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Indian Bank Loan Customers May Pay More Soon; MCLR and TBLR Rates Revised From June 3

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Borrowers with home loans, car loans, or other credit facilities linked to Indian Bank's benchmark lending rates may soon feel the impact on their monthly finances. The public sector lender has announced an increase in several key lending benchmarks, a move that could lead to higher Equated Monthly Installments (EMIs) or longer loan repayment periods for certain customers.

The revised rates will come into effect from June 3, 2026, following a review by the bank's Asset Liability Management Committee (ALCO).

Indian Bank Revises Key Lending Rates

Indian Bank has decided to raise selected benchmark lending rates while keeping some other major rates unchanged.

According to information shared by the bank, changes have been made to the Marginal Cost of Funds-Based Lending Rate (MCLR) and the Treasury Bill Linked Lending Rate (TBLR). These benchmarks are widely used for pricing various loan products.

As a result, customers whose loans are linked to these benchmarks may see changes in borrowing costs when their interest rates are reset.

MCLR Rates Increased Across Key Tenures

The bank has revised upward several MCLR tenures that are commonly used for retail and corporate lending.

The updated MCLR structure is as follows:

Tenure Previous Rate New Rate
Overnight 7.90% 7.90%
1 Month 8.20% 8.20%
3 Months 8.40% 8.50%
6 Months 8.65% 8.75%
1 Year 8.75% 8.85%

The one-year MCLR is particularly important because many floating-rate retail loans, including home loans, are linked to this benchmark.

TBLR Rates Also Witness an Upward Revision

Indian Bank has also increased Treasury Bill Linked Lending Rates across multiple maturities.

The revised TBLR rates are:

Period Previous Rate New Rate
Up to 3 Months 5.25% 5.35%
3 to 6 Months 5.45% 5.55%
6 Months to 1 Year 5.60% 5.75%
1 Year to 3 Years 5.60% 5.75%

The increase reflects the bank's adjustment to changing funding and market conditions.

Which Rates Remain Unchanged?

Despite revising MCLR and TBLR, the bank has maintained several important lending benchmarks at existing levels.

The following rates remain unchanged:

Benchmark Rate
Base Rate 9.55%
Benchmark Prime Lending Rate (BPLR) 13.80%
Policy Repo Rate 5.25%
Repo Linked Benchmark Lending Rate (RBLR) 7.95%

Borrowers whose loans are linked to these unchanged benchmarks may not experience any immediate impact from the latest announcement.

How Will Existing Borrowers Be Affected?

The effect of the rate revision depends largely on the benchmark linked to a borrower's loan agreement.

For customers whose loans are connected to MCLR or TBLR:

  • Interest rates may increase during the next reset cycle.

  • Monthly EMI obligations could rise.

  • Alternatively, the repayment tenure may be extended if EMIs remain unchanged.

  • Total interest outgo over the life of the loan could increase.

The exact impact will vary depending on loan amount, outstanding balance, remaining tenure, and the applicable reset period.

What Home Loan Borrowers Should Check

Customers should review their loan sanction letters or account statements to determine which benchmark rate their loan follows.

Many older floating-rate loans continue to be linked to MCLR, while several newer loans are connected to repo-linked benchmarks.

If a loan is linked to MCLR, borrowers should monitor the next reset date, as the revised rates will affect interest calculations only after the scheduled reset period.

Why Banks Increase Benchmark Rates

Banks periodically review benchmark lending rates based on factors such as:

  • Cost of funds

  • Liquidity conditions

  • Market interest rates

  • Treasury yields

  • Regulatory and economic developments

When funding costs rise, banks may revise lending benchmarks upward to protect margins and maintain profitability.

What Borrowers Can Do

Customers concerned about rising loan costs may consider:

  • Reviewing their loan benchmark structure

  • Comparing available refinancing options

  • Making partial prepayments to reduce outstanding principal

  • Increasing EMI amounts voluntarily to reduce interest burden

  • Consulting their bank regarding conversion options, if available

Bottom Line

Indian Bank's decision to increase MCLR and TBLR rates from June 3, 2026, could lead to higher borrowing costs for customers with loans linked to these benchmarks. While key rates such as the Repo Linked Benchmark Lending Rate (RBLR) remain unchanged, many home loan and other retail borrowers may see an impact when their next interest-rate reset takes place.

Customers are advised to check their loan agreements carefully to understand whether the revised rates will affect their EMI payments or loan tenure in the coming months.