One of the most dangerous financial mistakes a homebuyer in India can make is asking a bank officer: "How much home loan can I get?" Banks are highly incentivized to approve the maximum possible loan amount, often pushing your budget to its absolute breaking point.
The bank's calculation is based on regulatory risk caps, not your personal lifestyle comfort, retirement goals, or family safety nets. To buy a house without becoming "house poor"—where the majority of your monthly paycheck goes strictly to home loan EMIs—you need a realistic, self-guided affordability framework.
1. Understanding the Bank’s Lens: The FOIR Ratio
Before setting your own rules, you must know how banks calculate your maximum eligibility. They use a metric called the Fixed Obligation to Income Ratio (FOIR).
FOIR Formula:
FOIR = (Total Existing Monthly Debt Payments + Proposed Home EMI) / Gross Monthly Income
For salaried employees, most Indian banks cap FOIR at 45% to 50%. If your gross monthly household income is ₹1.5 Lakhs, a bank will happily approve a combined monthly debt payment of ₹75,000.
However, paying ₹75,000 out of ₹1.5 Lakhs leaves you with only ₹75,000. Under the New Tax Regime, income tax, professional tax, and PF contributions eat up another 15-20%, leaving you with less than ₹50,000 for groceries, school fees, utilities, medical emergencies, and investments. This is a highly unstable financial setup.
2. The 3/20/30/40 Affordability Rule
To protect your financial future, apply the 3/20/30/40 rule customized for Indian real estate realities:
3x Annual Income Limit
The total purchase price of the property should ideally not exceed 3 to 4 times your gross annual household income. If you earn ₹20 Lakhs per year, your ideal budget is ₹60 Lakhs to ₹80 Lakhs.
20-Year Max Tenure
Never take a 25 or 30-year loan simply to artificially lower your EMI. The interest compounding on a 30-year tenure is massive. Keep your loan target at 20 years or lower.
30% Down Payment Target
Instead of the bare minimum 20%, target a 30% down payment (including registration/taxes). This provides a substantial equity buffer and protects you from negative equity if prices fluctuate.
40% Net-Salary EMI Limit
Your monthly home loan EMI should never exceed 30% to 40% of your net (take-home) monthly income, rather than the bank's 50% gross limit.
3. Case Study: The Safe vs. Stretched Scenario
Let's evaluate a household earning a net take-home pay of ₹1.5 Lakhs per month (approx. ₹22 Lakhs gross annual salary).
| Parameter | Bank-Stretched Limit | PropIQ Safe Limit |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly EMI Allowance | ₹75,000 (50% net) | ₹45,000 (30% net) |
| Safe Loan Size (8.5%, 20y) | ₹86.5 Lakhs | ₹52 Lakhs |
| Total Property Budget | ₹1.1 Crores | ₹75 Lakhs |
| Monthly Disposable Surplus | ₹75,000 (extremely tight) | ₹1,05,000 (highly comfortable) |
4. Factor in the Home Maintenance Trap
Affordability isn't just about the loan. Modern gated communities in Indian metro areas levy heavy society maintenance fees. For a 1,600 sq. ft. apartment charging ₹4 per sq. ft. monthly, that is ₹6,400 per month. Add electricity, gas, and broadband, and you are staring at an additional ₹10,000/month in fixed non-discretionary housing costs. Always subtract this maintenance overhead from your target EMI budget before locking in your housing size.
Conclusion: Buy Within Your Means
True financial freedom means having room in your budget for vacations, retirement investments, and emergency provisions. Before shortlisting properties, use an affordability gauge to find your realistic financial target, and buy a home that serves as a sanctuary, not a financial anchor.