RBI issues Final Guidelines on Transaction Accounts

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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has released its final guidelines on how banks should maintain Cash Credit (CC), Current Accounts (CA), and Overdraft (OD) accounts.

These rules aim to improve credit discipline and transparency, while also offering some important relaxations for businesses.

The guidelines are especially important for banking awareness and competitive exam preparation, as they clearly explain how different transaction accounts will work.

Why RBI Introduced These Guidelines

Earlier, RBI released draft rules on October 1, 2025, and invited feedback from banks and stakeholders.

The main goal was to prevent misuse of funds and improve monitoring of borrowers, especially through current and overdraft accounts.

After reviewing suggestions, RBI finalized the rules with some flexibility, particularly for cash credit accounts.

Which Banks Will Follow These Rules

The new guidelines will apply to seven types of regulated entities:

Commercial Banks

Small Finance Banks

Payments Banks

Local Area Banks

Regional Rural Banks

Urban Co-operative Banks

State Co-operative Banks

Together, these institutions form the core of India’s banking system.

When Will the Rules Come Into Effect

The guidelines will be effective from April 1, 2026.

However, banks can choose to implement them fully even before this date.

Major Relief for Cash Credit (CC) Accounts

RBI has given big relief to borrowers using cash credit accounts.

Cash credit accounts are mainly used for working capital needs.

They are linked to current assets such as stock, inventory, and receivables, making them need-based and asset-backed.

Under the new rules:

Banks can freely provide cash credit facilities based on customer needs.

No restrictions will apply, regardless of the borrower’s total loan exposure.

This move will help businesses, especially MSMEs, manage daily operations more smoothly.

Rules for Current Account and Overdraft Account

For current and overdraft accounts, RBI has introduced exposure-based rules to improve credit discipline.

Borrowers With Exposure Below ₹10 Crore

If the total exposure of all banks to a borrower is less than ₹10 crore:

There are no restrictions on opening or operating CA or OD accounts.

Any bank can offer these accounts as per customer requirements.

Borrowers With Exposure of ₹10 Crore or More

Stricter rules apply if total exposure is ₹10 crore or above.

In such cases, a bank can operate a CA or OD account only if:

It holds at least 10% of the total banking system exposure, or

It has at least 10% of the borrower’s fund-based exposure

This ensures that only banks with a meaningful stake control transaction flows and monitor risks effectively.

No Change in Remittance Window Rule

RBI has kept the existing remittance rule unchanged.

Funds received in collection accounts must be transferred to designated transaction accounts (CC, OD, or CA) within two working days.

This rule ensures timely fund movement and maintains transparency in transactions.

Why These RBI Guidelines Matter

The new rules aim to:

Improve credit discipline

Prevent diversion of funds

Simplify norms for small borrowers

Ease working capital financing

Strengthen banking supervision and stability

These points make the guidelines highly relevant for students preparing for banking and government exams.

About the Reserve Bank of India

The Reserve Bank of India is India’s central bank, responsible for monetary policy and banking regulation.

Governor: Sanjay Malhotra

Headquarters: Mumbai

Established: April 1, 1935

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