What is the Bank of India car loan EMI calculator?
The Bank of India car loan EMI calculator estimates your monthly vehicle loan payment from the loan amount, interest rate, and tenure. Most auto loans in India run for three to seven years with fixed EMIs on a reducing balance.
If you invest through Bank of India, Enter the on-road loan amount you plan to borrow—not just ex-showroom price if you are financing registration, insurance, or accessories too.
Why check Bank of India car loan EMI before buying?
Dealers quote an ex-showroom price; your real commitment is the EMI hitting your bank account every month for five or more years.
- Match monthly EMI to your take-home budget before choosing a variant or loan tenure.
- Compare bank vs NBFC offers at different rates on the same loan amount.
- See how a shorter tenure raises EMI but cuts total interest paid.
How does this car loan EMI calculator work?
It uses the same reducing-balance EMI formula as personal and home loans. Car loan rates are often higher than home loan rates and tenures are shorter—typically up to seven years.
Worked example
Finance ₹10,00,000 at 9% for 5 years. Monthly EMI is about ₹20,758. Total repayment is roughly ₹12,45,501—including about ₹2,45,501 in interest above the ₹10 lakh borrowed.
How to use this car loan EMI calculator
Set car loan amount, rate of interest (p.a.), and tenure. Sliders default to a typical new-car range; adjust to match your lender's offer.
For general loans or home purchases, use the EMI calculator or home loan EMI calculator.
What this calculator does not include
Down payment, balloon payments, processing fees, hypothecation charges, and insurance bundled into the loan are not modeled separately.
Frequently asked questions
What tenure is typical for a car loan?
Most new-car loans run from three to seven years. Longer tenure lowers EMI but increases total interest.
Should I include the down payment in the loan amount?
No. Enter only the amount you borrow from the lender. Subtract your down payment from the on-road price first.
Is the EMI shown final?
It is an estimate based on your inputs. Your lender's amortization schedule is the authoritative figure.