Monday, 13 June 2016

What is a Home Saver Loan?

Pre-payment of home loan is a double-edged sword. It reduces the future obligation but at the same time, also incurs opportunity cost and risk in case of an emergency when you urgently need cash. This is exactly where a home saver loan helps.

Background
Home Loans or Mortgage is one set of financial transactions that almost every one of us is bound to encounter at least once during our life time, and then deal with it for a majority of our life. So, any available option in this area should be explored very carefully.

Most of us, after a few years of running a successful EMI schedule would also look at the option of pre-payment of home loans.

Pre-payment of home loan is a double-edged sword. It reduces the future obligation but at the same time, also incurs opportunity cost and risk in case of an emergency when you urgently need cash. This is exactly where a home saver loan helps.


What is a Home Saver Loan?
Home Saver Loan is a kind of loan where you have a dual advantage of pre-paying your home loan (and thus reducing your balance amount or tenure or both of EMIs) as well as having ready cash in hand which can be withdrawn in case of an emergency.

How does a Home Saver Loan work?
The concept, though simple, is powerful. The idea is to make use of your deposit in your current or savings account to offset a part of the principle. Once some of the principle is offset, interest obligation comes down.

Here is how it works:
1) In this type of Loan for Home, the lending bank links your home loan account (an account which you would already be running with the bank from which you have taken the home loan) with a current or savings account with the same bank.
2) While calculating the monthly interest on your home loan, the bank deducts the funds in the current account from the principal outstanding and then levies the interest, resulting in reduction of your EMI

This scheme is quite useful for a borrower who has a sufficiently large savings balance in his account, which he wishes to utilize when in need, and also for a business owner who can park excess funds in his current account.

For example, you think of making a prepayment of Rs 5 lacs. Instead of pre-paying, you can deposit that amount in a savings account which is linked to your home saver account.
Then, the interest obligation would be calculated on the loan outstanding less Rs 5 lacs, and not on the entire loan outstanding. The biggest lever is that you can withdraw this money or a part of it whenever you want.

Such savings can be quite huge when you consider the fact that EMIs will have to be paid for several years more.

What if you do not have immediate funds?
In that case, even when you deposit a recurring amount in your account, this deposit will still be subtracted from principle outstanding to calculate the EMI.
The savings would be less in initial months but will compound in the later part of the tenure.

[Source: http://elevate-your-life.blogspot.in/2013/02/what-is-home-saver-loan.html]




1 comment:

  1. Hey Thanks for sharing this informative blog it seems helpful, i was looking for same kind of content about Emi for Home Loan

    ReplyDelete