An education loan moratorium is a repayment holiday that usually runs for your full course period plus a grace window set in your sanction letter, so you do not have to start paying EMIs while you are still studying or just out of college. Under the Indian Banks' Association (IBA) model scheme that most banks follow, repayment for studies in India begins one year after the course ends or six months after you get a job, whichever comes first. For studies abroad, it commonly begins six months after the course ends. Your exact dates and terms are written in your loan sanction letter, so always read that document first.
A moratorium pauses your EMIs, but it does not always pause interest. Under the IBA model scheme, simple interest is charged during the study period and the moratorium. You are usually not required to pay it month by month while you study, but it keeps adding up. When the moratorium ends, the accrued interest is added to your loan and your EMI is worked out on the larger balance.
This is why two students with the same loan amount can end up with very different EMIs. The one who paid nothing during study starts repayment on a bigger figure. The one who serviced the interest as it accrued starts on a smaller one.
You generally have two choices during the moratorium:
The IBA model scheme also notes that many banks give a small interest concession, often around 1 percent, if you service the interest regularly during the study and moratorium period. This is a bank-level benefit, not a guaranteed legal right, so confirm whether your bank offers it before you count on it.
The moratorium terms are not a vague promise. They are spelled out in your sanction letter under the scheme your bank adopted. That means:
If a bank acts against your own sanctioned terms, for example by raising EMI demands during a granted moratorium or adding charges your letter does not mention, that is a service problem you can challenge. The Reserve Bank of India treats a 'deficiency in service' by a bank as a valid ground for a complaint, the route explained below.
Life does not always follow the loan calendar. If your course got longer, or you have not found a job by the time the grace period ends, you can ask your bank for more time:
Banks have discretion here, especially in cases of genuine unemployment or hardship, but they are not bound to agree. A written, documented request gives you the best chance and a clear record if you later need to escalate.
If your bank wrongly demands EMIs during a valid moratorium, or charges interest in a way that contradicts your sanction letter, follow this ladder:
There is no fee to file under this scheme. The RBI states clearly that there is no charge for a customer to file or resolve complaints under the Integrated Ombudsman Scheme, 2021.
If your loan is from a public-sector bank, that bank is a public authority, so you can also use the Right to Information Act to ask for its education loan policy or the specific moratorium rule applied to your account. For a full walk-through of drafting and appealing such requests, see The RTI Playbook. Note that private banks are not covered by the RTI Act, so this route applies to public-sector lenders only.
If you are still choosing a lender, the government-backed Vidya Lakshmi portal at https://www.vidyalakshmi.co.in lets you apply to banks using a single Common Educational Loan Application Form prescribed by the IBA. It was set up under the Department of Financial Services, the Department of Higher Education, and the IBA, and a student can apply to up to three banks through it.
Under the IBA model scheme, simple interest is charged during the study period and the moratorium. You are usually not required to pay it month by month, but it accrues and is added to your loan when repayment begins, raising the balance your EMI is based on. Your sanction letter states the exact treatment for your loan.
If your sanction letter grants a moratorium, the bank should not demand principal EMIs during that period. Servicing interest is optional and lowers your future EMI. If the bank demands payments that contradict your sanctioned terms, that may be a deficiency in service you can challenge with the bank and then the RBI Ombudsman.
For studies in India under the IBA model scheme, repayment usually starts one year after the course ends or six months after you secure a job, whichever is earlier. For studies abroad, it commonly starts six months after the course ends. Always confirm the exact date in your own sanction letter.
Section 80E of the Income Tax Act allows a deduction on the interest you pay on an education loan, with no upper limit, for up to eight assessment years. The deduction applies only once you start paying interest, and only individuals can claim it. So if you do not pay interest during the moratorium, the benefit begins when your interest payments do.
First complain in writing to the branch and grievance officer and keep your records. If the bank does not reply within 30 days, rejects your complaint, or you are unsatisfied, file with the RBI Ombudsman at https://cms.rbi.org.in or call 14448. There is no fee, and the complaint must be filed within one year of the bank's reply.
By Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak