Both Section 80EE and Section 80EEA are closed to new home loans, so no fresh loan can start a claim today. But if your loan was sanctioned inside the eligible window, you can keep claiming this extra interest deduction every year while you repay, on top of the Section 24(b) limit, as long as you file under the old tax regime. This guide explains the exact windows, the caps, and how to claim.
These two sections give first-time buyers an extra deduction on home loan interest, over and above the usual Section 24(b) limit. They were time-limited incentives. The sanction windows have ended, but the yearly benefit continues for borrowers who got in on time.
When you take a home loan, the interest you pay each year is normally deductible under Section 24(b) of the Income Tax Act, 1961, up to ₹2,00,000 for a self-occupied house. Sections 80EE and 80EEA were added later to give first-time buyers a little more room. They sit on top of the ₹2,00,000 limit, so an eligible borrower could deduct more total interest in a year.
Both are Chapter VI-A style deductions. That matters for one big reason covered below: they only work under the old tax regime.
Section 80EE lets a first-time buyer claim up to ₹50,000 of home loan interest in a year, above the Section 24(b) amount.
To qualify, the loan had to meet all of these:
If your loan was sanctioned in that window and met these caps, you can keep claiming up to ₹50,000 each year on the interest you are still paying. No loan sanctioned after 31 March 2017 can start a fresh 80EE claim.
Section 80EEA was the affordable-housing version, with a much larger benefit of up to ₹1,50,000 of home loan interest in a year, again above the Section 24(b) limit.
To qualify, the loan had to meet all of these:
As with 80EE, the window has closed, but a borrower who got a qualifying loan inside it can keep claiming up to ₹1,50,000 each year while repaying. No loan sanctioned after 31 March 2022 can start a fresh 80EEA claim.
Here is the order in which the deductions apply for a self-occupied home:
So an eligible 80EEA borrower could deduct up to ₹2,00,000 plus ₹1,50,000, a total of ₹3,50,000 of interest in a year, if they actually paid that much interest. You can only claim interest you genuinely paid; these are upper limits, not flat amounts.
You cannot claim 80EE and 80EEA together on the same loan. Pick the one your loan qualifies for.
This is the part most people miss. Sections 80EE and 80EEA are not available under the new tax regime, which is now the default. If you file under the new regime, you lose these deductions and also the Section 24(b) interest deduction on a self-occupied house.
To claim 80EE or 80EEA, you must opt for the old tax regime when you file your return. Compare your total tax under both regimes before deciding, because the old regime only makes sense if your deductions are large enough to beat the lower new-regime rates.
You do not file these with any separate form; they go straight into your ITR. For background on planning around the new default regime, see The RTI Playbook.
Yes, if your loan was sanctioned inside the eligible window and met the conditions. The windows for new loans have closed, but existing eligible borrowers keep claiming the yearly interest deduction while they repay, provided they file under the old regime.
No. Section 80EE needed a loan sanctioned between 1 April 2016 and 31 March 2017, and Section 80EEA needed one sanctioned between 1 April 2019 and 31 March 2022. A loan sanctioned after those dates does not qualify for either.
No. You cannot claim both on the same loan. Section 80EEA specifically requires that you are not eligible to claim under Section 80EE. Use whichever section your loan window and caps match.
No. Section 80EE and Section 80EEA can only be claimed under the old tax regime. If you opt for the new default regime, you cannot claim them, and you also lose the Section 24(b) interest deduction on a self-occupied house.
Section 24(b) allows up to ₹2,00,000 of interest on a self-occupied house. On top of that, an eligible borrower can add up to ₹50,000 under 80EE or up to ₹1,50,000 under 80EEA, so the extra is separate from the ₹2,00,000.
By Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak