Properties that are generally NOT accepted include agricultural land, properties under litigation, properties with disputed inheritance, and properties in unauthorized layouts or on encumbered land.
LTV Ratio: How Much Can You Borrow?
The Loan-to-Value (LTV) ratio is the maximum percentage of the property's market value that a lender will offer as a loan. RBI has set different LTV limits for LAP versus home loans:
| Property Type | Typical LTV (Banks) | Typical LTV (NBFCs) |
|---|---|---|
| Residential, self-occupied | 50%–60% | 55%–65% |
| Residential, rented | 50%–55% | 50%–60% |
| Commercial property | 50%–55% | 50%–60% |
| Industrial property | 40%–50% | 40%–55% |
Example: If your Hyderabad flat is valued at ₹1.2 Crore and the lender applies a 55% LTV, the maximum loan amount is ₹66 Lakh. The actual sanction will also be subject to your repayment capacity (FOIR) and credit score.
Interest Rates and Total Cost
LAP rates in 2026 range from 9% to 13% depending on the lender type, your CIBIL score, property type, and loan tenure:
- PSU banks (SBI, PNB, Bank of Baroda): 9%–10.5% for salaried borrowers with 750+ CIBIL
- Private banks (HDFC, ICICI, Axis): 10%–11.5% with faster processing
- NBFCs (Bajaj Finance, Tata Capital, LIC HFL): 10.5%–13%, more flexible income assessment
Beyond the interest rate, account for processing fees (0.5%–2% of loan amount), legal charges (₹5,000–₹20,000), property valuation fee (₹3,000–₹10,000), MOD stamp duty (state-specific), and potential insurance bundling. On a ₹50 Lakh LAP, these upfront costs can add ₹1–1.5 Lakh before the first EMI.
LAP vs Personal Loan: Side-by-Side
| Feature | Loan Against Property | Personal Loan |
|---|---|---|
| Interest rate | 9%–13% | 10.5%–24% |
| Loan amount | Up to ₹10 Crore | Up to ₹40 Lakh (typical) |
| Tenure | 5–15 years | 1–5 years |
| Collateral required | Yes, property pledged | No |
| Processing time | 7–15 working days | 1–3 working days |
| Property at risk | Yes | No |
Eligibility and Documents
Lenders assess three dimensions: the borrower's repayment capacity, the property's value, and the property's legal clarity. Key eligibility criteria:
- Age: 21–65 years at loan maturity
- CIBIL score: Minimum 650 for NBFCs, 700+ for most banks
- Income: Salaried (minimum ₹25,000/month net) or self-employed (minimum ₹2L annual ITR income)
- FOIR: Maximum 50%–55% including proposed LAP EMI
- Property: Clear title, approved construction, no pending litigation
Documents required: PAN, Aadhaar, address proof, 6 months bank statements, latest 2 years ITR with computation, property documents (sale deed, encumbrance certificate, approved plan), property tax receipts.
Permitted End Uses
LAP offers complete flexibility on end use, which makes it far more versatile than a home loan. Common and permitted uses include: business expansion capital, working capital for MSMEs, children's higher education (domestic or abroad), medical treatment, marriage expenses, debt consolidation of high-interest loans, purchase of another property (with lender approval), and renovation of existing property.
The one restriction: funds cannot be used for speculative purposes or in ways that violate RBI guidelines. In practice, lenders ask for a self-declaration on end use but do not monitor individual transactions after disbursal.
The Risks You Must Understand
LAP is fundamentally different from an unsecured loan. If you default, the lender can invoke SARFAESI Act provisions and take possession of the mortgaged property without court intervention (subject to procedural notices). This means:
- Use LAP only for productive purposes, not for consumption or asset purchases that don't generate returns
- Maintain an EMI buffer of at least 3 months in a separate account to cover cash flow disruptions
- Do not over-leverage, borrow only what FOIR analysis shows you can comfortably service
- Understand the foreclosure terms before signing, floating-rate LAPs have no foreclosure penalty per RBI, but fixed-rate products typically charge 2%–4%
Talk to a Finvastra Advisor About LAP
Getting the right LAP requires matching your property value, income profile, and purpose to the right lender, whether a PSU bank for the lowest rate, a private bank for speed, or an NBFC for flexible income assessment. Finvastra compares LAP offers across 25+ lenders and advises on the optimal LTV, tenure, and rate structure for your profile.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much loan can I get against my property?
The loan amount is set by the loan-to-value ratio, which for a self-occupied residential property is typically 50 to 60 percent with banks and 55 to 65 percent with NBFCs. For example, a Hyderabad flat valued at 1.2 crore with a 55 percent LTV could support a loan of about 66 lakh, subject to your repayment capacity and credit score.
What can I use a loan against property for?
LAP offers complete end-use flexibility, covering business expansion, working capital, higher education, medical treatment, marriage expenses, debt consolidation, and renovation, among others. The main restriction is that funds cannot be used for speculative purposes or in ways that violate RBI guidelines, and lenders usually take a self-declaration on end use rather than monitoring individual transactions.
What are the main risks of a loan against property?
Because LAP is secured against your property, a default can let the lender invoke the SARFAESI Act and take possession of the mortgaged property without going to court, subject to procedural notices. To manage this, use LAP for productive purposes, avoid over-leveraging, and keep an EMI buffer of at least 3 months in a separate account.