Personal loans: Check THESE key points before you decide to borrow

Household borrowing climbed sharply after the Covid years, leaving many families with higher monthly obligations. If you’re thinking of taking a personal loan or any other unsecured credit, a quick reality check can save stress and money down the road.

Why many households borrowed more

  • Income disruptions: Job losses and reduced work hours pushed people to rely on credit for daily expenses.
  • Rising costs: Higher medical and living costs led families to tap savings or borrow to bridge gaps.
  • Easy access to credit: Lenders rolled out quicker personal loans and higher credit limits, which encouraged borrowing.

Quick checklist before you borrow

  • Define the purpose: Is the loan for an emergency, investment, or discretionary spending? Borrow only for essential or value-adding needs.
  • Check affordability: Calculate the EMI and make sure it fits comfortably within your monthly budget. Leave room for surprises.
  • Know your debt-to-income ratio: Total monthly debt payments should not crowd out necessities. Aim to keep repayment obligations manageable.
  • Compare rates and fees: Look beyond the headline rate. Check processing fees, prepayment or foreclosure charges, and penalty clauses.
  • Loan tenure matters: Longer tenures lower EMIs but increase total interest. Shorter tenures cost more monthly but save interest overall.
  • Fixed vs floating rate: Understand how interest can change and whether rising rates will strain your budget.
  • Read the fine print: Check for hidden charges, insurance requirements, and documents needed for disbursal.
  • Have an emergency buffer: Keep 3–6 months of expenses aside so loan payments don’t derail your finances.
  • Plan repayment: Set up an automatic payment or calendar reminders to avoid missed EMIs and credit score damage.
  • Explore alternatives: Could savings, a lower-cost secured loan, or balance transfer options be cheaper?

When to hit pause

  • If you’re borrowing for non-essential wants while already carrying high debt.
  • If your income is uncertain in the near term.
  • If the effective cost of borrowing (fees + interest) is very high compared to alternatives.

When borrowing can make sense

  • To cover unavoidable emergencies like medical bills.
  • When the loan helps preserve or grow income (upskilling, essential home repairs that prevent bigger costs).
  • To consolidate very expensive debt into a lower-rate product, after careful calculation.

Bottom line: Borrow consciously. A short checklist and a realistic repayment plan go a long way toward avoiding long-term stress and protecting your financial health.

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