Fixed Deposits & Bank Savings — Your Questions Answered
Understand FD interest rates, tenure options, DICGC coverage, and how to build a smarter savings strategy.
The Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC) protects up to 5 lakh per depositor per bank, covering both principal and accrued interest. If you have 10 lakh in one bank’s FD, only 5 lakh is insured — the rest is at risk if the bank fails. That’s why spreading deposits across multiple banks is a smart move if you’re saving large amounts.
A 3-year FD locks in your rate for 3 years — good if you think rates might drop. A 5-year FD gives you a higher guaranteed rate but your money’s tied up longer, so if rates jump, you’re stuck. Most investors use a ladder strategy: split your savings across multiple tenures so part of your money matures each year, letting you reinvest at better rates.
Yes, but you’ll pay a penalty. Most banks charge 0.5% to 1% lower interest for early withdrawals, and some charge a flat penalty. If you withdrew after 1.5 years on a 5-year FD earning 7%, you might get 5.5-6% instead. There’s also a tax hit on the interest you earned — so only break an FD if it’s really urgent.
Banks set their own rates based on their funding needs and credit costs. A smaller bank struggling for deposits might offer 7.5% while an established bank offers 6.8% for the same tenure. Credit rating matters too — a bank with lower ratings often offers higher rates to attract deposits. Always compare rates across 5-6 banks before committing; a 0.5% difference on 5 lakh over 3 years means 7,500 more in your pocket.
DICGC coverage applies equally to all banks — public, private, and scheduled banks. What matters is whether the bank is DICGC-insured, not its ownership type. That said, check the bank’s credit rating (look for CRISIL or ICRA ratings) and financial health. A private bank offering 8% is only attractive if it’s financially stable; a poorly-rated bank is riskier regardless of higher rates.
FD interest is taxed as income at your slab rate — 5%, 20%, or 30% depending on your total income. On 3 lakh earning 7% annually (21,000), you’d pay tax on that interest. If you’re in the 30% bracket, you lose 6,300 to tax. Consider investing via senior citizen FDs (no tax up to 50,000) or holding FDs in your spouse’s name if they’re in a lower bracket to optimize after-tax returns.
Still have questions about FDs or bank savings?
Our team at DepositWise India is here to help you navigate fixed deposits, tenure strategies, and deposit insurance. Reach out and let’s build your smarter savings plan together.
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