Understand how the EMI calculation formula works internally,
why banks use it, and how it affects your monthly payments,
total interest, and long-term financial decisions.
What Is the EMI Formula?
The EMI formula is a mathematical method used by banks and financial institutions
to calculate a fixed monthly repayment amount for a loan.
Although the EMI amount remains the same every month, the internal structure
keeps changing automatically.
The formula balances three critical factors that directly influence
how much you pay and for how long.
Loan Amount (Principal)
Interest Rate
Loan Tenure
By combining these variables, the EMI formula creates a
stable and predictable
repayment structure for both borrower and lender.
Standard EMI Formula
EMI = P × R × (1 + R)N ÷ [(1 + R)N − 1]
P (Principal)
Total loan amount borrowed
R (Monthly Interest Rate)
Annual interest rate ÷ 12 ÷ 100
N (Tenure)
Total number of monthly installments
This formula is based on compound interest,
not simple interest, which makes long-term loans significantly costlier.
Why the EMI Formula Uses Compound Interest
Interest is calculated on the remaining loan balance
Interest is recalculated every month
It reflects real-world lending risk and inflation
Because of compounding:
Early EMIs contain a higher interest portion
Later EMIs contain a higher principal portion
Effect of Tenure and Interest Rate
Longer Tenure
Lower EMI
Higher total interest
Shorter Tenure
Higher EMI
Lower total interest
Common Misconceptions About EMI Formula
EMI is not principal divided by months
Principal does not reduce equally every month
Lower EMI does not mean cheaper loan
Same EMI does not mean same total cost
Types of EMI Based on Repayment Frequency
EMI can be classified into six practical types based on how frequently
the borrower repays the installment. This classification directly impacts
cash flow, interest burden, financial discipline, and default risk.
1. Monthly EMI
Monthly EMI is the most widely used repayment structure where the borrower pays
a fixed amount once every month on a pre-decided date.
How It Works
EMI deducted every month
Interest calculated monthly
Aligned with salary cycles
Pros
Easy budgeting, predictable cash flow
Cons
Higher interest over long tenure
Best For
Salaried individuals, long-term loans
2. Weekly EMI
Weekly EMI requires repayment every week. Each payment is smaller,
but loan reduces faster due to frequent installments.
Pros: Faster principal reduction, lower interest
Cons: High discipline required
Best For: Daily or weekly income earners
3. Fortnightly EMI (Every 15 Days)
Fortnightly EMI splits the monthly EMI into two equal payments.
This results in 26 payments per year.
Pros: Interest savings, faster loan closure
Cons: Not available with all banks
Best For: Salaried borrowers with surplus cash
4. Bi-Monthly EMI
Bi-monthly EMI involves two fixed EMI payments per month,
usually aligned with multiple income sources.
Pros: Better cash flow alignment
Cons: Rare availability, tracking complexity
Best For: Dual-income households, freelancers
5. Quarterly EMI
Quarterly EMI requires repayment once every three months,
making each installment significantly higher.
Pros: Flexible for irregular income
Cons: Higher interest and default risk
Best For: Business owners
6. Annual / Yearly EMI
Annual EMI requires a single payment once per year.
It carries the highest interest and risk.
Pros: Maximum flexibility
Cons: Highest interest, large payment burden
Best For: Farmers, seasonal income earners
Final Conclusion
EMI frequency is not just a payment option—it is a financial strategy.
Choosing the correct EMI type helps reduce interest, manage stress,
and align repayment with real income behavior.