From 1 January 2026, your bank or NBFC cannot charge any foreclosure or pre-payment penalty when you close a floating-rate loan taken for a personal (non-business) purpose. This applies to home, personal and education loans sanctioned or renewed on or after that date, whether you prepay part or all of the loan, from any source of funds, with no lock-in period. The rule is the Reserve Bank of India (Pre-payment Charges on Loans) Directions, 2025.
Short on time? Jump to how to complain if a bank still charges you.
The Reserve Bank of India (Pre-payment Charges on Loans) Directions, 2025 (reference RBI/2025-26/64; DoR.MCS.REC.38/01.01.001/2025-26), issued on 2 July 2025, set the rule. It applies to all loans and advances sanctioned or renewed on or after 1 January 2026.
The core protection is simple. For any floating-rate loan given to an individual for a purpose other than business, the lender must not levy pre-payment charges. This holds whether or not there is a co-borrower (co-obligant). It covers home loans, personal loans and education loans on floating rates.
The Directions add three important conditions in your favour. The ban applies:
So you cannot be told you must wait one year before closing, and you cannot be penalised for using a bonus, a gift, or a top-up from another bank to clear the loan.
Micro and Small Enterprises (MSEs) also get protection for floating-rate business loans. The reach depends on the lender. Larger commercial banks (other than Small Finance Banks, Regional Rural Banks and Local Area Banks) and the bigger urban co-operative banks must not charge pre-payment penalties on MSE business loans of any amount. The smaller lenders just named must apply the exemption to MSE business loans up to a sanctioned amount of ₹50 lakh. Check your sanction letter to see which category your lender falls in.
The Directions cover a wide set of regulated entities:
Payments banks do not give such loans, which is why they sit outside the rule. If your loan is from any of the other four, the ban applies once your loan is sanctioned or renewed on or after 1 January 2026.
The ban is not retroactive. Loans sanctioned before 1 January 2026 stay outside these 2025 Directions. The older terms in your loan agreement continue to govern those accounts.
That does not always mean you must pay. The RBI had already barred foreclosure charges on floating-rate home loans and other floating-rate loans to individual borrowers for non-business purposes through earlier circulars. So many older floating-rate personal loans are already charge-free. Read your sanction letter and loan agreement, and ask your bank in writing which rule applies before you pay anything.
One practical point. If an old loan is renewed on or after 1 January 2026, the renewal brings it under the new Directions. A reset of the interest rate alone is not a fresh sanction, so confirm with your lender what counts as a renewal in your case.
If a lender demands a pre-payment or foreclosure charge on a covered loan, do not pay quietly. Follow these steps.
You can also use a Right to Information request to a public-sector bank to get its internal policy circular on pre-payment charges, which strengthens your complaint. See the RTI practical guides and the free Ask RTI tool to draft your application.
Suppose Kashvi takes a floating-rate home loan of ₹40 lakh sanctioned in March 2026 from a commercial bank. In 2028 she gets a bonus and wants to close the loan early. The bank tries to add a 2% foreclosure charge of about ₹50,000 on the outstanding amount.
Because her loan was sanctioned after 1 January 2026, is on a floating rate, and is for a non-business personal purpose, the bank cannot charge that fee. She writes to the grievance cell quoting the 2025 Directions, the bank reverses the charge, and she closes the loan for the outstanding amount alone.
No. The ban under the 2025 Directions is for floating-rate loans given to individuals for non-business purposes. If your loan is on a fixed rate, the lender may still levy a pre-payment or foreclosure charge as per your loan agreement. Check the rate type in your sanction letter. For mixed or hybrid loans, ask the lender in writing which portion is treated as floating before you prepay.
Loans sanctioned before 1 January 2026 are outside the 2025 Directions, so the older rules and your loan agreement apply. However, the RBI had already barred foreclosure charges on floating-rate loans to individuals for non-business purposes in earlier circulars, so many such loans are already free of charge. Ask your bank in writing which rule covers your account, and do not pay until you have that confirmation.
No. The Directions state the protection applies without any minimum lock-in period, whether you prepay in part or in full, and regardless of the source of the funds you use. So your lender cannot insist you keep the loan running for a fixed time before allowing a charge-free closure on a covered floating-rate loan.
Floating-rate business loans to individuals and to Micro and Small Enterprises are covered, but the reach depends on the lender. Larger commercial banks and bigger urban co-operative banks cannot charge pre-payment penalties on MSE business loans of any amount. Small Finance Banks, Regional Rural Banks, Local Area Banks and smaller co-operative banks apply the exemption to MSE business loans up to a sanctioned amount of ₹50 lakh.
First write to the bank or NBFC grievance cell quoting the Reserve Bank of India (Pre-payment Charges on Loans) Directions, 2025, and ask for a waiver or refund. If there is no reply in 30 days or the reply is unsatisfactory, file a free complaint with the RBI Ombudsman at cms.rbi.org.in under the Integrated Ombudsman Scheme, 2021. You can also call the RBI helpline on 14448 for help.
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