
Budgeting & Debt
4 min read
- By Priyesh Mishra
Section 80E: The Education Loan Deduction Most People Miss
Section 80E allows DEDUCTION OF ENTIRE INTEREST paid on education loan. NO CAP. Eight years from start of repayment. Available to student, parent, or spouse who is the borrower. Rs. 1.5 lakh annual interest at 30% slab = Rs. 45k tax saved. Over 8 years: Rs. 3.6 lakh tax shield. No other Indian deduction is as clean, unlimited, or long-running. And yet 80% of eligible education-loan holders claim it wrong or not at all. Either claiming principal alongside interest (incorrect) or missing the deduction entirely in their first ITR after repayment starts.
By the end, you will know the 80E eligibility criteria, the lender qualifiers, the 8-year window mechanics, and the relationship to principal (which is NOT deductible).
The rule
Section 80E: deduction of INTEREST PAID on loan for HIGHER EDUCATION of self, spouse, children, or legally-related student. Loan from: BANK, APPROVED CHARITABLE INSTITUTION, or NON-BANKING FINANCIAL COMPANY NOTIFIED BY CBDT. No maximum limit on the deduction. Deduction available for 8 CONSECUTIVE YEARS from start of repayment OR until interest is fully paid, whichever is earlier.
The no-cap feature is unique. Most sections have limits (Rs. 1.5L for 80C, Rs. 2L for 24(b), etc.). Section 80E is uncapped. A Rs. 5 lakh annual interest deduction at 30% slab = Rs. 1.5 lakh tax saving. For borrowers with large education loans (foreign universities, Rs. 50 lakh-Rs. 1 crore loans), this is the largest single tax deduction available in the Indian code.
Principal is NOT deductible
Section 80E covers INTEREST ONLY, not principal. If your EMI is Rs. 25k of which Rs. 18k is interest and Rs. 7k is principal, only the Rs. 18k x 12 = Rs. 2.16L annual interest qualifies. The principal portion is your own capital repayment; no deduction. This is different from home loans (where 80C allows principal deduction up to Rs. 1.5L); education loans have no 80C-equivalent for principal.
In early years of EMI, interest component is high (loan-amortisation schedule), so 80E claim is large. In later years, principal component grows and interest shrinks. 80E claim shrinks proportionally. For a 10-year education loan, 80E claim is highest in years 1-3 and tapers to modest amounts by year 8 (when the 80E window closes).
The 8-year window
8 CONSECUTIVE years from START OF REPAYMENT. Note: "start of repayment". Not start of loan, not start of moratorium. Most education loans have a moratorium period (study period + 6-12 months grace) before repayment begins. The 8-year clock starts when first EMI is paid. A 12-year loan with 4-year moratorium has 8 full years of 80E availability, covering the initial repayment period.
If the loan is fully paid off before 8 years (through prepayment or shorter tenure), 80E deduction ends with loan payoff. The 8 years is a MAXIMUM ceiling; actual availability is whichever expires first. 8 years OR loan fully paid.
Higher education definition
Higher education = ANY COURSE OF STUDY POST-SCHOOLING (undergraduate, postgraduate, vocational, professional certification like CA / CFA) from a RECOGNISED INSTITUTION in India or abroad. Coaching classes or short-term certifications (3-6 months) typically do not qualify. Only recognised institutions granting formal degrees / diplomas. Recognition criterion: accredited by AICTE, UGC, or equivalent foreign body.
Higher education: specific definition
Higher education: specific definition
Loan from employer or relative
Borrower, not student, claims the deduction
Key Takeaways
- 80E: full interest deduction on education loan, no cap.
- 8 consecutive years from start of repayment (not loan start).
- Available to borrower. Student / parent / spouse.
- Only interest, not principal.
- Must be from bank / approved institution, for recognised higher education.
Read Next
Education loan interest deductible. Car loan interest is NOT. Unless the car is used for business. Another line that trips up first-time borrowers.
Continue ->