Fresh dollar selling by exporters ahead of two-day Fed's policy meeting starting late today also aided the rupee rise.
At the Interbank Foreign Exchange (Forex) market, the domestic unit commenced weak at 60.35 a dollar from previous close of 60.16. It dropped further to an over seven-week low of 60.51 - a level not seen since April 29, 2014 when it had touched an intra-day low of 60.63.
In straight two previous trading sessions, it had plunged by 91 paise or 1.54 per cent on fears that costlier crude due to Iraq unrest would balloon India's fuel import bill and cause trade deficit to widen.
The dollar index was up 0.06 per cent against rivals.
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The benchmark S&P BSE Sensex closed up by 330.71 points, or 1.31 per cent, while FIIs sold shares worth Rs 194.10 crore yesterday, as per provisional data with stock exchanges.
"RBI also intervened by selling dollars through state owned banks around 60.50 levels," he added.
RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan's comments also boosted the rupee.
"The rupee was seen gaining after the Reserve Bank of India chief said India was well positioned on the external front to deal with shocks," said Abhishek Goenka, Founder and CEO, India Forex Advisors.