RBI Grade B Current Affairs — 3 July 2026

1 topics · RBI Grade B · 3 July 2026
RBI bars pre-payment charges on transfer of floating rate loans for individual borrowers
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RBI bars pre-payment charges on transfer of floating rate loans for individual borrowers

What happened

RBI has prohibited banks, NBFCs, and All India Financial Institutions from levying pre-payment penalties on floating rate loans taken by individual borrowers for non-business purposes. The directive, titled Pre-payment Charges on Loans Directions, 2025, covers full and partial prepayments regardless of fund source or presence of co-obligants. Dual and special rate loans on floating rates at repayment time are also covered. Payment banks and co-operative banks are excluded. Lenders must disclose charges for non-covered loans in sanction letters and Key Facts Statements.

Why it matters

For years, Indian retail borrowers faced a hidden trap: even if interest rates fell or a competing lender offered better terms, their existing bank could impose prepayment penalties that made switching economically unviable. This was especially painful for home loan and personal loan borrowers on floating rates, who technically bore interest rate risk but were denied the offsetting benefit of moving to cheaper credit. RBI's Pre-payment Charges on Loans Directions, 2025 decisively closes this loophole. By banning penalties on floating rate retail loans for non-business purposes, RBI strengthens the borrower's right to exit and intensifies competition among lenders. The practical effect is significant: a borrower with a ₹50 lakh home loan can now refinance to a lower-rate lender or make a lump-sum repayment from a bonus without penalty, reducing their debt burden. The rule covers dual-rate and special-rate products if they are on floating rates at the time of prepayment, preventing lenders from using structural workarounds. Payment banks are excluded because they do not offer loans; co-operative banks are under a different regulatory architecture. The disclosure mandate for non-covered loans reinforces the Key Facts Statement framework, which is a broader RBI push toward standardised, plain-language loan disclosures. This directive aligns with global best practices where floating rate borrowers are not penalised for taking advantage of rate movements — the very risk they bear.
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