Home loans · 8 min read · July 2026
The 5 charges hiding in your home loan sanction letter
Everybody negotiates the processing fee. Almost nobody reads page two, where the real money quietly changes hands. Here's the full charge sheet — and which lines you can actually push back on.
A sanction letter is a beautiful document when you've been waiting for it: the amount, the rate, the tenure, all approved. The excitement is exactly why most borrowers skim the annexure titled something like "Schedule of Charges". That annexure is where a ₹40 lakh loan quietly collects another ₹40,000–₹80,000 from you — mostly before you've received a single rupee.
I process these files for a living. Here's every charge line, in the order you'll meet it.
1. Legal opinion & valuation charges
Before sanction, the bank sends your property papers to an empanelled advocate for a title search report and the property itself to an empanelled valuer for a valuation report. You pay for both — typically ₹3,000–₹10,000 combined, more for larger or complicated properties, and doubled if two legal opinions are required (common for higher loan amounts).
Negotiable? Rarely as a line item — but here's the practical tip: if your builder's project is already approved by the bank (an APF-listed project), the title work for the project is largely done, and the legal cost and turnaround both shrink. Ask the builder which banks have approved the project before choosing your lender.
2. MOD / MOE stamp duty — the biggest one nobody mentions
Your home loan is secured by an equitable mortgage — you deposit your title deeds with the bank, and this is recorded through a Memorandum of Deposit of Title Deed (MOD/MODT/MOE, the name varies). In most states this memorandum attracts stamp duty of roughly 0.1% to 0.5% of the loan amount, plus registration charges.
Negotiable? No — it's a statutory levy and varies by state. But you should know it's coming so it doesn't ambush your down-payment budget in the final week.
3. Documentation, stamping & CERSAI charges
A cluster of smaller lines that add up: stamp paper for the loan agreement, documentation charges, and the CERSAI registration fee (the central registry where the bank records its charge on your property — ₹50–₹100, but it's there). Together, usually ₹1,000–₹5,000.
Negotiable? Not really, but verify each line matches the bank's published schedule of charges — every bank hosts this document on its website, and the sanction letter should not exceed it.
4. Bundled insurance — the one you should question hardest
Two different products get mixed here, deliberately:
- Property insurance (fire/hazard cover on the structure): genuinely required by most lenders, and genuinely cheap — often a few thousand rupees for years of cover.
- Loan-linked life insurance (a single-premium group credit-life policy): frequently presented as if it were mandatory. A single premium of ₹50,000–₹1,50,000 quietly added to your loan amount — so you pay interest on your insurance premium for 20 years.
Negotiable? Yes — this is the big one. Life cover for a home loan is prudent, but you are generally free to choose how: a plain term insurance policy bought separately usually gives far more cover per rupee than the bundled single-premium product. Ask, in writing if needed, whether the specific insurance is a condition of the sanction. Insist on seeing the premium as a separate figure, not merged into the disbursement.
5. The conversion / switch fee — the charge that returns every few years
This one isn't upfront; it's the recurring charge hiding in your future. Floating-rate loans are linked to a benchmark plus a spread. Over the years, banks offer new customers lower spreads than yours. To move your old loan to the current lower spread, the bank charges a conversion fee (also called a switch, repricing or spread-reset fee) — commonly 0.25%–0.5% of the outstanding, or a flat amount.
Negotiable? Often, yes. When you ask for conversion, you're implicitly threatening a balance transfer to another bank — and retaining you is cheaper for the bank than losing you. Get a balance-transfer offer in hand first, then negotiate the conversion fee down. Repeat every couple of years. A 0.5% rate reduction on ₹40 lakh over a long tenure is worth lakhs; the fee is a fraction of that.
And the charge that must be zero
One line to check with a red pen: prepayment and foreclosure charges. Under RBI rules, on floating-rate loans to individuals for non-business purposes, banks cannot charge prepayment or foreclosure penalties. If your sanction letter for a floating-rate home loan shows one, question it before you sign — not after.
The one-page checklist
| Charge | Typical size | Negotiable? |
|---|---|---|
| Processing fee | 0.25%–0.5% + GST | Often, especially with a competing offer |
| Legal & valuation | ₹3k–₹10k | Rarely; APF projects reduce it |
| MOD stamp duty | 0.1%–0.5% of loan (state-wise) | No — statutory |
| Documentation + CERSAI | ₹1k–₹5k | No, but verify against published schedule |
| Bundled life insurance | ₹50k–₹1.5L single premium | Yes — question it, unbundle it |
| Conversion / switch fee | 0.25%–0.5% of outstanding | Yes — negotiate with a BT offer in hand |
| Prepayment (floating, individual) | Must be NIL per RBI | Not applicable — challenge if present |
Read page two before you celebrate page one. The rate gets the attention; the annexure takes the money.