As per Bloomberg reports, India’s financial regulators are recalibrating the retail finance landscape, with sweeping reforms by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) that aim to eliminate hidden charges, protect consumers, and fast-track digital inclusion. These changes are expected to significantly alter cost structures, compliance dynamics, and market consolidation for traditional banks and fintechs alike.
The RBI is urging lenders to eliminate or revise charges on debit card use, minimum balance penalties, and late payments, particularly impacting low-income households. A major directive is the ban on prepayment penalties for personal and MSE loans from January 1, 2026.
Additionally, ATM withdrawal fees were increased from ₹17 to ₹19 from May 1, 2025, and balance inquiries rose to ₹7. This dual action prioritises digital transactions over physical cash dealings, benefiting digital finance platforms significantly.
Fintech companies now face tighter compliance mandates. Key requirements include mandatory customer consent for data access, storing all data within India, and cyber audits sanctioned by CERT-In.
Payment aggregators must meet a minimum net worth of ₹15 crore, which will rise to ₹25 crore by 2028. This capital barrier may marginalise smaller firms while established players with strong compliance architecture will likely consolidate market share.
The RBI’s Digital Lending Directions now require direct disbursals into customer accounts and prohibit auto-increases in credit limits. A DLG cap of 5% restricts third-party risk transfers. This tighter control challenges traditional NBFCs and peer-to-peer models while encouraging transparent and integrated digital credit systems.
Read More: RBI Halt Rent Payment via Credit Card on Fintech Apps: Check Alternatives, and Other Aspects You Should Know!
Bank-fintech synergies are growing via co-lending and shared infrastructure. With UPI revenues under pressure due to zero-MDR fees, fintechs are pivoting toward embedded finance offering lending and insurance through non-financial platforms like agritech and e-commerce. Firms led by tech and data-driven ecosystems are more likely to thrive in this transformation.
India’s regulatory overhaul targets affordability, data integrity, and innovation in the retail finance sector. These changes shift competitive advantage to compliant fintechs and digitally mature banks. The future belongs to firms embracing structured governance and tech integration alongside financial inclusion goals.
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Published on: Sep 19, 2025, 3:14 PM IST
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