Section 80EEB: EV Loan Interest Deduction up to ₹1.5 Lakh

If you took a loan to buy an electric vehicle and the bank sanctioned it between 1 April 2019 and 31 March 2023, Section 80EEB of the Income-tax Act, 1961 lets you deduct up to ₹1,50,000 of the interest you pay each year, but only if you file under the old tax regime. This guide shows who qualifies, works a real number, and lists the traps.

Eligibility at a glance

Start here. If any row below does not match your situation, you cannot claim the deduction.

Question What Section 80EEB requires
Who can claim? An individual only. Not a HUF, firm, company, AOP or BOI.
When was the loan sanctioned? Between 1 April 2019 and 31 March 2023 (both dates inclusive).
Who gave the loan? A bank (financial institution) or an NBFC.
What did you buy? An electric vehicle as defined in the section (see below).
Which tax regime? Old regime only. The default new regime under section 115BAC does not allow it.
How much? Interest of up to ₹1,50,000 per year, over the life of the loan.

A key honest point: the sanction window is closed. A loan sanctioned on or after 1 April 2023 does not qualify at all. But if your loan was sanctioned inside the window, you keep claiming the interest deduction every year until the loan is fully repaid, even today in AY 2026-27.

A worked example: Rohit in Bengaluru

Rohit bought an electric car in 2022. His bank sanctioned the EV loan in August 2022, comfortably inside the 1 April 2019 to 31 March 2023 window. In the financial year 2025-26 he pays ₹1,80,000 in interest on that loan.

  1. Eligible interest: Rohit paid ₹1,80,000 interest, but Section 80EEB caps the deduction at ₹1,50,000. So he can claim ₹1,50,000.
  2. The extra ₹30,000: Because Rohit uses the car only for personal commuting, the ₹30,000 above the cap is simply not deductible. (If the vehicle were used for his business and registered for it, that excess could be claimed as a business expense instead, which is a separate route.)
  3. Old regime: Rohit files under the old regime, claims the ₹1,50,000 deduction, and reduces his taxable income by that amount. In the 30% slab, that is roughly ₹46,800 of tax saved (including cess).
  4. New regime: If Rohit had stayed on the default new regime, his Section 80EEB deduction would be zero. The benefit simply does not exist there.

That is the punchline. The same interest, the same person, the same year, but the regime decides whether the deduction is ₹1,50,000 or nothing. If the old-regime saving beats what the new regime gives him through lower slabs, Rohit must actively opt for the old regime. See how to switch tax regime with Form 10-IEA before you decide.

The rules behind the deduction

What counts as an electric vehicle. The Explanation to Section 80EEB defines it as a vehicle powered exclusively by an electric motor whose traction energy is supplied exclusively by a traction battery installed in the vehicle, and which has an electric regenerative braking system that converts the vehicle kinetic energy into electrical energy during braking. A hybrid that also runs on petrol or diesel does not meet this exclusive-electric test.

Only interest, not principal. The deduction is on interest payable on the loan. The repayment of the principal amount is not deductible under this section.

No double deduction. Section 80EEB(3) is clear: if you claim a given interest amount under 80EEB, you cannot claim that same interest again under any other provision of the Act, for the same year or any other year. So you cannot, for instance, also park it under business income depreciation rules and 80EEB together for the same rupees.

Business use above the cap. Where the electric vehicle is used for business and is registered in the owner or enterprise name, interest above the ₹1,50,000 ceiling may be claimed as a business expense. This is a separate computation from the 80EEB personal deduction and needs proper books.

Keep your evidence. Hold the loan sanction letter showing the sanction date, the lender interest certificate for the year, and the vehicle registration. The sanction date is what proves you are inside the window, so that letter is the single most important paper.

For other old-regime deductions that work the same way, compare with Section 80G donations. For more citizen tax and rights guides, browse the RTI Wiki. If you ever need to extract your own loan or scheme records from a public authority, The RTI Playbook walks you through filing the request.

Common mistakes to avoid

  1. Assuming a 2024 or 2025 EV loan qualifies. It does not. The sanction must fall on or before 31 March 2023.
  2. Claiming it under the new regime. The new regime is the default from FY 2023-24 onward and blocks 80EEB entirely.
  3. Claiming principal repayment. Only interest qualifies.
  4. Claiming the full interest when it exceeds ₹1,50,000 in personal use. The cap is firm.
  5. Letting a HUF or company claim it. The section is individual-only.

FAQ

Can I still claim Section 80EEB in AY 2026-27?

Yes, if your loan was sanctioned between 1 April 2019 and 31 March 2023 and you file under the old regime, you can keep claiming the interest deduction each year until the loan is repaid.

Does a new EV loan taken in 2025 qualify?

No. Any loan sanctioned on or after 1 April 2023 is outside the window and gets no deduction under this section.

Can I claim 80EEB under the new tax regime?

No. Section 80EEB is available only under the old regime. Under the default new regime the deduction is not allowed.

Is the ₹1,50,000 limit per year or one-time?

It is a per-year ceiling on interest. You can claim up to ₹1,50,000 of interest in each financial year over the loan tenure, subject to actual interest paid.

Can a company or HUF claim Section 80EEB?

No. Only an individual can claim. HUFs, firms, companies, AOPs and BOIs are excluded.

Can I claim both 80EEB and a business expense for the same interest?

No. Section 80EEB(3) bars claiming the same interest under any other provision. Business-use claims apply only to interest above the ₹1,50,000 cap, not the same rupees.

Next steps

Pull out your loan sanction letter and confirm the sanction date. If it falls inside 1 April 2019 to 31 March 2023, get this year interest certificate from your lender, and check whether the old regime with the ₹1,50,000 deduction leaves you better off than the new regime. If it does, opt for the old regime when you file. This is general information, not tax advice; for your own numbers, consult a qualified chartered accountant.

Sources: Section 80EEB and 80EEB(3), Income-tax Act, 1961 (incometaxindia.gov.in); Finance (No. 2) Act, 2019 inserting Section 80EEB; section 115BAC on the default new regime.

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