IDFC First Bank Slashes Savings Account Rates, Caps Peak Returns at 6.5%

Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], January 8: IDFC First Bank has quietly but decisively pulled back on savings account generosity. From January 9, depositors will earn less across several balance slabs, with cuts running as deep as 200 basis points.

IDFC First Bank has revised its savings account interest rates, trimming returns across multiple balance slabs and resetting expectations for depositors who had grown used to market-leading yields. The changes apply from January 9 and cover domestic, NRE, and NRO savings accounts. This is not a cosmetic tweak. In certain slabs, the reduction touches 200 basis points. The bank’s earlier rate structure had been in force since December 17, 2025.

Less than a month later, the numbers have been rewritten. What stays the same, what changes, and who feels the pinch most? Let’s break it down.

Understanding the New Savings Account Rates

Under the revised structure, balances of up to ₹1 lakh continue to earn 3% per annum. No surprises there. That entry-level slab remains untouched.

The shift begins once balances cross ₹1 lakh.

Deposits above ₹1 lakh and up to ₹10 lakh will now earn 5%. Earlier, portions of these balances benefited from higher progressive rates, especially as balances climbed. That advantage has narrowed.

For many retail savers, this is where the real impact lies. Smaller and mid-sized balances now earn meaningfully less than before, translating into cuts of up to 200 basis points depending on the slab.

Peak Rates Now Have a Lower Ceiling

Previously, IDFC First Bank stood out for its aggressive savings account interest rates. Balances above ₹5 lakh and up to ₹5 crore earned as much as 7%. Deposits between ₹5 crore and ₹10 crore earned 6.75%.

Those days are over.

Under the revised structure, the peak savings account interest rate is capped at 6.5%. This applies to balances above ₹10 lakh and up to ₹10 crore.

That cap alone marks a clear shift in strategy. The bank is no longer chasing deposits with headline-grabbing rates. Instead, it is reining them in.

How High-Value Deposits Are Treated?

At the very top end, rates are largely unchanged.

Balances above ₹10 crore and up to ₹25 crore continue to earn 6%. Deposits above ₹25 crore and up to ₹100 crore earn 5%. Amounts exceeding ₹100 crore still earn 4%.

These slabs remain exactly where they were earlier.

In other words, the sharpest adjustments are concentrated in the retail and affluent segments, not the ultra-high-value balances.

Progressive Interest Calculation Still Applies

One important feature remains intact. IDFC First Bank continues to calculate savings account interest on a progressive basis.

This means different portions of a depositor’s balance earn interest at different rates, depending on the slab they fall into. Interest is credited monthly.

So, even after the rate cut, balances are not subjected to a flat rate across the board. The structure still rewards higher balances, just less generously than before.

Why This Matters for Indian Savers?

For years, IDFC First Bank positioned itself as a disruptor in retail banking. High savings account interest rates were a key hook, especially for salaried professionals, startups, and digitally savvy customers.

This revision signals a recalibration.

Across India’s banking system, deposit pricing is being reassessed. Funding costs have risen. Liquidity conditions are tighter. Banks are increasingly selective about how much they pay for deposits.

IDFC First Bank’s move fits squarely into this broader trend.

The Timing Is Telling

The fact that the previous rate structure lasted barely a few weeks is revealing. It suggests the bank is actively fine-tuning its deposit strategy rather than locking itself into long-term commitments.

For depositors, this reinforces an old truth. Savings account interest rates are not fixed promises. They move. Sometimes quickly.

Those relying heavily on high savings yields need to stay alert.

Who Loses the Most?

Retail customers with balances between ₹1 lakh and ₹10 lakh will feel the immediate impact. This group sees lower effective yields than before, even though the nominal structure may look neat on paper.

Affluent customers who parked funds expecting 7% returns will also notice the downgrade. A cap of 6.5% changes the math, especially for large idle balances.

For ultra-high-net-worth deposits, the story is more stable. Rates at the top end remain unchanged, cushioning the impact for institutional-scale balances.

What Savers Should Do Now?

This is not a call for panic. But it is a reminder to review.

Savings accounts are meant for liquidity, not long-term wealth creation. If large balances are sitting idle purely for yield, it may be time to reassess allocations.

Fixed deposits, liquid funds, and other low-risk instruments may offer better alignment depending on individual needs. Internal link placeholder: [Read our guide on choosing the right deposit instruments]

At the same time, IDFC First Bank still offers competitive rates compared to many peers, even after the cut. The gap has narrowed, not vanished.

The Bigger Banking Picture

Across the sector, banks are balancing growth with prudence. Deposit wars are cooling. Margins matter again. IDFC First Bank’s decision reflects that reality. It is less about retreat and more about recalibration.

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