Home Loan Masterclass · Part 5 · Home loans · 8 min read · July 2026
LTV: how much your property can borrow, not your salary
A family clears the income math comfortably — eligible for ₹60 lakh on salary alone. The sanction comes in at ₹52 lakh. Nobody lied to them; a second ceiling did. It's called the loan-to-value cap, it belongs to the property rather than to you, and the final sanction is always the lower of the two ceilings.
- Your income decides how much EMI you can carry. LTV decides how much of the property's value the bank will fund — the rest is your own contribution, no exceptions.
- RBI's slabs: loans up to ₹30 lakh can be funded up to 90% of value, ₹30–75 lakh up to 80%, and above ₹75 lakh up to 75%.
- The bank applies its percentage to its own valuation or your agreement price — whichever is lower. Stamp duty and registration sit outside the calculation entirely.
Part 3 of this masterclass walked through FOIR — the income ceiling. That answers the question "how much EMI can this person safely carry?" LTV answers a completely different one: "if this loan goes wrong, how much cushion does the bank have in the property itself?"
A home loan is a secured loan. If everything fails, the property is what the lender falls back on. So the lender never funds 100% of it — it always keeps a margin between the loan and the property's value, so that even in a weak market, a forced sale can recover the outstanding. That margin is the whole logic of LTV.
The formula, and the slabs
LTV = loan amount ÷ property value. The RBI caps how high this ratio can go, and the cap tightens as the ticket size grows:
| Loan amount | Maximum LTV | Your minimum contribution |
|---|---|---|
| Up to ₹30 lakh | 90% | 10% of value |
| ₹30 lakh – ₹75 lakh | 80% | 20% of value |
| Above ₹75 lakh | 75% | 25% of value |
These are ceilings, not promises. A lender's internal policy can sit below them — and for specific profiles or property types, it often does. But no lender can go above them on a standard home loan.
The detail that surprises buyers: whose "value"?
Here is where files actually get trimmed. The LTV percentage is not applied to the price you agreed with the seller. It is applied to the lower of two numbers: your agreement value, or the valuation done by the bank's own empanelled valuer, who visits the property and reports independently.
Valuers are conservative by design. They look at registered transaction rates in the area, the building's age, the floor, legal clarity, and comparable sales — not at what you were willing to pay in a competitive market. When the valuer's number comes in below your agreement price, the loan shrinks with it, and the difference lands on you.
A worked example: where the ₹60 lakh became ₹52 lakh
Back to the family in the opening line. Take-home income supports a ₹60 lakh loan comfortably on FOIR. They're buying at an agreement value of ₹68 lakh. The bank's valuer reports ₹65 lakh. Now the two ceilings:
- Income ceiling (FOIR): ₹60 lakh.
- Property ceiling (LTV): the loan will land in the ₹30–75 lakh slab, so 80% of the lower value — 80% × ₹65 lakh = ₹52 lakh.
Sanction: ₹52 lakh. The property, not the salary, set the number. And the buyer's own funds must now cover ₹16 lakh of the price plus stamp duty and registration — which brings us to the next quiet subtraction.
What LTV never covers
The property "value" in this whole calculation is the property alone. Sitting outside it, fully on your side of the table:
- Stamp duty and registration — typically 5–8% of the agreement value depending on your state. On a ₹68 lakh purchase, that can be ₹4–5 lakh of pure own-money, over and above the down payment.
- The other charges — processing, legal, valuation, MOD stamping — the fine-print items Part 1 of this masterclass walks through one by one.
- Interiors, society transfer, brokerage — real money, invisible to the loan.
A useful planning rule from the desk side: for a mid-range purchase, keep own funds of roughly 25–30% of the agreement value ready. That covers the LTV gap, the duties and the friction costs without last-minute borrowing — because the worst way to fund a down payment is a personal loan that then eats your FOIR on the same file.
Why the bank won't "adjust" it
Buyers sometimes ask whether the agreement can be written higher so the loan covers more. Two problems. First, the valuer's independent number caps the math anyway. Second, inflating an agreement value is misrepresentation on a registered document — it creates stamp-duty, tax and legal exposure that dwarfs whatever it was meant to save. No honest file does this, and no good banker lets it through.
The legitimate levers are simpler: choose a property whose realistic valuation matches its price, time the purchase so your own contribution is genuinely ready, and if the gap is structural, consider a smaller ticket — the ₹30 lakh slab's 90% LTV exists precisely to make entry-level purchases easier.
The three-ceiling summary
Your final home loan sanction is the lowest of three numbers: what your income supports (FOIR, Part 3), what the property supports (LTV, this part), and what your credit history earns you in rate and confidence (the CIBIL masterclass). Run all three before you fall in love with a flat, and the sanction letter will never surprise you.
One ceiling remains that most borrowers meet only years later — the rules around paying the loan off early. Those rules changed in January 2026, in your favour. That's Part 6.