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Falling FD Rates

Falling FD Rates? Where to Move Your Capital in 2026

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Summary: India’s FD rate cycle has turned. After the RBI cut the repo rate by a cumulative 125 basis points across 2025 — bringing it to 5.25%—banks have already begun trimming deposit rates on popular tenures. This article breaks down why FD laddering is a dying strategy in a falling-rate environment and covers four smarter alternatives: corporate deposits, arbitrage funds, small finance bank FDs, and G-Secs/SDLs to help you protect your fixed-income returns in mid-2026 and beyond. 

If you locked in a fixed deposit at 7.5% in late 2024, you timed it well. Since then, the RBI has cut the repo rate by 125 basis points to 5.25%, prompting banks to lower FD rates. Today, major banks like SBI, HDFC Bank, and ICICI Bank offer peak FD rates of around 6.45–6.5%, making those high-return days a thing of the past.

The RBI has kept the repo rate unchanged at 5.25% since June 2026, with a neutral stance as inflation is expected to remain elevated. While further rate cuts appear unlikely, deposit rates remain much lower than before. So, the key question now is: where should you park your money to earn better returns without taking unnecessary risk?

Why “FD Laddering” No Longer Works in a Falling-Rate Environment 

FD laddering, which basically means spreading your deposits across multiple tenures so they mature at different points, and then reinvesting at whatever rate is available, is a genius move when rates are stable or on the upswing. You get to maintain liquidity, average out your rates, and every time one of them rolls over, you’ve got a shot at scoring a higher yield. But when rates are falling, every rollover basically works against you. 

For instance, you had booked a 12-month FD back in mid-2024 at 7.25%. Fast forward to today, and you’re looking at reinvesting at around 6.4%-6.6% with most major banks. And if you do that again in 12 months, who knows, you might be facing rates as low as 6% or even lower, depending on where the rate cycle is headed. The short-term end of the curve is the most vulnerable: When rates fall, short-term FD rates fall the fastest, while the longer tenures tend to stay stable for a bit longer. 

So, what’s the smart move now? Kind of the opposite of laddering: lock in duration. If you can score a 3-5 year FD today at 6.5%, 7%, or higher, you’re basically shielding your rate from further depreciation for the medium term. The risk of being locked in is relatively low when rates don’t have much room to rise, but it’s significant when they’ve got plenty of room to fall. 

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The 4 Pillars of Capital Relocation

If you’re looking for alternatives to locking in duration, here are four options you might want to consider:

Corporate Fixed Deposits

    These are offered by NBFCs and housing finance companies, and they generally pay more than your average bank FD, mainly because they come with credit risk that bank deposits don’t have. As of June 2026, the interest rates for these range from 6.60% to 9.10% [1] for regular investors and up to 9.35% for senior citizens. 

    If you’re a cautious investor who likes playing it safe, stick with AAA-rated issuers. For example, Mahindra Finance offers up to 7.45% [2] per annum for regular investors and 7.8% for senior citizens on tenures of 12 to 60 months, and they’ve got CRISIL AAA/Stable and IND AAA/Stable ratings to back it up. Shriram Finance is another option, with AAA/Stable ratings from ICRA, CARE, and CRISIL, offering up to 7.25% [3] per annum for regular investors and 7.75% for senior citizens.

    Just remember, unlike bank FDs, corporate FDs aren’t covered by DICGC insurance, so keep your exposure to individual issuers reasonable; don’t put more than 20-25% of your fixed-income corpus with a single NBFC, even if it’s AAA-rated. 

    Arbitrage Funds

      This one is mainly about the tax benefits. With a regular FD, you might earn 7%, but after taxes, you’re looking at more like ~5%. An arbitrage fund, on the other hand, can keep up to 7% of its returns after taxes, thanks to LTCG exemptions, and over time, that difference can add up meaningfully over time.

      These funds work by exploiting the price difference between the cash market and futures market for the same stock; it’s a hedged, market-neutral strategy, so the returns don’t depend on which way the equity market is moving. Because they maintain at least 65% exposure to equity and equity derivatives, they qualify as equity funds for tax purposes, which means short-term gains are taxed at 20% and long-term gains are taxed at 12.5%, with ₹1.25 lakh exempt annually. 

      These funds are highly attractive for investors in the 30% tax bracket who are looking to park their funds for 12 to 24 months, the only caveat being that there’s a 30-day exit load, so they’re not ideal for very short-term liquidity needs. Pre-tax returns are usually in the range of 6% to 7.5%, comparable to bank FDs, but the post-tax outcome is way better for high earners. 

      Small Finance Banks (SFBs)

        These are licensed by the RBI, and they’ve got full DICGC insurance up to ₹5 lakh per depositor. They tend to offer rates that are 100-150 bps higher than the big private banks. As of June 2026, Unity Small Finance Bank is offering up to 7.80% [4] per annum for general depositors, while senior citizens can earn up to 8.30%. Utkarsh Small Finance Bank is offering FD rates up to 8.10% [5] and 8.25% for senior citizens. 

        The trade-off here is that SFBs are newer, smaller entities, so there’s a bit of perceived institutional risk. But from a regulatory standpoint, the DICGC protection makes deposits up to ₹5 lakh just as safe as those at SBI. One strategy could be to spread your deposits across two or three SFBs, keeping each one under the ₹5 lakh insurance threshold. 

        G-Secs and State Development Loans (SDLs)

          They are often overlooked by retail investors, but they’re actually a really solid risk-free alternative to bank FDs right now. The 10-year G-Sec yield is currently around 6.8%, and with the government’s massive borrowing target of ₹17.2 trillion for FY2026-27, there’s a lot of new supply hitting the market. SDLs, which are bonds issued by state governments, offer even better yields. In 2026, they’re typically offering 0.50% to 1.00% more than G-Secs of the same tenure, with 10-year SDLs from major states offering ~7.3% to 7.7%. 

          Access has never been easier: Through the RBI Retail Direct portal, you can place non-competitive bids in SDL auctions, which means you’re guaranteed to get the weighted average yield, with a minimum investment of just ₹10,000. Alternatively, you can buy G-Secs and SDLs through your existing demat account on NSE/BSE or through a SEBI-registered OBPP (just like us!).

          Latest Bond News:

          Quick Comparison: The 4 Alternatives at a Glance

          InstrumentIndicative Yield (June 2026)Credit RiskDICGC CoverTax TreatmentBest Suited For
          Bank FD (major private bank)6.40%-6.50%NegligibleUp to ₹5LSlab rateCapital preservation
          Corporate FD (AAA NBFC)7.25-7.40%Low-moderateNoneSlab rateHigher income, rated issuers
          Arbitrage Fund6.0-7.60%Very lowNone20% STCG/12.5% LTCG30% tax bracket, 12-24 month horizon
          Small Finance Bank FD7.50-8.10%Low (RBI-regulated)Up to ₹5LSlab rateHigher rates with insurance safety net
          G-Secs/SDLs6.7-7.7%Zero (sovereign)N/ASlab rateConservative long-term investors

          Sources: ClearTax, GoldenPi, Trading Economics, Groww, CCIL

          The Tax Trap: What You Actually Take Home

          The thing about FD investing in India that people tend to overlook is that banks will throw around these gross interest rates, but what you’re really left with is the return after taxes take a bite from them.

          FD interest gets taxed as “Income from Other Sources,” which means it’s lumped in with your taxable income and slammed with your slab rate. So, if you’re in that 30% bracket, a 6.5% FD is more like 4.55% after the tax. And if inflation keeps running along at 4%-5% through FY27, which is what the RBI is basically predicting, you’re looking at a real return that’s essentially close to zero, or maybe even negative. 

          Compare that with:

          • Arbitrage funds: Hold them for over 12 months, and you’re looking at a 12.5% LTCG tax rate, with ₹1.25 lakh exempt. So, a 7% gross return translates to around 6.1% post-tax for someone in the 30% bracket.
          • G-Secs/SDLs: Interest is taxed at your slab rate, same as FDs, but if you hold listed bonds for over 12 months, those capital gains get taxed at 12.5%, which can be a nice planning opportunity for long-term holders. 
          • PPF and SCSS: If you qualify and haven’t maxed out your limits, the Senior Citizen Savings Scheme is currently offering 8.2%, which is fully taxable but worth looking into.

          The takeaway: Always calculate the post-tax yield before you start comparing instruments. A 7.5% NBFC FD might sound great, but in the 30% bracket, that’s more like 5.25%, which might be lower than what you’d get from an arbitrage fund at 6.5%.

          Conclusion

          There’s no need to expose yourself to equity risk to safeguard your income. So, here’s a straightforward reallocation checklist for mid-2026: 

          • Ditch the habit of rolling over short-term FDs at falling rates. Instead, opt for 3- to 5-year tenures where rates are way more stable. 
          • Diversify across SFBs to bag the extra 100-150 bps; just ensure each deposit stays under ₹5 lakh.
          • Add AAA-rated corporate FDs for a yield boost, but don’t go overboard with exposure per issuer. 
          • If you’re stuck in the 30% tax bracket and have a 12+ month horizon, consider arbitrage funds. 
          • Take a look at G-Secs/SDLs for yields that are not only sovereign-safe but also a neat 7%+.
          • Before making any comparisons, crunch the numbers on post-tax returns.

          We haven’t hit the rate-cycle floor just yet, so it’s time to act on duration before the next MPC meeting in August 2026.

          Interest rates falling in India Frequently Answered Questions

          Q1. Why are fixed deposit (FD) interest rates falling in India?

          Bank FD rates are highly sensitive to the Reserve Bank of India’s monetary policy. When inflation slows down, the RBI slashes or keeps the repo rate low, which in turn prompts commercial banks to cut the interest rates on retail deposits, all in an effort to safeguard their profit margins, which means if you’re rolling over a matured FD, you can expect lower passive income.

          Q2. Are Small Finance Bank (SFB) FDs safe to invest in for higher rates?

          Yes, up to a specific limit. While SFBs offer higher interest rates to attract depositors, your capital is legally protected up to ₹5 Lakhs per bank (including both principal and interest) under the RBI’s Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC). Smart Strategy: If you want to chase higher SFB yields safely, split your corpus across multiple small finance banks so no single institution holds more than ₹5 Lakhs.

          Q3. Should retirees move their capital from FDs to the Senior Citizen Savings Scheme (SCSS)?

          Absolutely. If you’re over 60, the SCSS should be your go-to option before regular FDs. Backed by the Government of India, it consistently offers interest rates that are significantly higher than your standard bank FD rates, with a maximum investment cap of ₹30 lakhs per individual.

          Q4. How are arbitrage funds different from debt mutual funds for tax purposes?

          Arbitrage funds are classified as equity funds (65%+ equity exposure), so gains after 12 months are taxed at 12.5% LTCG. Debt funds bought after April 2023 are taxed at slab rates regardless of holding period — removing their old tax advantage over FDs.

          Q5. Which mutual funds can act as tax-efficient alternatives to FDs?

          While pure debt mutual funds are now taxed at your slab rate, investors looking for lower tax hits can explore: Arbitrage Funds: They leverage equity market inefficiencies to deliver returns comparable to short-term FDs but are taxed as equity instruments (yielding significant tax savings if held for over a year).
          Multi-Asset Allocation Funds: These dynamically spread your money across debt, equity, and gold, keeping your portfolio diversified while dampening volatility. 

          Sources

          1. https://www.policybazaar.com/fd-interest-rates/fd-rates-comparison/ 
          2. https://goldenpi.com/fixed-deposits/fd-details/GPID105193/mahindra-finance-cfd-yield?fp=mahindra-finance&ia=100000&tenure=48-months&pm=on-maturity&sc=senior-citizen&tx=taxable&src=view_details&selectHighRate=true&sr=without-special-rate 
          3. https://goldenpi.com/fixed-deposits/fd-details/GPID100016/shriram-finance-cfd-yield?fp=shriram-finance-limited&ia=100000&tenure=36-months&pm=on-maturity&sc=senior-citizen&tx=taxable&src=view_details&selectHighRate=true&gender=male&sr=without-special-rate 
          4. https://goldenpi.com/fixed-deposits/fd-details/GPID105192/unity-small-finance-bank-cfd-yield?fp=unity-small-finance-bank&ia=100000&tenure=16-custom-months&pm=on-maturity&sc=senior-citizen&tx=taxable&src=view_details&selectHighRate=true&etd=16&sr=without-special-rate 
          5. https://goldenpi.com/fixed-deposits/fd-details/GPID106947/utkarsh-small-finance-bank-cfd-yield?fp=utkarsh-small-finance-bank&ia=100000&tenure=22-custom-months&pm=on-maturity&sc=senior-citizen&tx=taxable&src=view_details&selectHighRate=true&etd=6&sr=without-special-rate 

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