RBI’s Draft PPI Norms: Stricter Cash Rules, Simplified Categories, No Cross Border Payments and More
Simrat Singh and Jeel Ranavat | Finserv@vinodkothari.com
The RBI has proposed an overhaul of the existing prepaid payment instruments (PPI) framework through its draft Master Direction, 2026. The changes aim to, inter-alia, simplify classification, tighten cash usage, restrict cross border payments etc. In this note, we discuss some of the key proposals of the draft master directions.
Simpler classification
Two overarching categories are proposed:
- General Purpose PPI: Comprising Full-KYC PPI and Small PPI (single type, no further sub-types);
- Special Purpose PPI: comprising Gift PPI, Transit PPI, PPI for Foreign Nationals/NRIs (UPI One World) and any other with prior RBI approval. PPI-MTS renamed into Transit PPI
Credit card loading restricted
With a view to curb ‘loan-loaded PPIs’, it is proposed that credit cards can now be used only for Special Purpose PPIs, while General Purpose PPIs are limited to bank account debit, cash or another PPI. This signals a clear intent to ring-fence credit-backed spending to specific use cases. See our resource around loan loaded PPIs here.
Statutory auditor certification for net worth compliance
The draft introduces a procedural clarification by requiring non-bank PPI applicants to submit a certificate from their statutory auditor confirming compliance with the minimum net worth criteria of ₹5 Crores. While the threshold itself remains unchanged, earlier a CA certificate was required; the draft now specifically mandates certification by the statutory auditor in a prescribed format..
Sharp cut in cash usage
Cash usage sees the biggest tightening. Cash loading for Full-KYC PPIs is reduced from ₹50,000 to ₹10,000 per month, pushing higher-value transactions towards bank-linked digital modes. The move appears designed to curb anonymity and improve traceability.
P2P transfers also curtailed
Peer-to-peer transfer (i.e. transfer to another person’s bank account or PPI) limits have been standardised. Instead of differentiated limits based on beneficiary registration, a flat cap of ₹25,000 per month is now proposed.
Monthly usage cap formalised
While earlier regulations relied on outstanding balance caps, the draft introduces an explicit ₹2 lakh monthly debit limit for Full-KYC PPIs. In substance, this aligns with the existing ceiling but adds clarity on usage.
Banks get faster go-live
Banks issuing PPIs will no longer require prior approval if they are already qualified to issue debit cards. A prior intimation to RBI will be sufficient, allowing faster product launches. This acknowledges that regulated banks already meet baseline prudential standards.
This significantly reduces time-to-market and reflects regulatory reliance on the existing prudential and compliance standards applicable to banks. The change is expected to enhance agility, support faster product innovation, and strengthen banks’ participation in the digital payments ecosystem.
Non-bank approvals streamlined
For non-bank issuers, the process is simplified with perpetual authorisation and removal of the explicit in-principle approval stage. The timeline for submission post-regulatory NOC is also relaxed to 45 days from the earlier requirement of 30 days. The draft is silent on the earlier requirement of submitting a System Audit Report (SAR) at the time of authorisation. However, an IS Audit report is proposed to be submitted annually by the issuer.
Core portion interest computation shifts to monthly basis
The draft revises the methodology for computing interest on the core portion by moving from a fortnightly to a monthly calculation framework. Instead of averaging 26 lowest fortnightly balances, issuers will now compute the average of 12 lowest monthly outstanding balances, with the minimum one-year operational requirement continuing. This change appears to be a pragmatic step towards operational simplification, reducing computational intensity while aligning the framework with more conventional monthly cycles. While the earlier explicit restriction on availing loans against such deposits is not reiterated, the fiduciary nature of PPI funds implies that pledging or leveraging customer balances would, in our view, remain impermissible.
Foreign wallet norms liberalised; A push for UPI One World
In contrast to tightening elsewhere, the framework for foreign users is expanded. The UPI One World wallet will now be available to all foreign nationals and NRIs, with a higher ₹5 lakh monthly usage limit.
This step is aimed at making UPI more accessible to international users, especially inbound travellers who often face challenges in using domestic payment systems. By enabling seamless, wallet-based access to UPI, the framework improves convenience and enhances the overall payment experience in India.
Cross-border usage removed
A key change is the blanket removal of cross-border transaction capability for PPIs. Earlier, AD-1 bank issued PPIs could be used for limited overseas transactions. The draft eliminates this entirely, narrowing the scope of PPIs.
Other notable changes
Closed system PPIs continue to remain outside regulation but marketplaces are explicitly excluded from claiming this status. The definition of “merchant” has been broadened, removing the requirement of contractual acceptance. Small PPIs will now expire after 24 months with mandatory balance transfer in case the same has not been converted into Full-KYC PPI, instead of merely restricting further credits.
See our existing resources on PPI:
