Fixed Deposit (FD) in India 2026 – Meaning, Types, Interest Rates & Benefits | Arthzo
📅 Updated 29 May 2026  ·  RBI Repo Rate: 5.25%

Fixed Deposit (FD) — Complete Guide for 2026

A Fixed Deposit (FD) is one of the safest investment options offered by banks and financial institutions in India. Money is deposited for a fixed period at a predetermined interest rate, earning stable, guaranteed returns unaffected by market volatility. Banks like SBI, HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank and small finance banks currently offer FD rates ranging from 6.25% to 9.10%. Senior citizens receive an additional 0.25%–0.75% interest. This guide covers everything — meaning, types, rates, tax impact, risks, and how to choose the best FD in 2026.

9.10%
Highest FD rate (NBFC)
9.00%
Highest bank FD (SFB)
₹5 Lakh
DICGC deposit insurance
7 Days
Minimum FD tenure
⚡ Direct Answer — Featured Snippet Target

What is a Fixed Deposit (FD)?

A Fixed Deposit (FD) is a financial product where a lump-sum amount is deposited with a bank or financial institution for a fixed period (tenure) at a predetermined annual interest rate. The deposited amount earns guaranteed returns until maturity — regardless of market conditions, RBI policy changes, or economic cycles. At the end of the tenure, you receive the original principal plus all accumulated interest. FDs are considered one of the safest investments in India, suitable for conservative investors, senior citizens, and anyone seeking stable income.

How Does a Fixed Deposit Work?

When you open an FD, you agree to lock in a fixed sum of money with your bank for a specific period — anywhere from 7 days to 10 years. In return, the bank pays you a fixed interest rate that is higher than a regular savings account. Here is the step-by-step flow:

  • 1️⃣
    You deposit a lump sum: Choose the amount (minimum varies by bank — as low as ₹1,000 at SBI), tenure, and interest payout option (cumulative or monthly/quarterly).
  • 2️⃣
    Bank locks your rate: The agreed rate stays fixed for the entire tenure — even if RBI cuts repo rates and other FD rates fall, your existing FD keeps earning the locked-in rate.
  • 3️⃣
    Interest compounds quarterly: Most Indian banks compound FD interest quarterly. This means your effective yield is slightly higher than the stated annual rate.
  • 4️⃣
    Maturity and payout: On the maturity date, you receive principal + interest. You can choose to auto-renew, transfer to savings account, or reinvest in a new FD.

FD Maturity Formula

The maturity amount for quarterly-compounded FDs (used by most Indian banks):

FD Maturity Amount — Compound Interest Formula
A = P × (1 + r/n)^(n × t)
A
Maturity amount (principal + interest)
P
Principal deposited (₹)
r
Annual interest rate (decimal, e.g. 0.075 for 7.5%)
n = 4
Compounding frequency (quarterly = 4)
t
Tenure in years

📌 Worked Example — ₹1 Lakh at 7.5% for 2 Years (Quarterly Compounding)

Principal
₹1,00,000
Rate (r)
7.50% p.a.
Tenure
2 Years
Compounding
Quarterly
Maturity Amount
₹1,16,136
Interest Earned
₹16,136

Use the Arthzo FD Calculator to compute exact maturity amounts for any combination of principal, rate, tenure, and compounding frequency — instantly and free.

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Types of Fixed Deposits in India

Indian banks offer several variants of fixed deposits designed for different investor profiles and financial goals.

🏦
Regular FD
Standard fixed deposit open to all individuals. Flexible tenures from 7 days to 10 years. Interest paid at maturity (cumulative) or periodically.
Rate: 6.25%–9.00%
👴
Senior Citizen FD
Exclusively for depositors aged 60+. Banks offer an additional 0.25%–0.75% over regular FD rates. Ideal for retirement income planning.
Rate: up to 9.50%
📋
Tax-Saving FD
5-year lock-in period. Allows Section 80C deduction up to ₹1.5 lakh per year. Cannot be withdrawn prematurely or used as loan collateral.
Rate: 6.25%–6.50%
📈
Cumulative FD
Interest is compounded and paid at maturity along with principal. Best for wealth accumulation goals. Higher effective yield than non-cumulative.
Best for: Growth
💰
Non-Cumulative FD
Interest paid monthly, quarterly, or annually. Ideal for retirees and those needing regular income. Principal returned at maturity.
Best for: Income
🔄
Flexi FD (Sweep-In)
Linked to your savings account. Excess funds automatically sweep into FD and earn higher interest. Funds sweep back when savings account balance falls below limit.
Offered by: HDFC, ICICI
🏢
Corporate FD
FDs offered by NBFCs and companies (Bajaj Finance, Shriram Finance). Higher rates than bank FDs but not covered by DICGC insurance. Check CRISIL/ICRA ratings.
Rate: 7.90%–9.10%
🌐
NRE / NRO FD
For Non-Resident Indians (NRIs). NRE FD interest is tax-free in India and fully repatriable. NRO FD interest is taxable in India at 30% TDS.
NRE Rate: ~6.5–7.5%

Latest Fixed Deposit Interest Rates — May 2026

🔄 Rates updated 29 May 2026 · Source: Bank websites & RBI
BankRegular FD RateSenior Citizen RateBest TenureMin. Deposit
State Bank of India6.50%7.05%444 Days₹1,000
HDFC Bank6.50%7.00%3 Years₹5,000
ICICI Bank6.40%7.10%15–24 Months₹10,000
Axis Bank6.50%7.00%1–2 Years₹5,000
Bank of Baroda6.50%7.15%400 Days₹1,000
IDFC First Bank7.50%8.00%18–24 Months₹10,000
IndusInd Bank7.75%8.25%12–24 Months₹10,000
Unity Small Finance Bank9.00%9.50%1 Year₹1,000
Suryoday SFB8.50%9.00%5 Years₹1,000
Bajaj Finance (NBFC)8.05%8.30%24–36 Months₹15,000

For a complete comparison of 25+ banks with tenure-wise rates, senior citizen rates, and safe investment strategies, see our Best Fixed Deposit Rates in India 2026 guide.

Benefits and Risks of Fixed Deposits

✅ Benefits of FD
Guaranteed returns: Rate locked at deposit — immune to market volatility or RBI rate cuts during tenure.
Capital safety: Principal fully protected. DICGC insures up to ₹5 lakh per depositor per bank.
Flexible tenure: 7 days to 10 years. Match tenure to your goal — emergency fund, child's education, retirement.
Loan against FD: Borrow up to 90% of FD value at 1–2% above FD rate. No need to break the deposit.
Senior citizen extra rate: +0.25% to +0.75% additional interest for age 60+. Regular income option available.
Tax-saving option: 5-year FDs qualify for Section 80C deduction up to ₹1.5 lakh per year.
Easy to open: Available at any bank branch or instantly via mobile/internet banking. Minimal documentation.
⚠️ Risks of FD
Inflation risk: If inflation exceeds your FD rate, real purchasing power erodes. A 6.5% FD in 6% inflation gives only 0.5% real return.
Lower liquidity: Money is locked for the tenure. Premature withdrawal attracts a 0.5%–1% penalty on interest.
Interest fully taxable: Unlike PPF or ELSS, FD interest is added to income and taxed at your slab rate (up to 30%).
Misses upside: If interest rates rise after you lock in, you lose out on higher rates. Equity or debt funds may outperform over long term.
NBFC risk: Corporate FDs (NBFCs) are not DICGC-insured. Check credit rating (CRISIL/ICRA) before investing.
TDS deduction: Banks automatically deduct 10% TDS if annual interest exceeds ₹40,000 (₹50,000 for senior citizens).
No wealth creation: At 6.5% post-tax for a 30% slab investor, effective yield is only ~4.5% — unlikely to beat long-term inflation of 5–6%.

FD vs Savings Account vs RD vs Mutual Funds

🏦 FD vs Savings Account
FD Rate6.25%–9.00%
Savings Rate2.70%–4.00%
LiquidityLow (lock-in)
RiskNil
TaxSlab rate
Best ForParking surplus
FD wins for returns
🔄 FD vs RD
InvestmentLump sum
RD InvestmentMonthly SIP
FD Rate0.25% higher
FlexibilityRD more flexible
Best For (FD)Lump sum investors
Best For (RD)Monthly savers
FD: higher rate
📈 FD vs Mutual Funds
Returns6.5%–9% (fixed)
MF Returns10%–15% (variable)
RiskZero vs Market risk
Tax (FD)Slab rate on interest
Tax (Equity MF)12.5% LTCG
HorizonAny vs 3+ years
MF wins long-term
📊 Smart Strategy

Don't choose only FD or only mutual funds. A balanced portfolio for conservative investors: 60% FD + 30% debt mutual funds + 10% equity. For moderate investors: 30% FD + 40% debt MF + 30% equity. FD provides the safe, liquid foundation; mutual funds provide growth to beat inflation.

Tax on Fixed Deposit Interest — Complete Guide

FD interest is fully taxable as "Income from Other Sources" and added to your total income. The tax rate depends on your income slab — 5%, 20%, or 30%. Banks deduct TDS automatically above certain thresholds.

CategoryTDS-Free LimitTDS Rate (with PAN)TDS Rate (no PAN)How to Avoid TDS
General depositors₹40,000 / year10%20%Form 15G (if total income below exemption)
Senior citizens (60+)₹50,000 / year10%20%Form 15H (if estimated tax is nil)

Real Tax Impact by Income Slab

Income SlabTax RateFD at 7.5%Post-Tax Yieldvs PPF (7.1% tax-free)
Up to ₹3L (Nil)0%7.50%7.50%FD better
₹3L–₹7L (5% slab)5%7.50%7.13%FD marginally better
₹7L–₹10L (10% slab)10%7.50%6.75%FD comparable
₹10L–₹12L (15%)15%7.50%6.38%PPF better
Above ₹15L (30%)30%7.50%5.25%PPF clearly better
⚠ High Income Earners

If you are in the 30% tax bracket, consider PPF (7.1% tax-free), ELSS mutual funds, or debt mutual funds (indexation benefit) as more tax-efficient alternatives to FD for long-term investing. FD makes more sense for short-term goals or emergency funds regardless of tax bracket.

Senior Citizen Fixed Deposits — Higher Rates & Monthly Income

Banks in India are legally required by RBI to offer additional interest of at least 0.25%–0.75% per annum to senior citizens (age 60+) over regular FD rates. Some banks also offer a "super senior citizen" category for those aged 80+ with an extra 0.10%. For retirees, FDs offer predictable monthly or quarterly interest income alongside capital safety.

Bank / InstitutionSenior Citizen RateBest TenureExtra Over Regular
Unity Small Finance Bank9.50%1 Year+0.50%
Suryoday SFB9.00%5 Years+0.50%
Jana Small Finance Bank8.50%1–3 Years+0.50%
IndusInd Bank8.25%12–24 Months+0.50%
IDFC First Bank8.00%18–24 Months+0.50%
ICICI Bank7.10%3–5 Years+0.70%
Bank of Baroda7.15%400 Days+0.65%
SBI (We-Care Scheme)7.05%5–10 Years+0.55%
💡 Senior Citizen Tips

Choose non-cumulative FD for monthly income. Submit Form 15H at the start of each financial year to avoid TDS if your total income is below the taxable limit. For amounts above ₹5 lakh, spread across two or more banks to maximize DICGC protection.

Tax-Saving Fixed Deposit — Section 80C Deduction

A Tax-Saving FD is a special category of fixed deposit with a mandatory 5-year lock-in that qualifies for income tax deduction under Section 80C of the Income Tax Act. You can invest up to ₹1.5 lakh per financial year and deduct the full amount from your taxable income.

✅ What You Get
  • • Section 80C deduction up to ₹1.5 lakh
  • • Fixed interest for 5 years
  • • Available at all major banks
  • • Joint account allowed (first holder gets deduction)
  • • Minors can invest via guardian
⚠️ Limitations
  • • 5-year mandatory lock-in (no premature withdrawal)
  • • Cannot pledge as loan collateral
  • • Interest earned is fully taxable
  • • Small finance banks generally NOT eligible
  • • Auto-renewal to regular FD after 5 years

Tax-Saving FD Rates at Major Banks — May 2026

Bank5-Year FD RateSenior Citizen RateSection 80C
State Bank of India6.50%7.00%✓ Eligible
HDFC Bank6.50%7.00%✓ Eligible
ICICI Bank6.40%7.10%✓ Eligible
Axis Bank6.50%7.00%✓ Eligible
Bank of Baroda6.50%7.15%✓ Eligible

Note: Compare tax-saving FDs with PPF (7.1%, fully tax-free) and ELSS mutual funds before investing. For investors in the 30% slab, PPF often provides better post-tax returns despite the same or lower rate.

How to Open a Fixed Deposit in India

Opening an FD takes less than 5 minutes online or 15 minutes at a branch. Here is the step-by-step process:

1

Choose the right bank and tenure

Compare rates using the Arthzo FD Calculator. Match tenure to your financial goal — short-term (under 1 year) for liquidity, long-term (3–5 years) to lock in high rates.

2

Keep KYC documents ready

Aadhaar card, PAN card, passport-size photo, and a savings account at the same bank (for online FD). Most banks let you open FD instantly if you have a savings account.

3

Choose cumulative vs non-cumulative

Cumulative: interest compounds and is paid at maturity — best for growth. Non-cumulative: interest paid monthly/quarterly — best for regular income (retirees).

4

Set auto-renewal (optional)

Instruct the bank to auto-renew on maturity — this ensures your money continues earning interest without a gap if you're unavailable on the maturity date.

5

Submit Form 15G/15H (if applicable)

If your total annual income is below the taxable limit, submit Form 15G (general) or 15H (senior citizens) at the start of each financial year to avoid TDS deduction.

6

Download FD certificate or receipt

Save the FD certificate / receipt. For nominee registration, do it at the time of opening — this ensures hassle-free claim settlement in unforeseen circumstances.

FD Premature Withdrawal Rules & Penalty

Most banks allow premature withdrawal after a minimum period (usually 7–30 days from the date of deposit). The bank reduces the applicable interest rate by 0.5%–1% as a penalty.

Withdrawal ScenarioPenaltyInterest EarnedAlternative
Before 7–30 daysNo interest paidZeroChoose shorter tenure next time
After min period, before maturity0.5%–1.0% on rateReduced rateLoan against FD (better)
Tax-saving FD (5-year)Not allowedNot applicableNo alternative — mandatory lock-in
Loan against FD insteadNo penaltyFD continues earningRecommended

Loan Against FD — Smarter Than Breaking

Instead of breaking an FD early and losing interest, most banks offer a loan or overdraft against FD up to 90% of its value at an interest rate of 1%–2% above the FD rate. Your FD continues earning the original interest, offsetting most of the loan cost. This is almost always cheaper than a personal loan.

📌 Example — Loan Against FD vs Premature Withdrawal

FD Amount
₹5,00,000
FD Rate
7.50%
Loan Available
₹4,50,000
Loan Rate
9.00%
Net Cost
1.50%
vs Personal Loan
12–22%

Are Fixed Deposits Safe? — DICGC Insurance Explained

FDs at banks regulated by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) are among the safest financial instruments available to retail investors in India. The Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC) — an RBI subsidiary — insures every depositor's deposits up to ₹5 lakh per bank, covering both principal and accrued interest.

  • 🏛
    Government / PSU Banks (SBI, BoB, PNB): Considered the absolute safest — government ownership implies implicit sovereign guarantee beyond DICGC. For large amounts (over ₹1 crore), PSU banks are recommended.
  • 🏦
    Large Private Banks (HDFC, ICICI, Axis, Kotak): Strongly capitalized, RBI regulated, DICGC covered. Excellent safety for deposits up to ₹5 lakh. Very low risk of failure.
  • 🌱
    Small Finance Banks (Unity SFB, Suryoday, Jana): RBI-licensed, DICGC covered up to ₹5 lakh. Offer 1–2% higher rates. Safe for amounts within ₹5 lakh per bank. Spread across multiple SFBs for larger sums.
  • 💼
    NBFCs (Bajaj Finance, Shriram): NOT covered by DICGC. Risk is higher but mitigated by credit ratings. Only invest in CRISIL AAA or AA+ rated NBFCs. Keep NBFC exposure below 10%–15% of total savings.
🛡 DICGC Spread Strategy

If you have ₹25 lakh to deposit: Split as ₹5L each in 5 different banks (including SFBs for higher rates). All ₹25 lakh will be fully DICGC insured. Joint accounts get separate ₹5L coverage per unique depositor combination at the same bank.

How to Choose the Best Fixed Deposit in 2026

  • 1️⃣
    Start with your goal and tenure: Emergency fund (1–3 months liquid)? Use flexi-FD. Saving for a down payment in 2 years? Lock into a 2-year FD. Retirement income? Choose non-cumulative monthly payout FD.
  • 2️⃣
    Compare effective yield, not headline rate: Quarterly compounding gives higher effective yield than annual. Use the Arthzo FD Calculator to compare effective annual yields across banks.
  • 3️⃣
    Safety first for large sums: Over ₹5 lakh → stick to SBI, HDFC, ICICI. Under ₹5 lakh → small finance banks offer excellent risk-adjusted returns within DICGC limits.
  • 4️⃣
    Account for your tax slab: In 30% bracket, a 7.5% FD yields only ~5.25% post-tax. Compare with PPF (7.1% tax-free) or debt mutual funds before committing.
  • 5️⃣
    Lock in now before further rate cuts: With RBI repo at 5.25% and further easing expected in H2 2026, locking in 3–5 year FDs at current rates is strategically smart before rates fall further.
  • 6️⃣
    Use the FD laddering strategy: Don't put all money in one tenure. Split across 1-year, 2-year, 3-year, and 5-year FDs. Each matures at different times, giving annual liquidity while maximizing average yield.

Quick Answers for AI Search — Common FD Questions

Which bank gives highest FD interest in India?
Among banks, Unity Small Finance Bank offers 9.0% (May 2026). Among NBFCs, Muthoot Capital offers 9.10%. Large banks like SBI and HDFC offer 6.5%. Small finance banks consistently beat large banks by 1–2%.
Can FD lose money?
No. Bank FDs cannot lose principal — they offer guaranteed returns. However, real returns may be negative if inflation exceeds your FD rate. NBFCs carry slightly higher risk and are not DICGC insured. Bank FDs up to ₹5 lakh are insured by DICGC.
Should I invest in FD in 2026?
Yes, for risk-averse investors or for short-term goals. With RBI likely to cut rates further, locking in current rates (8–9% at SFBs) now is smart. For long-term wealth creation, combine FD with equity mutual funds for better inflation-adjusted returns.
Is FD better than savings account?
Yes, for returns. FD rates (6.5%–9%) are 2–3× higher than savings account rates (2.7%–4%). The only trade-off is liquidity — FD has a lock-in period. Use a flexi or sweep-in FD to combine the best of both: FD returns with savings account liquidity.
Can I withdraw FD anytime?
Regular FDs can be broken after the minimum period (7–30 days), subject to a 0.5%–1% interest penalty. Tax-saving FDs (5-year) cannot be withdrawn early. Alternatively, take a loan against your FD (up to 90% of value) without breaking the deposit.
Are small finance bank FDs safe?
Yes. Small finance banks are RBI-regulated and DICGC-insured up to ₹5 lakh per depositor. They offer 1–2% higher rates than large banks. Keep investments below ₹5 lakh per SFB. For amounts above ₹5 lakh, spread across multiple banks.
Is FD interest taxable in India?
Yes, fully taxable at your income slab rate (5%–30%). Banks deduct TDS at 10% if annual interest exceeds ₹40,000 (₹50,000 for senior citizens). Submit Form 15G/15H to avoid TDS if your income is below the taxable limit.
What is minimum amount for FD?
SBI, Bank of Baroda, and most PSU banks accept FDs from ₹1,000. Private banks (HDFC, ICICI) typically require ₹5,000–₹10,000. Small finance banks often start from ₹1,000. NBFCs like Bajaj Finance require a minimum of ₹15,000.

Frequently Asked Questions

A Fixed Deposit (FD) is a financial product where a lump-sum amount is deposited with a bank or financial institution for a fixed period at a predetermined annual interest rate. The deposited amount earns guaranteed returns until maturity — regardless of RBI policy changes, market conditions, or economic cycles. At maturity, you receive the original principal plus all accumulated interest.

FD interest rates in India range from 6.25%–6.50% at large banks (SBI, HDFC, ICICI) to 8%–9% at small finance banks (Unity SFB, Suryoday SFB) and up to 9.10% at NBFCs like Muthoot Capital, as of May 2026. Senior citizens earn an additional 0.25%–0.75% over regular rates at most banks.

Yes. FD interest is fully taxable as per your income tax slab rate and added to "Income from Other Sources." Banks deduct TDS at 10% if annual interest income exceeds ₹40,000 (₹50,000 for senior citizens). Tax-saving FDs allow Section 80C deduction on the invested principal (up to ₹1.5 lakh) but the interest earned is still fully taxable. Submit Form 15G or 15H to avoid TDS if your total income is below the taxable limit.

Yes. Most banks allow premature FD withdrawal subject to a penalty of 0.5%–1% on the applicable interest rate. You forfeit a portion of your earned interest but the principal is always returned. Tax-saving FDs (5-year lock-in) cannot be withdrawn before maturity. Alternatively, take a loan against your FD up to 90% of its value at 1–2% above the FD rate — this preserves the FD and is usually the smarter option.

The minimum FD amount varies by bank. SBI, Bank of Baroda, and most public sector banks accept FDs from as low as ₹1,000. Private banks like HDFC and ICICI require a minimum of ₹5,000–₹10,000. Small finance banks generally accept from ₹1,000. Corporate FDs (NBFCs) like Bajaj Finance require a minimum of ₹15,000.

SBI FDs are considered the absolute safest due to government ownership and implicit sovereign backing. All bank FDs (including small finance banks) are insured by DICGC up to ₹5 lakh per depositor per bank. For amounts above ₹5 lakh, spread across multiple banks. NBFCs (Bajaj Finance, Shriram) are not DICGC insured — check CRISIL/ICRA credit ratings before investing.

No, bank FDs cannot lose money. The principal is always protected and returns are guaranteed. However, your real purchasing power may erode if inflation exceeds your FD interest rate — for example, a 6.5% FD in a 6% inflation environment provides only 0.5% real return. NBFC FDs carry slightly higher risk as they are not DICGC insured, but the principal is still contractually guaranteed by the NBFC.

In a cumulative FD, interest compounds quarterly and is paid along with the principal at maturity. This maximizes returns through compound interest and is ideal for wealth accumulation goals. In a non-cumulative FD, interest is paid out monthly, quarterly, or annually, providing regular income. The principal is returned at maturity. Cumulative FDs earn slightly more due to compounding; non-cumulative suits retirees or those needing periodic income.

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