BatchWise

Section 80E Deduction — Interest on Education Loan (FY 2025-26)

Section 80E: deduction for interest on education loan, no monetary cap, 8 consecutive years from first repayment, Old Regime only, approved-lender requirement.

Section 80E at a glance

Section 80E of the Income-tax Act 1961 provides a deduction for interest paid on a loan taken for higher education. Unlike most Chapter VI-A provisions, 80E imposes no monetary cap — whatever interest is paid in the financial year is fully deductible from Gross Total Income.

Two structural constraints define the section:

  1. The deduction is available only under the Old Tax Regime. Taxpayers filing under the default New Regime (Section 115BAC) cannot claim 80E. For salaried taxpayers with material education-loan interest, this is often the deciding factor when choosing the regime each year.
  2. The deduction window is 8 consecutive assessment years starting from the year interest is first paid. Beyond year 8, the interest cost is real but does not reduce taxable income.

For where 80E sits within the broader Chapter VI-A deduction stack, see the Section 80C deductions spoke and the HRA exemption calculation guide.

Who can claim

Section 80E restricts the claim by both taxpayer type and beneficiary relationship.

  • Eligible taxpayer: only an individual can claim. HUFs, firms, LLPs, and companies are outside scope.
  • Eligible beneficiary: the loan must be for the higher education of:
    • Self
    • Spouse
    • Children (any number; no two-child cap)
    • Student for whom the individual is the legal guardian

Grandparents, siblings, and other relatives cannot claim unless they hold legal guardianship of the student. The relationship at the time of taking the loan is what matters.

What qualifies as “higher education”

The pre-2009 version of Section 80E was narrow — limited to engineering, medicine, applied sciences, and management. The Finance (No. 2) Act 2009 expanded the definition. Post-amendment, higher education means any course of study pursued after the Senior Secondary Examination (Class 12) or its equivalent, from any school / college / board / university recognised by the Central Government, State Government, local authority, or any authorised regulatory body.

Domestic courses

Recognised post-secondary education in India qualifies — undergraduate (BA, BSc, BCom, BTech), postgraduate (MA, MSc, MBA, MD), recognised diploma + certificate programmes.

Foreign courses

The Act does not impose any geographic limit. An Indian taxpayer borrowing from an Indian approved lender to fund overseas study at any recognised institution qualifies. (The lender must be Indian and approved; the institution can be anywhere.)

Vocational + skill courses

Post-2009 amendment, vocational courses also qualify if pursued after Class 12 from an institution recognised by an authorised regulator.

What qualifies as an “approved financial institution”

The lender side of the eligibility test is strict and is a frequent disqualification trigger.

Scheduled banks

Any bank listed in the Second Schedule of the Reserve Bank of India Act 1934 qualifies — covers public sector banks, private commercial banks, regional rural banks, and Indian branches of foreign banks.

Notified NBFCs

An NBFC qualifies only if specifically notified by the Central Government in the Official Gazette for Section 80E purposes. Several specialised education-loan NBFCs hold this notification; many general-purpose NBFCs do not. Verify the lender’s notification status before assuming the deduction applies.

Approved charitable institutions

Institutions approved under Section 10(23C) or referenced in Section 80G(2)(a) qualify if they extend education loans.

What does NOT qualify

  • Loans from individuals (friends, relatives)
  • Employer advances or staff welfare loans
  • Credit-card outstandings used to pay college fees
  • Personal loans from unnotified private lenders or NBFCs without the Section 80E notification
  • Top-up loans against home loan / property collateral, where the lender has not classified the loan as an education loan

Quantum + the 8-year cap

There is no maximum on the interest deduction — actual interest paid in the financial year is the deduction amount.

The window: deduction is available for 8 consecutive assessment years starting from the AY in which interest is first paid, or until interest is fully paid, whichever is earlier. The 8-year clock runs in calendar terms; it does not restart on prepayment, restructuring, or borrower-change.

Worked example

Education loan of ₹15,00,000 for an overseas master’s degree. Repayment starts FY 2025-26, 10-year tenure.

FYInterest paid (₹)80E deduction (₹)Note
2025-261,50,0001,50,000Year 1
2026-271,40,0001,40,000Year 2
2027-281,30,0001,30,000Year 3
2028-291,20,0001,20,000Year 4
2029-301,05,0001,05,000Year 5
2030-3190,00090,000Year 6
2031-3275,00075,000Year 7
2032-3360,00060,000Year 8 (last eligible year)
2033-3445,0000Window expired
2034-3530,0000Window expired

Interest paid in years 9 + 10 (₹75,000 aggregate) is a real cash outflow but no longer reduces taxable income.

Edge case: prepaying within 5 years

If the loan is closed in year 5, the deduction is available only for those 5 years. The unused 3 years of the 8-year window cannot be carried forward, transferred to another loan, or applied to a different borrower.

How to claim in the ITR

The mechanics:

Documentary evidence

Obtain an annual interest certificate from the lender — must separate principal vs interest paid during 1 April to 31 March. Salaried employees should submit this via Form 12BB to the employer; the deduction will then reflect in monthly TDS and in Form 16.

Documents are not attached to the ITR but must be retained — the Assessing Officer can request them during processing or scrutiny.

Schedule VI-A line in the ITR

When filing ITR-1 or ITR-2 under the Old Regime, the interest amount is entered in the 80E field within Chapter VI-A deductions. Entering the total EMI (principal + interest) instead of just interest will trigger a defective-return notice on processing.

If the taxpayer files under the New Regime by mistake (or by default), the 80E claim will be auto-rejected at CPC processing without any opportunity to revise the regime selection mid-cycle for that filing.

Section 80E vs Section 80C tuition fees

Frequent point of confusion — two unrelated mechanisms:

DimensionSection 80ESection 80C (tuition fees)
What it coversInterest paid on education loanActual tuition fees paid from own funds
CapNo monetary capAggregate ₹1.5L (shared with PF, ELSS, LIC, PPF, etc.)
BeneficiariesSelf / spouse / children / legal wardUp to 2 children only
GeographyIndia + abroadIndia only (full-time courses)
Education levelPost-Senior-SecondaryAny level (school + college)
Regime availabilityOld Regime onlyOld Regime only

The two can be claimed in parallel for the same FY — a parent paying part of college fees from savings (80C) and the balance from an education loan (80E interest) qualifies for both, subject to the respective caps.

Common pitfalls

  • Claiming the principal repayment — Section 80E covers interest only. The principal component of the EMI provides zero tax benefit. (Contrast with home loans: principal under 80C, interest under Section 24(b).)
  • Filing under the New Regime while entering 80E — the CPC utility rejects the deduction silently. The taxpayer cannot retrospectively switch regimes after filing for that FY.
  • Loan from a non-approved lender — borrowing from a non-notified NBFC, friend, or employer and claiming 80E. Scrutiny will disallow + raise demand with interest.
  • Running past the 8th year — losing track of the start year and continuing to claim in year 9 or 10. The window is fixed; no extension on prepayment, course extension, or restructuring.
  • Mistaking the deduction for a tax credit — 80E reduces taxable income, not tax liability directly. The actual tax saving is the interest amount multiplied by the marginal slab rate, not the interest amount itself.

For end-to-end Old-vs-New regime evaluation + Chapter VI-A optimisation + ITR filing, see the ITR Filing service. For the broader Old-Regime deduction stack, see the Section 80C deductions spoke and the Section 80D medical insurance spoke.

Frequently asked questions

Who can claim the Section 80E deduction — the parent or the student?

Whoever takes the loan and pays the interest from their own taxable income. If the parent borrows for the child's education and services the EMIs, the parent claims 80E. If the loan is in the student's name and the student starts repaying after employment, the student claims it. The deduction follows the actual interest-payer, not the student-beneficiary.

Is Section 80E available under the New Tax Regime?

No. Section 80E is among the Chapter VI-A deductions that the default New Regime (Section 115BAC) does not allow. To claim 80E for FY 2025-26, the taxpayer must opt out of the New Regime and file under the Old Regime.

Can I claim a deduction for a loan from my employer, friends, or an unnotified NBFC?

No. Section 80E requires the loan to be from a 'financial institution' (a scheduled bank or a CBDT-notified NBFC) or from an approved charitable institution. Employer advances, family loans, credit-card debt, and loans from unnotified lenders are outside scope and the interest on them does not qualify.

Does an education loan for studies abroad qualify?

Yes. The 80E definition of 'higher education' (post the 2009 amendment) covers any course pursued after the Senior Secondary Examination or its equivalent, with no geographic restriction. Loans taken for an overseas degree are eligible if the lender is an approved Indian financial / charitable institution.

How does the 8-year limit work if my loan tenure is 10 years?

The deduction is available for a maximum of 8 consecutive assessment years starting from the year you first pay interest, or until the interest is fully paid, whichever is earlier. On a 10-year repayment, interest paid in years 9 and 10 does not qualify — even though it is real interest cost, the statutory window has closed.

Can I claim Section 80C tuition fees and Section 80E interest in the same year?

Yes. They sit in different boxes. Section 80C (capped at ₹1.5L aggregate) covers actual tuition fees paid out of own funds for up to two children, full-time courses in India only. Section 80E (no monetary cap) covers interest on borrowed funds for self / spouse / children / legal ward, no geographic restriction. A parent paying part-fees from savings and part-fees from an education loan can claim both.

What evidence is required to claim Section 80E?

An annual interest certificate from the lender splitting principal vs interest paid in the financial year. For salaried taxpayers, submit it to the employer via Form 12BB so that 80E reflects in Form 16 + TDS. Documents are not attached to the ITR but must be retained for scrutiny.

What happens if the student interrupts or drops out of the course?

Section 80E does not require course completion. As long as the loan was taken for a qualifying higher-education course and interest is being repaid to an approved lender, the deduction continues within the 8-year window. The deduction does not retroactively reverse if the student exits the course.