T+0 settlement means your shares and money are settled on the same day you trade, instead of the next day. SEBI has made this optional cycle available on the top 500 listed stocks by market value. You keep using your normal broker app; T+0 runs in parallel with the regular T+1 cycle, and you choose it trade by trade where your broker offers it.
Short on time? Jump to “How to place a T+0 trade” below for the three steps.
In the regular T+1 cycle, if you sell shares today, the money reaches your account tomorrow. In T+0, the same trade settles by the evening of the same day. You get your funds or your shares hours after the trade, not the next working day. This helps active traders, people who need quick liquidity, and anyone who dislikes overnight settlement risk.
T+0 is optional. It does not replace T+1. Both cycles run side by side, and the same stock can trade in either. Prices in the two cycles can differ slightly because they are separate order books.
SEBI expanded T+0 in two stages. The beta started on 25 stocks in March 2024. It was then widened to the top 500 companies by market capitalisation (ranked as on 31 December 2024), with 100 stocks added at each month-end from 31 January 2025 and the full 500 covered by May 2025.
All investors can use T+0, not just large institutions. Your access depends on whether your broker has enabled the T+0 cycle on its platform.
| Feature | T+0 (optional) | T+1 (default) |
|---|---|---|
| Settlement | Same day | Next working day |
| Stocks covered | Top 500 by market cap | All listed stocks |
| Who can use | All investors | All investors |
| Order book | Separate | Separate |
| Cut-off | Continuous session up to a fixed afternoon deadline | Full trading day |
Meera, a salaried investor in Pune, sells ₹80,000 of a large-cap stock at 11 a.m. to fund a medical bill the same day. In T+1 she would wait until the next morning for the money. Using T+0 on her broker app, the sale settles that evening and the funds are usable the same day. The convenience is real, but she still checks the price in the T+0 book separately, because it can differ from the T+1 price.
No. T+0 is fully optional for both investors and brokers. The default cycle stays T+1. You choose T+0 trade by trade, and only where your broker has enabled it on the top 500 stocks.
The top 500 companies by market capitalisation, ranked as on 31 December 2024. SEBI phased them in 100 at a time from 31 January 2025, completing all 500 by May 2025. Stocks outside this list settle only in T+1.
T+0 and T+1 are separate order books with their own buyers and sellers. Supply and demand in each can differ, so the quoted price and available volume may not match. Always compare both before placing a same-day trade.
SEBI did not mandate a separate charge for using T+0. However, brokerage and statutory levies still apply as in any trade. Check your broker's contract note, because individual platforms set their own fees.
T+0 is about settlement timing, not intraday positions. It gives same-day delivery of shares and funds. Intraday trading remains a separate product; ask your broker how T+0 interacts with their intraday and margin rules.
Your trades simply settle in the regular T+1 cycle. T+0 is optional for brokers, so many are still building the systems. You lose nothing; you only miss the same-day option until they enable it.
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