Smart Banking · Updated 2026

The Sweep-In Strategy: Earn FD-Level Returns on a Liquid Savings Account

Your emergency cash can sit at 2.5–3% — or quietly earn 6.5–7.5% while staying one UPI tap away. Here is exactly how an auto-sweep account does it, with the tax math and a live calculator.

⏱️ 9 min read By the Arthzo Editorial Team · Reviewed for FY 2026-27
⚡ Quick answer

An auto-sweep (sweep-in) account is a savings account that automatically converts any balance above a set threshold into short-term fixed deposits earning FD-level interest (typically 6.5–7.5%). The money stays fully liquid — if a withdrawal, debit-card swipe, or UPI payment needs more than your savings balance, the bank instantly breaks just enough FD (a "reverse sweep") with no penalty. You get FD returns and instant access at the same time.

Why your savings account is quietly losing money

Idle cash isn't "safe" — it's slowly shrinking. Most savings accounts pay only 2.5–3% a year, while everyday inflation eats more than that. The gap is real money you never see.

How much does idle cash actually cost? Take ₹2,00,000 parked in a regular savings account at 3%. It earns about ₹6,000 a year. The same ₹2,00,000 in a sweep-in account — where most of it sits in 7% mini-FDs — earns close to ₹13,500. That's roughly ₹7,500 of pure, risk-free interest left on the table every year, on money you weren't going to spend anyway.

~3%
Typical regular savings account rate
6.5–7.5%
Typical sweep-in / FD bracket
₹7,500+
Extra yearly interest on ₹2 lakh*

*Illustrative, at 3% vs an effective ~6.7% blended rate. Actual rates vary by bank and tenure.

What is an auto-sweep facility?

An auto-sweep facility (also called a sweep-in account, flexi-deposit, or money-multiplier account) links your savings account to fixed deposits. You keep a chosen amount liquid; everything above that is automatically "swept" into FDs that earn higher interest — without you doing anything manually.

It sits between a plain savings account and a locked fixed deposit, taking the best of both:

🔑 In one line

A sweep-in account gives you FD interest with savings-account liquidity. Your surplus earns more, but you can still withdraw it instantly whenever you need it.

How it differs from a regular savings account

A normal savings account pays one low rate on your entire balance. A sweep-in account pays the savings rate only on your liquid threshold, and a much higher FD rate on the surplus — automatically.

How it differs from a fixed deposit

A regular FD locks your money for a fixed tenure, and breaking it early usually costs a penalty. With a sweep-in account, the FDs are auto-created and auto-broken in small units as needed, so your money is never truly locked.

How auto-sweep works (visual explanation)

Three simple moving parts: a threshold, an automatic sweep up, and a reverse sweep back down.

Savings Account Liquid · ~3% Threshold (e.g. ₹25,000) Kept liquid for daily spends Mini Fixed Deposits High yield · ~7% Auto-created units Auto-Sweep ▶ surplus → FD ◀ Reverse Sweep when you spend
Surplus above your threshold sweeps into FDs (green). Spend more than your balance and the bank reverse-sweeps exactly what's needed (blue).

You set a threshold

You decide how much stays liquid in the savings account — say ₹25,000 for everyday expenses.

Surplus sweeps into FDs automatically

Any balance above the threshold is moved into short-tenure fixed deposits (often in units of ₹1,000), earning the higher FD rate.

Reverse sweep gives instant liquidity

If a UPI payment, ATM withdrawal, or cheque exceeds your liquid balance, the bank breaks just enough FD — usually newest-first (LIFO) — and pays interest for the period it was actually held. No manual steps, typically no penalty.

Auto-sweep vs savings account vs FD

Each product wins on a different axis. A sweep-in account is built to win on two at once — returns and liquidity.

FeatureSavings AccountFixed DepositAuto-Sweep Account
ReturnsLow (~2.5–3%)High (~6.5–7.5%)High on surplus (~6.5–7.5%)
LiquidityInstantLockedInstant (reverse sweep)
AccessibilityATM / UPI / chequeOn maturity (or break)ATM / UPI / cheque
Penalty on early accessNoneUsually chargedUsually none
RiskVery lowVery lowVery low
Deposit insuranceUp to ₹5 lakh (DICGC)Up to ₹5 lakh (DICGC)Up to ₹5 lakh (DICGC)
EffortNoneManual bookingFully automated

No single product is best for everyone. A sweep-in account suits idle surplus cash; for goals with a fixed horizon, a plain FD may still earn slightly more. Compare exact numbers with the Arthzo FD Calculator.

Who should use a sweep-in account?

It's most powerful for anyone holding cash they "might" need but rarely do.

💼

Salaried employees

Park your buffer above monthly expenses. It earns FD returns between paydays and is ready for any surprise bill.

🛟

Emergency fund holders

Your 6-month emergency fund finally earns its keep without sacrificing the instant access it exists for. See the Emergency Fund Calculator.

🧓

Retirees

Higher yield on liquid funds, plus a bigger tax shield under Section 80TTB (₹50,000) that also covers FD interest.

🏪

Business owners

Working-capital balances that wait between payments can earn FD-level interest instead of sitting idle.

Interest calculation examples

Assuming a ₹25,000 liquid threshold (at 3%) with the surplus in 7% sweep-FDs, here's the approximate yearly interest at three balances:

Total balanceRegular savings (3%)Sweep-in accountExtra per year
₹50,000₹1,500≈ ₹2,500+ ₹1,000
₹2,00,000₹6,000≈ ₹13,500+ ₹7,500
₹5,00,000₹15,000≈ ₹34,000+ ₹19,000

Figures rounded and illustrative. Use the calculator below to model your own numbers.

📊 Savings Yield Calculator

See exactly how much extra your idle cash could earn. Adjust the sliders or pick a preset.

📈

How much are you leaving on the table?

Compares a regular savings account against a sweep-in account, in real time.

Total money sitting in the account.
Anything above this is swept into FDs.
Regular savings / year
₹6,000
Whole balance at savings rate
Sweep-in account / year
₹13,475
Threshold + surplus in FDs
Extra interest you'd earn
₹7,475
₹623 per month · risk-free
✅ Your savings-portion interest stays within the ₹10,000 Section 80TTA tax-free limit.

Estimates for illustration only. Actual returns depend on your bank's rates, sweep rules, and tenure. Not financial advice.

Tax implications: Section 80TTA & 80TTB

This is where most guides get it wrong, so here's the accurate version. Savings interest and FD interest are taxed differently — and that matters for sweep accounts, because they generate both.

SectionWhoDeduction limitCovers
80TTAIndividuals / HUF under 60Up to ₹10,000 / yearSavings interest only — not FD interest
80TTBSenior citizens (60+)Up to ₹50,000 / yearBoth savings and FD / deposit interest

What this means for a sweep account

If you're under 60: the interest on your liquid threshold (the savings portion) is shielded up to ₹10,000 under Section 80TTA. The sweep FD interest is treated as fixed-deposit income and is fully taxable at your slab rate — TDS may apply once it crosses the bank's threshold.

If you're a senior citizen: Section 80TTB is a bigger win — its ₹50,000 deduction covers your sweep-FD interest and savings interest together, making sweep accounts especially efficient for retirees.

📄 New for FY 2026-27

From April 1, 2026, Form 121 replaces the earlier Forms 15G/15H for declaring that your income is below the taxable limit, so TDS isn't deducted unnecessarily on deposit interest. Estimate your liability with the Arthzo Income Tax Calculator.

Tax rules can change and depend on your total income. This is general information, not tax advice — confirm with a qualified advisor.

Benefits of an auto-sweep facility

  • Higher returns — surplus earns FD-level interest instead of the low savings rate.
  • Full liquidity — reverse sweep delivers cash instantly via UPI, ATM, or cheque.
  • Zero effort — sweeps happen automatically once set up; no booking or tracking.
  • No early-withdrawal penalty — broken FD units typically earn interest for the actual period held.
  • Same safety — deposits are DICGC-insured up to ₹5 lakh, like any bank deposit.

Limitations and risks to know

Sweep accounts are low-risk, but they aren't magic. Keep these in mind:

  • FD interest is taxable — the sweep portion doesn't get the 80TTA shield (unless you qualify for 80TTB).
  • Threshold and unit rules vary — some banks need a minimum balance or sweep in fixed units, which can slightly reduce returns.
  • Policies differ by bank — sweep tenure, LIFO/FIFO break order, and minimum trigger amounts aren't standard everywhere.
  • Rates can change — sweep-FD rates move with the broader rate cycle, so today's 7% isn't guaranteed forever.
  • Slightly lower than a locked FD — the flexibility of reverse sweep can mean marginally less interest than a same-tenure standalone FD.

How to activate auto-sweep

Most banks let you turn it on in minutes. The checklist is broadly the same everywhere:

Via net banking

Log in → look for "Sweep-in", "Auto-sweep", "Flexi deposit", or "Money multiplier" under deposits/services → set your threshold and tenure → confirm.

Via mobile banking app

Open the deposits or services menu, choose the sweep/flexi option, link it to your savings account, and set the threshold amount.

Via branch request

Submit a sweep-in activation form at your branch; staff link it to your account and set your preferred threshold.

Before activating, ask your bank three things: the minimum threshold, the sweep tenure, and whether reverse sweeps carry any penalty. The answers decide your real return.

Frequently asked questions

What is a sweep-in account?
A sweep-in account is a savings account linked to fixed deposits. Any balance above a threshold you set is automatically moved into FDs earning higher interest, while the money stays accessible. If you spend more than your liquid balance, the bank instantly breaks just enough FD to cover it.
Is auto-sweep better than a regular FD?
It depends on your goal. A sweep account is better for surplus or emergency cash you might need anytime, because it stays liquid with no break penalty. A standalone FD can earn slightly more for money you're certain you won't touch for a fixed period. Many people use both.
Can I withdraw money anytime?
Yes. That's the main advantage. Through a "reverse sweep", the bank automatically breaks the smallest number of FD units needed to fund your UPI payment, ATM withdrawal, or cheque. You don't do anything manually, and the broken portion still earns interest for the period it was held.
Is sweep interest taxable?
Yes. Interest from the sweep FDs is fixed-deposit income and is fully taxable at your slab rate, with TDS once it crosses the bank's threshold. Only the savings-account portion qualifies for the Section 80TTA deduction (up to ₹10,000) if you're under 60. Seniors get a wider ₹50,000 shield under 80TTB that also covers FD interest.
What is a reverse sweep?
A reverse sweep is the automatic process that converts your FD units back into spendable savings when you need them. If a transaction exceeds your liquid balance, the bank breaks just enough FD — usually the newest first (LIFO) — so you keep your higher-earning older deposits intact for longer.
Is auto-sweep safe?
Yes. The underlying deposits are ordinary bank FDs, insured by the DICGC up to ₹5 lakh per depositor per bank, exactly like a standalone FD or savings balance. There's no market or equity risk involved — it's a fixed-income, low-risk product.
What threshold should I set?
Set the threshold to cover one to two months of regular expenses plus a small buffer — often ₹20,000–₹50,000. Too high and you under-use the sweep; too low and frequent reverse sweeps can break FDs early. Review it whenever your spending pattern changes.
Does breaking a sweep FD attract a penalty?
Usually not. Most sweep-in accounts pay interest for the actual period the deposit was held, with no premature-withdrawal penalty on the swept amount. Policies vary, so confirm the exact terms with your bank before relying on it.
How is interest calculated on a sweep account?
Your liquid threshold earns the savings rate, while the surplus earns the FD rate for the time it stays in the sweep FDs. The result is a blended return higher than a savings account but with savings-like access. Try the Savings Yield Calculator above to see your own numbers.
Does every bank offer auto-sweep?
Most major Indian banks offer some version, marketed under names like sweep-in, auto-sweep, flexi deposit, or money multiplier. Features differ — minimum threshold, sweep tenure, and break order aren't standardised — so compare the specifics before opening or activating one.

Key takeaways

  • A sweep-in account gives you FD-level returns (6.5–7.5%) with savings-account liquidity.
  • Surplus above your threshold auto-sweeps into FDs; a reverse sweep returns cash instantly when you spend.
  • On ₹2 lakh of idle cash, the strategy can earn roughly ₹7,500 more per year, risk-free.
  • Sweep FD interest is taxable; only the savings portion gets the ₹10,000 80TTA shield (₹50,000 under 80TTB for seniors).
  • Best for emergency funds, salary buffers, retirees, and business float — money you might need but rarely spend.
  • Deposits stay DICGC-insured up to ₹5 lakh, so risk is minimal.

Plan your next move with Arthzo

Disclaimer: This article is for general educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or tax advice. Interest rates (savings ~2.5–3%, sweep-in/FD ~6.5–7.5%) are illustrative and vary by bank, tenure, and the prevailing rate environment. Tax treatment depends on your total income and may change. Please verify current terms with your bank and consult a qualified financial or tax advisor before making decisions. Arthzo does not endorse any specific bank or product.

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