
Cheat Sheet
Home loan insurance is having a moment. Adoption jumped nearly seven-fold in the five months to mid-2026, according to a Policybazaar report covered by Fortune India and ANI. More borrowers are buying the cover on their own rather than having it pushed at the loan desk, which is a healthy shift.
The shift is real, and the instinct behind it is right: a big home loan is a big risk to leave uncovered. But home loan insurance vs term insurance is a comparison worth getting straight before you sign, because loan cover alone leaves most of your family’s risk untouched. Here is how the two products work, where each one fits, and why a home loan protection plan on its own is rarely enough.
What is home loan insurance, exactly?
Home loan insurance goes by a few names: credit life insurance, loan protection, or a home loan protection plan. Most are group policies. The bank or housing finance company holds the master policy, and you join as a member when you take the loan.
Two features define it. First, the cover is a reducing cover. The sum assured starts at roughly your loan amount and falls every year as you repay, so it always tracks your outstanding balance. Second, the death benefit is paid to the lender to settle whatever loan is left. The product exists to make sure the bank gets its money back if the borrower dies, and as a side effect, your family is not left with the EMIs.
Because the cover keeps shrinking, a home loan protection plan is cheaper per rupee of starting cover than a level term plan. That price tag is most of its appeal. The premium is usually charged as a single one-time payment at the start of the loan.
Lenders often add that single premium to your loan amount and let you repay it through EMIs. It sounds convenient, but you then pay interest on the insurance premium for the full 15-20 year tenure. A premium that looks like a one-time cost can quietly become one of the more expensive ways to buy life cover.
What term insurance does differently
Term insurance is a contract between you and the insurer, with no bank in the middle. You choose the sum assured, the term, and any riders. Two differences matter most here.
The cover is level: a ₹1 crore policy stays ₹1 crore whether you bought it yesterday or fifteen years ago. And the payout goes to your nominee, who decides how to use it. They can clear the home loan, keep the rest for living expenses, fund the children’s education, or do all three. You own the policy, so it stays with you through a balance transfer, a prepayment, or a switch of lender.
Five reasons home loan insurance alone isn’t enough
None of this makes home loan insurance a bad product. It does one job well. The trouble starts when borrowers treat it as their life cover. Here is where a home loan protection plan leaves your family exposed.
1. The cover shrinks while your family’s needs don’t
The reducing cover that makes the premium cheap is also its biggest weakness. Say you take a ₹75 lakh loan at 32. The home loan insurance pays close to ₹75 lakh if you die in year one. By the time you are 47 and the balance is down to ₹30 lakh, that is all your family gets. Their monthly expenses, the children’s college fees, and your spouse’s retirement are no smaller at 47 than they were at 32. The cover fell; the need did not.
2. It pays the bank, not your family
This is the part most buyers miss. The death benefit settles the lender’s outstanding balance and stops there. Your family ends up with a house that has no loan on it, which is genuinely useful, but they get no cash to live on. They cannot pay the loan off slowly and keep the lump sum for income. The money never reaches them; it goes straight to the bank.
3. The “cheap” premium often rides on your loan
A reducing single-premium plan looks like a bargain next to a term policy. But once the lender folds that single premium into the loan, you pay interest on it for two decades. Run the real numbers and a home loan protection plan can cost more than a level term plan that gives your family far more cover for far longer.
4. It’s chained to one loan and one lender
Home loan insurance is tied to a specific loan with a specific lender. Move that loan to another bank for a better interest rate, and the cover does not automatically come with you; depending on the policy, it can lapse on a balance transfer. Prepay the loan and the cover ends early. You are protecting a loan, not your life, so the protection disappears the moment the loan does.
5. It usually covers just one borrower
Most loan protection plans cover the primary borrower only. If your spouse is a co-borrower or a co-earner, their share of the risk often sits uncovered. A personal term plan on each earning member closes that gap; a single loan-linked policy rarely does.
Since September 2025, life insurance premiums attract no GST in India. That removes an old talking point that online loan cover was cheaper because it skipped the 18% tax. Today, neither term insurance nor a home loan protection plan carries GST, so cost has to be compared on the cover itself, not the tax.
Where home loan insurance does earn its place
There are situations where a home loan protection plan is worth taking, usually alongside term insurance rather than instead of it.
- You can’t get term insurance. Group loan cover often skips detailed medical underwriting. If a health condition makes a standalone term plan hard to get or very expensive, the loan-linked cover may be the realistic way to protect the loan.
- You want the loan ring-fenced separately. Some borrowers like keeping the home loan covered by its own policy so the term insurance payout stays fully free for the family. That works, as long as you have the term cover in the first place.
- You want more than death cover. Many loan protection plans offer riders for disability, critical illness, or temporary loss of income, paying the EMIs if you survive but cannot earn. That is a genuine gap a plain term plan does not fill.
The common thread: home loan insurance works as an add-on, not as the foundation.
Home loan insurance vs term insurance, side by side
| Parameter | Home loan insurance | Term insurance |
|---|---|---|
| What it protects | The outstanding loan | Your family’s income and goals |
| Cover amount | Reduces every year with the loan balance | Level; stays the same for the full term |
| Who gets the payout | The lender, to clear the loan | Your nominee, who decides how to use it |
| Premium | Usually a single premium, often added to the loan | Paid yearly, monthly, or as a limited-pay option |
| Policyholder | The bank (you join a group policy) | You |
| Portability | Tied to the loan; can lapse on balance transfer or prepayment | Fully yours; independent of any lender |
| Who is covered | Usually the primary borrower only | Whoever the policy is on; a plan per earner |
| After the loan is repaid | Cover ends | Cover continues for the rest of the term |
| Tax on premium | May qualify under Section 80C | Section 80C deduction up to ₹1.5 lakh |
The smarter default for most borrowers
For the majority of borrowers, you do not need both products. One term plan, sized correctly, covers the loan and everything the loan cover leaves out.
The logic is simple. Work out your total protection need: outstanding loans, plus 10-15 years of income replacement, plus big future costs like the children’s education, minus what you already have in savings and existing cover. Buy a term plan for that number. If your home loan is ₹75 lakh and your family needs another ₹1 crore to live on, a single ₹1.75 crore term plan handles both. If you die, the nominee clears the loan and keeps the rest. If you outlive the loan, the full cover still protects your family for the years that remain on the policy. Our guide on how much term insurance you actually need walks through the sizing, and the premium calculator gives you a quick cost estimate.
Term cover for a healthy 30-year-old non-smoker runs roughly ₹8,000 to ₹12,000 a year for ₹1 crore, based on current insurer quotes. That buys level, family-first protection that a reducing loan-linked plan cannot match. This is also why matching the policy term to when your liabilities end matters more than chasing the lowest sticker price.
A term insurance payout is paid to your nominee, not to your bank. That single difference is why term cover protects a family while loan cover protects a loan. Your family can clear the EMI on their own schedule and keep the balance for everything else.
Know your rights at the loan desk
Plenty of borrowers buy home loan insurance because they believe it is compulsory. It is not. Neither the RBI nor IRDAI has made it mandatory, and a lender cannot reject your loan application simply because you declined their insurance product.
The rules have tightened on this. The National Housing Bank issued communications in December 2024 and March 2025 directing housing finance companies to stop mis-selling bundled insurance: they must take your explicit consent before adding any insurance, and offer at least two options rather than pushing a single product. If a policy was added without your clear consent, the free-look window (15 to 30 days) lets you cancel it and have the premium adjusted against your loan principal. The same lender-bundling pattern shows up across the industry, which our look at how banks sell insurance breaks down in detail.
This surge in voluntary buying sits inside a bigger trend. Credit life bundled with bank loans has become a large slice of the whole life insurance market, as our report on how two-thirds of April’s premium growth came from credit life shows.
So which do you need?
- You have no life cover and a home loan: start with term insurance sized for the loan plus income replacement. It does both jobs.
- You already have adequate term cover: you usually do not need home loan insurance at all. Your term plan already covers the loan.
- You can’t qualify for term insurance on health grounds: a home loan protection plan is a sensible way to at least cover the loan.
- You want EMI protection if you survive but can’t work: a loan plan with a disability or job-loss rider fills a gap term cover does not, as an add-on to your term plan.
Frequently asked questions
Is home loan insurance mandatory in India?
No. Neither the RBI nor IRDAI requires it, and a lender cannot reject your loan because you refused to buy their insurance. Banks must take your explicit consent before adding any insurance to a loan and must offer you more than one option. If a policy was bundled in without your clear agreement, you can use the free-look period to cancel it.
Is home loan insurance cheaper than term insurance?
On the sticker, often yes, because the cover reduces every year. But the single premium is frequently added to your loan, so you pay interest on it for the full tenure. Once you account for that, a level term plan can give your family far more cover for a comparable real cost.
What happens to home loan insurance if I transfer my loan to another bank?
It depends on the policy, but the cover is tied to the original loan and can lapse when you move the loan to another lender or prepay it. A term plan you own is not affected by any of this, which is one of its main advantages.
If I have term insurance, do I still need home loan insurance?
Usually not. A term plan sized to cover your loan and your family’s income replacement already protects the home loan. The exceptions are when you want the loan ring-fenced under its own policy, or when you want a rider that pays your EMIs if you are disabled or lose your job.
Does home loan insurance cover both co-borrowers?
Most plans cover the primary borrower only. If your spouse is a co-borrower or a second earner, their share of the risk is often left uncovered. Separate term plans on each earning member close that gap more reliably than a single loan-linked policy.
Try our free tools
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute insurance advice. Consult an IRDAI-registered insurance advisor for recommendations tailored to your specific financial situation and needs.
Was this article helpful?
Your feedback helps us improve our guides
Reviewed and Edited by
Ashok HegdeAshok Hegde is the Chief Executive Officer at Quantent, where he leads a team of media professionals helping clients leverage digital media for better business outcomes. With over 30 years of experience across print and digital media, he advises clients on content and media strategy — from startups to established brands. His focus is on helping organisations use online media — social, search, and mobile — to build brand awareness, drive sales, and protect reputation.



