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For home-loan borrowers (FY2026-27) — compare your tax under both regimes with your 24(b) interest and 80C principal, and see which saves more.
Compare your income tax under both regimes (FY2026-27) with your home-loan deductions, and see which saves more.
The New Regime saves you ₹91,000 a year.
Old Regime
₹2.42 L
Taxable income: ₹14.00 L
Deductions: ₹4.00 L
New Regime
₹1.51 L
Taxable income: ₹17.25 L
Deductions: ₹75,000
Your home loan saves ₹1.09 L in tax under the old regime.
Not included (consult a CA):
Estimates only, not tax advice. Surcharge above ₹50L and items listed above are not modeled. Consult a qualified CA before filing.
For a self-occupied house, no — the new tax regime (default from FY2025-26) does not allow the Section 24(b) interest deduction or the Section 80C principal deduction. For a let-out property, interest is still deductible against the rental income, but a resulting loss cannot be set off against your other income under the new regime. The old regime keeps both self-occupied deductions.
It depends on your total deductions. The new regime makes income up to ₹12 lakh effectively tax-free, so it usually wins for salaried borrowers. The old regime tends to win only when your combined deductions — home-loan interest, 80C, HRA, 80D, NPS — are large. This optimizer compares both on your exact numbers.
Yes, under the old regime. Each co-borrower who is also a co-owner can separately claim the Section 24(b) interest deduction (up to ₹2 lakh each) and the Section 80C principal deduction (up to ₹1.5 lakh each), effectively doubling the household caps. Toggle the joint-loan option to see the effect.