Reviewed on: 2026-07-05.
A retail fixed deposit below ₹1 crore is callable, meaning the bank must let you break it early for a published penalty. File a written closure instruction, take a dated acknowledgement, and if the branch still stalls, complain free to the RBI Ombudsman at cms.rbi.org.in under RB-IOS 2026. For a public sector bank, a ₹10 RTI to the CPIO under Section 6(1) forces out the penalty circular and the file noting on your request. Reply is due in 30 days under Section 7(1).
Lakshmi, a retired schoolteacher in Tirunelveli district, Tamil Nadu, booked a ₹2,00,000 fixed deposit for two years at 7.10 per cent per annum with a public sector bank in September 2025. Ten months in, her husband needed cataract surgery with an intraocular lens implant, and the family wanted its own money back. She walked into the branch with the FD receipt and asked for premature closure.
The counter clerk said the manager was on leave. The next visit, “the system is not allowing it today.” A third visit produced the line every reluctant branch uses: “come after maturity.” Lakshmi was not asking for a favour. She was asking the bank to honour a term of her own deposit contract and accept the penalty that every bank publishes in its schedule of charges. Instead, she was being sent home to wait 14 more months while her own money sat locked and her husband's surgery was put on a credit card charging roughly 42 per cent per annum.
What Lakshmi did not know, and what most depositors do not know, is that the Reserve Bank of India has laid down exactly how premature closure must be priced, and that an outright refusal on an ordinary retail FD is a service deficiency the bank can be made to answer for. The money is yours. The closure is priced, not prohibited. This guide walks through the penalty maths, the only three situations in which a refusal is lawful, the new RBI Ombudsman regime that took effect on 1 July 2026, and the RTI route that exposes any unwritten branch “policy”.
A fixed deposit is a contract under which you lend a sum to the bank for a fixed tenure at a fixed rate. “Premature closure” means you ask the bank to return the money before that tenure ends. The bank does not have to give you the full contracted interest, because you did not keep your end of the bargain on time. But on an ordinary retail deposit it must give you the money back, priced according to a rule the Reserve Bank has set for every bank.
That rule now lives in the RBI Master Direction — Interest Rate on Deposits Directions, 2025 (reference RBI/2025-26/134, dated 1 April 2025, in force immediately). It consolidates and replaces the 2016 Master Directions on the same subject. Two paragraphs do most of the work for your case:
There is a floor below which the rule does not move. Under Para 8.2.2, no interest is paid if the deposit is withdrawn before the minimum period of seven days. And under Para 8.1.3, banks may offer deposits without a premature withdrawal option, but for commercial banks every term deposit from individuals, singly or jointly, for ₹1 crore and below must carry premature withdrawal facility. The cooperative-bank mirror rule applies the same facility to HUF deposits up to ₹1 crore.
That ₹1 crore line was itself set by a separate RBI notification. RBI/2023-24/74, dated 26 October 2023, raised the minimum size for a non-callable term deposit from ₹15 lakh to ₹1 crore, across commercial and cooperative banks, and extended the rule to NRE and NRO deposits. The practical consequence: every ordinary retail FD below ₹1 crore is callable. If a branch tells you your ₹3 lakh FD is “non-withdrawable”, it is either mistaken or hoping you will not check. Ask, in writing, which deposit scheme and which clause says so.
So the law of the land is simple. Premature closure of a retail FD is a contractual right you bought when you booked the deposit. The price of using it is the period rate minus the published penalty. A refusal that does not fall within one of three narrow exceptions is not a “policy”, it is a deficiency in service.
Why this matters for your RTI. When a branch quotes an unwritten “policy” to refuse your closure, that policy almost never exists on paper. An RTI application to the CPIO of a public sector bank can force out three things at once: the deposit scheme terms actually applied to your FD, the penalty circular in force on your booking date, and the file noting on your closure request. If the bank cannot produce a written refusal ground, the refusal has no leg to stand on, either before the RBI Ombudsman or in a consumer forum.
Understanding the mechanics tells you exactly what to ask for, and what the bank must give you.
Booking. When you book an FD, the bank records the amount, tenure, interest rate, and whether the deposit is callable or non-callable. For retail deposits below ₹1 crore, callable is the default and the only permitted option. The penalty rate that will apply on premature closure must be disclosed to you at this stage under Para 15.2.
Closure instruction. To break the FD you submit a premature closure instruction, quoting the FD number and the savings or current account to which the proceeds should be credited. Most banks offer this inside net banking and mobile banking; the branch will accept a signed paper instruction. Always take a dated acknowledgement. If net banking shows an error or a greyed-out button, screenshot it, dated. That screenshot is evidence.
Pricing. The bank looks up the card rate, on the date you booked the FD, for the tenure the deposit actually ran. It subtracts the published penalty. The result is the effective rate. Interest is calculated on that effective rate for the actual days the money was with the bank. The table in the next section shows the full maths on a real example.
Payout. Principal plus the recalculated interest is credited to your nominated account, usually within one working day for an in-person instruction. TDS already deducted is reflected in your Form 26AS and can be claimed when you file your income tax return.
The three lawful refusals. A bank may refuse premature closure only where one of these applies, and it must be able to point to the clause:
If none of these applies, the refusal has no leg. On the depositor's death, even a tax-saver FD can be closed before the lock-in, and no penalty may be levied on premature closure by claimants of a deceased depositor, provided the period and aggregate amount do not change (Master Direction Para 15.3). The full claim process is in the deceased account and FD claim guide.
Here is what breaking a fixed deposit early actually costs, on Lakshmi's deposit: ₹2,00,000 booked for two years at 7.10 per cent, closed after 10 months at a bank whose penalty is 1 per cent.
| Item | Figure |
|---|---|
| Amount deposited | ₹2,00,000 |
| Booked rate (2-year tenure) | 7.10% p.a. |
| Card rate for the period actually run (10 months, on the booking date) | 6.25% p.a. |
| Premature penalty | 1.00% |
| Rate you are paid (6.25 minus 1.00) | 5.25% p.a. |
| Interest for 10 months at 5.25% | about ₹8,750 |
| Interest you would have got at 7.10% for 10 months | about ₹11,833 |
| Cost of breaking early | about ₹3,083 |
The point of the table: premature closure is priced, not prohibited. The bank applies the rate for the period the deposit actually ran, minus its published penalty. What a bank cannot do with an ordinary retail FD is refuse the closure outright, sit on the request, or invent conditions. Paying the booked rate minus penalty would often be higher than the correct method, which is why some depositors mistakenly think they got a good deal. Paying less than the period rate minus penalty is a computation error worth disputing with the calculation sheet.
If you need only part of the money, many banks allow partial withdrawal in units, breaking only the amount you need while the balance continues at the original rate. A loan against the FD at roughly 1 to 2 per cent above the deposit rate is sometimes cheaper than breaking a high-rate FD near maturity; compare both numbers before deciding.
Two changes have reshaped this problem in the last fifteen months, and a branch that has not updated its own scripts may still be operating on the old assumptions.
1. The RBI Master Direction on deposits was recast on 1 April 2025. The Master Direction — Interest Rate on Deposits Directions, 2025 (RBI/2025-26/134) consolidates the older 2016 directions into a single binding text. The pricing rule in Para 8.2.1, the disclosure rule in Para 15.2, and the no-penalty-on-death rule in Para 15.3 are now in one place you can quote by paragraph number. The no-penalty rule on transfer of business to another commercial bank (Para 15.4) is also restated. When a branch says “that is an old circular”, you can point to the 2025 Master Direction and ask for the clause that overrides it.
2. The RBI Ombudsman scheme changed on 1 July 2026. The Reserve Bank — Integrated Ombudsman Scheme, 2026 (RB-IOS 2026) was issued on 16 January 2026 and took effect on 1 July 2026, repealing the 2021 scheme. It is grounded in Section 35A of the Banking Regulation Act 1949, Section 45L of the RBI Act 1934, Section 18 of the Payment and Settlement Systems Act 2007, and Section 11 of the Credit Information Companies (Regulation) Act 2005. Three numbers have moved in your favour:
The process is unchanged in shape. Complain to the bank in writing first. If it does not reply in 30 days, or you are dissatisfied with the reply, escalate to the RBI Ombudsman. File online at cms.rbi.org.in (the portal header now reads “Reserve Bank — Integrated Ombudsman Scheme, 2026”), email [email protected], or post the complaint to the Centralised Receipt and Processing Centre, 4th Floor, RBI, Sector-17, Central Vista, Chandigarh — 160017. The toll-free IVRS is 14448, available 24×7, with human assistance from 8 AM to 10 PM, Monday to Saturday. If the Ombudsman rejects your complaint, you can appeal within 30 days through the portal or by email to [email protected]. The next steps after a rejection are covered in what to do after the RBI Ombudsman rejects your complaint.
The lesson for 2026: do not let a branch sit on your closure request. The 90-day clock at the Ombudsman starts running from the bank's silence, and the compensation ceiling for the loss you suffer while your money is blocked has tripled.
The RTI route runs in parallel with the bank complaint, not instead of it. The complaint gets your money back; the RTI gets the paper that proves the refusal was unlawful, which makes the complaint stronger and supports a claim for consequential loss.
If the CPIO refuses, claims the information is fiduciary under Section 8(1)(e), or does not reply in 30 days, file a first appeal under Section 19(1) within 30 days. The Supreme Court in RBI v. Jayantilal N. Mistry, (2016) 3 SCC 525 held that the regulator-regulated relationship between RBI and banks is not fiduciary, that inspection reports of banks are disclosable under RTI, and that Section 10 severability applies to protect customer-specific data. The CIC reaffirmed this in Kumar Medhavi v. RBI on 17 July 2023. A bank cannot hide behind “fiduciary” to withhold the penalty circular that governed your deposit.
For private banks (HDFC, ICICI, Axis, Kotak, Yes and others), the bank itself is not a public authority, but information about it held by the RBI is accessible through an RTI to the RBI CPIO. You can ask the RBI CPIO for the supervisory file on your complaint, the bank's Board-approved penalty policy as submitted to RBI, and any action taken on your Ombudsman complaint.
Central versus State PIO: public sector banks (SBI, PNB, Bank of Baroda, Canara, Union Bank of India, Indian Bank, Bank of India, Bank of Maharashtra and the rest) are Central public authorities, so the ₹10 central fee and the Central RTI rules apply. File through the bank's CPIO at its head office or the designated nodal branch. If you need help structuring the application, the AI RTI draft tool at https://righttoinformation.wiki/tools/ai-rti-draft-app.html can assemble the questions, and the PIO reply checker at https://righttoinformation.wiki/tools/pio-reply-checker-app.html can tell you whether a reply or a silence is legally complete. The first-appeal drafting tool at https://righttoinformation.wiki/tools/first-appeal-app.html handles the Section 19(1) appeal if the CPIO stalls.
Lakshmi R., Tirunelveli district, Tamil Nadu — public sector bank, ₹2,00,000 FD.
Lakshmi booked a ₹2,00,000 two-year FD at 7.10 per cent per annum in September 2025. In July 2026, ten months in, her husband needed cataract surgery with a lens implant. She asked the branch for premature closure and was told three times to “come after maturity.”
She then submitted a written closure instruction quoting the FD number and her savings account, and took a dated acknowledgement. The branch still did not process it. She demanded a written refusal citing the deposit scheme and clause; none came. She filed a grievance with the bank's redressal officer, attaching the acknowledgement, and waited 30 days. No satisfactory reply.
In parallel she filed a ₹10 RTI to the bank's CPIO under Section 6(1), asking for the deposit scheme terms applied to her FD, the Board-approved penalty circular in force on her booking date, and the file noting on her closure request. The CPIO disclosed the penalty circular but produced no written refusal ground, because none existed.
She then filed a complaint at https://cms.rbi.org.in under RB-IOS 2026, citing the bank's silence, the RTI disclosure showing no lawful refusal ground, and the consequential loss: her husband's surgery was financed on a credit card at roughly 42 per cent per annum while her own ₹2,00,000 sat blocked for 38 days.
Outcome: The Ombudsman ordered the FD closed at the correct period rate of 6.25 per cent minus the 1 per cent penalty, principal plus about ₹8,750 interest credited within five days, and ₹15,000 as compensation for mental harassment and consequential loss under the new RB-IOS 2026 limits. Total cost to Lakshmi: the ₹3,083 interest differential she had always accepted as the price of breaking early, plus ₹10 for the RTI. The money she recovered on top was the compensation the bank paid for sitting on her instruction.
To The Central Public Information Officer [Name of the public sector bank] [Head Office / designated nodal branch address] Subject: Application under Section 6(1) of the Right to Information Act, 2005 regarding premature closure of Fixed Deposit No. [FD number] Sir/Madam, I, [your name], citizen of India, hereby request the following information under Section 6(1) of the Right to Information Act, 2005, pertaining to my Fixed Deposit No. [FD number] booked on [booking date] for ₹[amount] and a tenure of [X months/years]: 1. A certified copy of the deposit scheme terms and conditions applied to the said Fixed Deposit on the booking date. 2. The Board-approved premature-closure penalty policy of the bank as on the booking date, including the penalty rate and the clause under which it is levied, as required by Para 15.1 and 15.2 of the RBI Master Direction — Interest Rate on Deposits Directions, 2025 (RBI/2025-26/134). 3. The card rate sheet of the bank for the tenure of [X months] as on the booking date, used for computing interest on premature withdrawal under Para 8.2.1 of the said Master Direction. 4. The file noting, correspondence and any reason recorded for non-processing of my premature closure instruction dated [date], including whether any written refusal ground exists on record. 5. Whether the penalty applicable on premature closure was disclosed to me at the time of acceptance of the deposit, as required by Para 15.2 of the said Master Direction, and the document evidencing such disclosure. I state that the information sought is not exempt under Section 8 or Section 9 of the Act. Where any portion is claimed exempt, I request that severability under Section 10 be applied and the non-exempt portion be supplied. I hereby inform that I am a person below the poverty line and am exempt from the application fee. [Delete this line if not applicable; otherwise attach proof.] If the information is not supplied within 30 days as required by Section 7(1), I reserve the right to file a first appeal under Section 19(1) of the Act. Date: [date] Place: [place] [Signature] [Your name] [Your address] [Your contact number]
No. The standard method under Para 8.2.1 of the RBI Master Direction, 2025 is the rate applicable to the tenure the deposit actually ran, as on the booking date, minus the penalty. Paying the booked rate minus penalty would often be higher than the correct method; paying less than the period rate minus penalty is a computation error worth disputing with the calculation sheet. Always ask for the computation sheet.
Many banks allow partial withdrawal in units, breaking only the amount you need while the balance continues at the original rate. Others will split or close fully. A loan against the FD at roughly 1 to 2 per cent above the deposit rate is sometimes cheaper than breaking a high-rate FD near maturity; compare both numbers before deciding. Ask the branch for its partial-withdrawal option in writing.
Wrong. Auto-renewal creates a fresh callable deposit, and a callable deposit can be closed prematurely on any working day. The renewal instruction does not lock the money. If the deposit is below ₹1 crore, the premature withdrawal facility is mandatory under Para 8.1.3 of the Master Direction.
Premature closure normally needs all holders' signatures unless the mandate is Either or Survivor and the account opening form permits either holder to close. Check the mode of operation before blaming the branch. After a holder's death, the claim runs through the survivorship and deceased-account process: the survivorship claim guide.
The published penalty is the bank's rule, set under a Board-approved policy. Banks routinely waive it for rebooking into a longer tenure and on hardship grounds at managerial discretion, but this is branch practice, not an RBI-prescribed right. Asking in writing costs nothing; just do not let the negotiation delay a closure you urgently need.
No. Deposits are not credit facilities and do not report to credit bureaus. The only cost is the interest differential in the penalty maths table. A closed FD leaves no negative mark on your CIBIL or any other bureau report.
No. The computation sheet shows how the rate and penalty were applied to your deposit, and it is part of the information you can demand both as a customer and, for a public sector bank, through an RTI under Section 6(1). If the branch refuses, that refusal is itself a service deficiency you can include in your Ombudsman complaint.
Then under Para 15.2 of the Master Direction the bank may not levy any penalty at all. You are entitled to the period rate without subtraction. Ask, in writing, for the document evidencing disclosure at the time of acceptance. If none exists, the FD should be closed at the full period rate.
The private bank itself is not a public authority under Section 2(h), so you cannot file RTI to its CPIO. But information about the bank held by the RBI is accessible through an RTI to the RBI CPIO, and the RBI Ombudsman route under RB-IOS 2026 applies to every regulated entity, public or private. Use both: the Ombudsman for your money, the RTI to RBI for the supervisory paper.
Under RB-IOS 2026, in force from 1 July 2026, the filing window is 90 days from the expiry of the bank's response timeline or its last communication, reduced from the earlier one year. Give the bank 30 days to reply after your written complaint, then file at cms.rbi.org.in. If the Ombudsman rejects your complaint, appeal within 30 days through the portal or by email to [email protected]. The timeline calculator at https://righttoinformation.wiki/tools/timeline-calculator-app.html can compute your deadline from the bank's last communication date.
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*This page explains the deposit rules laid down by the Reserve Bank of India and the rights under the Right to Information Act, 2005. It is not a substitute for a lawyer. If your bank is refusing to release your own deposit, act in writing at every step and keep dated evidence.*
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