A loan against property (LAP) lets you borrow money by mortgaging a home, shop or plot you already own, while you keep living in or using it. Lenders usually advance 50 to 70 percent of the property's market value, charge less interest than a personal loan because the loan is secured, and can auction the property under the SARFAESI Act, 2002 if you default. So the lower rate comes with a real risk: your property is on the line.
A loan against property is a secured loan. You pledge an asset you own, the lender registers a charge on it, and in return you get a lump sum you can use for almost anything: a business need, a wedding, medical bills, or to consolidate costlier debt. You continue to own and use the property; the lender only steps in if you stop repaying.
This is different from a home loan. A home loan is taken to buy or build a house, and the new house is the security. A LAP is taken against a property you already own, and the money is not tied to buying a home. Because a LAP carries slightly more risk for the lender, its interest rate is usually a little higher than a home loan but still well below an unsecured personal loan.
Eligibility rules vary by lender, but most look for the same things:
The property's value sets the ceiling on how much you can borrow, and your income decides how much of that you actually get.
Lenders do not give you the full market value of your property. They lend a percentage of it, called the loan-to-value (LTV) ratio. In the Indian market this is typically 50 to 70 percent of the assessed value, though the exact figure depends on the lender, the property type and your profile. A self-occupied residential flat usually fetches a higher LTV than a commercial shop or a plot of land.
This is a market practice, not a fixed legal cap. The lender's own valuer assesses your property, and the sanction is built on that valuation, not on the price you think it is worth.
Because a LAP is backed by an asset, it is priced well below unsecured borrowing. As an indicative market range in 2026, LAP rates run roughly from the high single digits to the mid-teens per cent per year, depending on the lender, your credit profile and the property. Public-sector and large private banks tend to sit at the lower end; NBFCs and housing-finance companies often price higher.
Treat any rate you see in an advertisement as a starting point, not a promise. Your actual rate depends on your income, score, LTV and the property. Always read the sanction letter and the Key Facts Statement, which must spell out the rate, fees and prepayment terms before you sign.
The reason a LAP is cheaper is also the reason it is dangerous. Your property is the security, and if you default the lender can enforce that security without going to court first, using the Securitisation and Reconstruction of Financial Assets and Enforcement of Security Interest Act, 2002 (the SARFAESI Act).
Here is the broad process once your account is classified as a non-performing asset:
This is why a LAP should be taken for a genuine, repayable need, not to plug a hole you are not sure you can fill. For what recovery staff can and cannot legally do, see Bank loan recovery agent rights and limits in India.
If you come into money and want to close the loan early, the rules now favour individual borrowers. Under the Reserve Bank of India (Pre-payment Charges on Loans) Directions, 2025, if your LAP is taken by you as an individual for a non-business (personal) purpose, a regulated lender cannot levy any prepayment or foreclosure charge at all whether the loan is fixed-rate or floating-rate, with no minimum lock-in period and whatever the source of the money.
The position is narrower if your LAP was taken for a business purpose. There, the no-charge protection applies to floating-rate loans, and some smaller lenders apply it only up to a sanctioned limit. So the key questions are why you borrowed and what your rate type is.
These Directions apply to loans sanctioned or renewed on or after 1 January 2026, and they cover banks (other than payments banks), co-operative banks, NBFCs and all-India financial institutions. For an older loan, check the prepayment clause in your sanction letter and Key Facts Statement.
No. A home loan is borrowed to buy or build a house, and that new house is the security. A loan against property is borrowed against a property you already own, and the money can be used for almost any legitimate purpose. LAP rates are usually a little higher than home-loan rates but lower than personal-loan rates.
Yes, if your account becomes an NPA and the outstanding is above Rs 1 lakh, the lender can act under the SARFAESI Act, 2002. It must first send a demand notice under Section 13(2) giving you 60 days to pay. If you do not, it can take possession and auction the property. You can reply to the notice and approach the Debt Recovery Tribunal.
If your LAP is taken by you as an individual for a personal, non-business purpose, the RBI (Pre-payment Charges on Loans) Directions, 2025 bar the lender from levying any prepayment or foreclosure charge, whether the loan is fixed-rate or floating-rate, for loans sanctioned or renewed on or after 1 January 2026. For a business-purpose LAP the protection is narrower and mainly covers floating-rate loans, so confirm the clause in writing.
Lenders typically sanction 50 to 70 percent of the property's assessed market value, based on their own valuation, your income and your credit profile. The percentage is a market practice that varies by lender and property type, not a fixed legal limit.
Some lenders fund certain agricultural assets, but enforcement under the SARFAESI Act does not extend to agricultural land. Lenders are therefore cautious, and many decline pure agricultural land or apply stricter terms.
A loan against property is a powerful, lower-cost way to unlock the value of an asset you already own, but it puts that asset directly at risk. Borrow only what you can comfortably repay, get every charge and prepayment term in writing, and keep the SARFAESI timeline in mind so you can act early if money gets tight.
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