Reviewed on: 2026-06-12.
Here is what breaking a fixed deposit early actually costs, on a real example: Rs 2,00,000 booked for 2 years at 7.1 per cent, closed after 10 months at a bank whose penalty is 1 per cent.
| Item | Figure |
|---|---|
| Amount deposited | Rs 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 Rs 8,750 |
| Interest you would have got at 7.10% for 10 months | about Rs 11,833 |
| Cost of breaking early | about Rs 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. Premature withdrawal on a callable deposit is a term of your deposit contract, and refusing to honour it is a service deficiency you can take to the RBI Ombudsman.
If none of these applies, the refusal has no leg.
Branch deposit targets. A broken FD dents the branch book, so staff discourage it: “come after maturity”, “the manager must approve”, “the system does not allow it today”. None of these is a ground. Two situations deserve their own note. On the depositor's death, the FD can be closed prematurely without any penalty by the nominee or claimants; the process sits in the deceased account claim guide. And many banks waive the penalty when you break an FD only to rebook it with the same bank for a longer tenure; ask before you sign.
For a public sector bank, an RTI to the Public Information Officer can fetch the deposit scheme rules applied to your FD, the penalty circular in force on your booking date, and the noting on your closure request. That is useful when the branch quotes an unwritten “policy”. Private banks are outside the RTI Act; their published schedule of charges and the Ombudsman route do the same job. Filing steps are at how to file an RTI online.
No. The standard method 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; paying less than the period rate minus penalty is a computation error worth disputing with the calculation 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.
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.
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, see the survivorship claim guide.
The published penalty is the bank's rule, but banks routinely waive it for rebooking into a longer tenure and on hardship grounds at managerial discretion. 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 table above.
Download the premature FD closure checklist (PDF).