RBI Repo Rate Cut 2025: How Bank MCLR, RLLR and RBLR Cuts Can Reduce Your Home Loan EMI

RBI Repo Rate Cut 2025: How Bank MCLR, RLLR and RBLR Cuts Can Reduce Your Home Loan EMI

Rashi Sood

Last Updated on 17th December 2025

After the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) reduced the repo rate by 25 basis points to 5.25% on December 5, 2025, several leading banks have started passing on the benefit to customers by lowering their lending benchmarks. These changes are beginning to reflect across home loans linked to repo-based benchmarks as well as internal benchmarks like MCLR, offering relief to both existing and prospective borrowers.

For home loan customers, the impact of the rate cut can be seen either in the form of lower monthly EMIs or a reduction in the overall loan tenure, depending on how individual banks apply interest rate resets. While the cut may seem small on paper, even a 25 bps reduction can translate into substantial savings over long loan tenures, especially for large-ticket home loans.

Understanding the RBI Repo Rate Cut and Its Significance

The repo rate is the interest rate at which the RBI lends short-term funds to commercial banks. It acts as a key monetary policy tool used to control liquidity, inflation, and economic growth. When the RBI cuts the repo rate, borrowing becomes cheaper for banks, encouraging them to lend more and stimulate economic activity.

In recent years, the RBI has pushed banks to link most retail loans—especially home loans—to external benchmarks such as the repo rate. This move was aimed at ensuring faster and more transparent transmission of policy rate changes to end borrowers, compared to the earlier system, where rate changes were slow and opaque.

The December 2025 repo rate cut was driven by:

  • Moderating inflation trends

  • Stable macroeconomic indicators

  • The need to support growth and consumption

  • Encouraging credit offtake in interest-sensitive sectors like housing

How the Rate Cut Translates to Home Loan Relief

While the RBI announces a policy rate cut, the actual benefit to borrowers depends on how banks transmit the change. This transmission occurs through lending benchmarks such as:

  • Repo-linked lending rates (RLLR/RBLR/BRLLR/EBLR)
  • Marginal Cost of Funds-based Lending Rate (MCLR)

Borrowers linked to repo-based benchmarks usually experience quicker relief, whereas those on MCLR-linked loans must wait until their scheduled reset date.

Banks That Have Cut Home Loan Rates So Far

Since the December repo rate decision, several major lenders have announced reductions in their lending benchmarks. Below is a consolidated view of the banks that have passed on the benefit so far.

Home Loan Rate Cuts Announced (December 2025)

Bank

Benchmark Reduced

New Rate (Reported)

Effective Date / Notes

HDFC Bank

MCLR

8.30%–8.55% (tenure-based)

Cut up to 5 bps; benefit on reset date

Punjab National Bank (PNB)

RLLR

8.10% (incl. BSP of 10 bps)

Effective Dec 6, 2025

Bank of Baroda

BRLLR

7.90%

Reduced from 8.15%

Indian Bank

RLLR

7.95%

Effective Dec 6, 2025

Bank of India

RBLR

8.10%

Effective Dec 5, 2025

Bank of Maharashtra

Home loan rate

7.10%

Cut from 7.35%; processing fee waiver announced

 

Rates are indicative and may vary based on credit score, loan amount, tenure, and borrower category.

Why Some Borrowers Get the Benefit Faster Than Others

A common question among borrowers is why EMI reductions appear immediately for some, while others see no change for months. The answer lies in the benchmark linkage of the loan.

Benchmark-wise Transmission Explained

Repo-based loans (RLLR/RBLR/EBLR):

  • Directly linked to the RBI repo rate
  • Faster pass-through, often within days or weeks
  • EMI changes usually apply automatically

MCLR-based loans:

  • Linked to banks’ internal cost of funds
  • Rate changes apply only on the reset date
  • Reset cycle may be quarterly, half-yearly, or annual

This difference explains why two borrowers at the same bank may experience different timelines for EMI relief despite the same repo rate cut.

EMI Impact: What a 25 bps Cut Really Means

Even a small reduction in interest rates can significantly lower the total cost of borrowing over long tenures.

Illustrative EMI Impact Example

 

Loan Amount & Tenure

Before Rate Cut

After 25 bps Cut

Monthly Savings

₹50 lakh, 20 years

8.50% → EMI ₹43,391

8.25% → EMI ₹42,603

~₹788

 

Over the entire loan tenure, this saving can add up to ₹1.8–2 lakh, assuming the lower rate continues.

Borrowers also have the option to:

  • Keep the EMI unchanged and reduce tenure
  • Lower the EMI and maintain the same tenure

What This Means for Homebuyers

1. Improved Affordability

Lower EMIs ease monthly financial pressure, particularly in high-cost urban markets where home loans often exceed ₹50 lakh.

2. Slightly Better Loan Eligibility

Lower interest rates may marginally improve eligibility in lender calculators, allowing borrowers to qualify for slightly higher loan amounts, depending on income and credit profile.

3. Opportunity to Compare and Negotiate

When banks begin cutting benchmarks:

  • Differences in spreads
  • Processing fees
  • Reset frequency becomes just as important as the headline rate.

Borrowers should evaluate the overall loan structure, not just the advertised rate.

What Existing Borrowers Should Do Now

  • Check whether your loan is repo-linked or MCLR-linked
  • Note your interest reset date
  • Compare the current interest spread with new offers
  • Consider a balance transfer only if savings exceed switching costs
  • Maintain a strong credit score to access better rates

Impact on the Housing and Credit Market

Experts believe falling home loan rates could:

  • Improve housing demand in 2026
  • Support first-time homebuyers
  • Increase refinancing and balance transfers
  • Aid real estate absorption, especially in affordable and mid-income segments

If the RBI continues its accommodative stance, more banks are expected to reduce lending rates in the coming months.

Key Takeaways

  • RBI cut repo rate by 25 bps to 5.25%
  • Multiple banks have reduced home loan benchmarks
  • Repo-linked loans benefit faster than MCLR-linked loans
  • Even small rate cuts lead to meaningful long-term savings
  • Good time for borrowers to review and optimise loans

Suggested read: Repo Rate Impacts Your Home Loan

FAQs about RBI Repo Rate Cut 2025

How does the RBI repo rate cut affect home loan EMIs?

A repo rate cut generally reduces interest on floating-rate home loans, especially those linked to an external benchmark (repo/EBLR), so your effective rate drops at the next reset, and either your EMI comes down, or your tenure shortens. Fixed-rate home loans usually don’t change just because the repo rate changed.

What is the difference between MCLR-linked and repo-linked (RLLR/RBLR) home loans after a rate cut?

MCLR-linked loans are tied to the bank’s internal cost of funds, so the benefit of a repo cut can be slower and smaller (banks may or may not cut MCLR quickly). Repo-linked (RLLR/RBLR/BRLLR/EBLR) loans are tied to an external benchmark and, as per RBI’s external-benchmark framework, the rate must be reset at least once every 3 months, so repo cuts typically transmit faster (subject to your reset date and the bank’s spread).

When will banks pass on the benefit of the December 2025 repo rate cut to borrowers?

For the December 5, 2025 repo rate cut (to 5.25%), banks will pass on the benefit to repo-linked borrowers at their next reset, which, by design, should be no later than the next 3-month reset cycle (many banks also revise their repo-linked benchmark within days). For MCLR-linked borrowers, you’ll typically see it only after the bank cuts MCLR and your loan hits its next reset, which can take longer depending on your reset frequency.

Which banks have reduced home loan benchmark rates after the RBI repo rate cut?

Banks reported to have reduced home-loan benchmarks after this cut include: PNB (RLLR cut effective Dec 6, 2025), Bank of Baroda (BRLLR to 7.90% w.e.f. Dec 6, 2025), Bank of India (RBLR cut effective Dec 5, 2025), Indian Bank (repo-linked benchmark cut effective Dec 6, 2025), and HDFC Bank (MCLR cut). Other lenders may follow or may have made smaller adjustments.

Will my EMI reduce automatically, or will my loan tenure change instead?

Whether your EMI reduces automatically or your tenure changes instead depends on your bank and your loan’s terms. Many lenders keep the EMI the same and adjust the tenure when rates move, but borrowers can often request a switch (lower EMI vs shorter tenure), subject to the bank’s policy and reset rules.

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