,040 | ₹94,280 saved |
| 40% | ₹7,60,000 | ₹11,40,000 | ₹23,515 | ₹2,74,900 | ₹1,41,420 saved |
| CIBIL Score | Interest Rate | Monthly EMI | Total Interest | Extra vs Best Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 750–900 (Excellent) | 7.40–8.50% | ₹16,356–₹16,602 | ₹1,01,360–₹1,09,120 | Baseline (best rate) |
| 700–749 (Good) | 8.75–9.25% | ₹16,686–₹16,851 | ₹1,11,160–₹1,19,080 | +₹9,800–₹17,960 |
| 650–699 (Fair) | 10.0–11.0% | ₹17,118–₹17,402 | ₹1,27,080–₹1,44,120 | +₹25,720–₹43,000 |
| Below 650 (Poor) | 12.0–15.0%+ | ₹17,691–₹18,668 | ₹1,61,460–₹2,20,080 | +₹60,000–₹1,19,000 |
I want a ₹20 lakh car but the table says I can afford ₹13L. Can I stretch?
You can. But stretch with data, not optimism. Calculate the EMI on ₹16 lakh (80% of ₹20L) at 8.75% for 5 years using the calculator. Now look at that EMI as a percentage of your take-home. If it’s above 25%, you’re entering financial stress territory. If you can genuinely absorb that EMI without stopping your SIP, cutting your emergency fund, or using credit cards for routine expenses — then you can afford it. If any of those three things would happen, you cannot afford it regardless of what the bank says.
The bank approved me for ₹18 lakh. Does that mean I can afford it?
No. The bank’s approval criteria and your financial health criteria are completely different. Banks care about whether you can repay the loan — they check income and CIBIL score. They don’t care whether the loan leaves you enough to invest for retirement, fund an emergency, or maintain quality of life. The bank will approve you for almost anything your income technically supports. Your job is to decide what you should borrow, not what you can borrow.
Should I choose a car on EMI or save up and buy with cash?
For most salaried Indians with an active investment portfolio returning 10–12%, taking a car loan at 8.75% and investing the cash elsewhere makes mathematical sense — the investment return exceeds the loan interest. However, this only applies if you will actually invest the cash, not spend it on other things. If the money would be consumed rather than invested, paying cash and avoiding the loan is the financially healthier choice. Be honest with yourself. Use our SIP Calculator to model what the cash would grow to if invested.
What is the minimum salary for a car loan in India?
Most banks require a minimum net monthly salary of ₹15,000–20,000 for a car loan. However, the practical minimum for a new car loan that makes financial sense (EMI below 15% of income) is around ₹40,000–50,000/month, depending on the car price. Below that, you’re looking at used cars with small loans, or saving for a larger down payment before buying.