The government on Friday left the interest rates unchanged on various small savings schemes for the first quarter of the next fiscal, beginning April 1, 2024. A notification in this regard has been issued by the finance ministry. "The rates of interest on various small savings schemes for the first quarter of FY 2024-25, starting from April 1, 2024, and ending on June 30, 2024, shall remain unchanged from those notified for the fourth quarter (January 1, 2024, to March 31, 2024) of FY 2023-24," the notification said. The deposit under the Sukanya Samriddhi scheme will attract an interest rate of 8.2 per cent, while the rate on a three-year term deposit remains at 7.1 per cent. The interest rates for popular PPF and savings deposits too have been retained at 7.1 per cent and 4 per cent, respectively. The interest rate on the Kisan Vikas Patra will be 7.5 per cent, and the investments will mature in 115 months. The interest rate on the National Savings Certificate (NSC) will remai
The Senior Citizen's Savings Scheme (SCSS), designed for individuals aged 60 years or employees above 55 years of age and below 60 years of age, offers 8.2 per cent interest per annum
If you are investing for specific long-term goals, such as your children's education or marriage, small savings schemes may be the ideal option. Fixed deposits are better suited for short-term goals
Rate on National Savings Certificate steeply raised by 70 bps, PPF kept unchanged
Small savings rates for 1-year time deposit (6.6 per cent), 2-year time deposit (6.8 per cent) and 3-year time deposit (6.9 per cent) were raised by 110 bps
National Savings Certificate, Public Provident Fund rate kept unchanged
The government on Thursday raised rates on some small savings schemes by up to 30 basis points (bps) in line with the hardening interest rate in the economy. With the revision, a three-year time deposit with post offices would earn 5.8 per cent from the existing 5.5 per cent, an increase of 30 basis points for the third quarter of the current financial year. Senior Citizen Savings scheme will earn 20 basis points more to 7.6 per cent from the existing rate of 7.4 per cent during the October-December period, a finance ministry notification said. With regard to Kisan Credit Card, the government has revised both tenure and interest rates. The Reserve Bank since May has raised the benchmark lending rate by 140 basis points, prompting banks to raise interest rates on deposits as well.
If this happens, it will be the 10th straight quarter of status quo; govt official says Centre did not cut rates when policy rates were being cut during pandemic
Investors who want to avoid their long lock-in can choose from a host of other high credit quality options
Amid uncertainty in the equity-linked savings instruments, government's small savings schemes offer safe and assured returns. What are these schemes? Let us understand in this explainer
Public Provident Fund (PPF) and National Savings Certificate (NSC) will continue to carry an annual interest rate of 7.1 per cent and 6.8 per cent, respectively
The rates have not been changed since September 1, 2020; status quo to help Centre raise additional resources, says Icra economist
Interest rates for small savings schemes are notified by the Finance Ministry on a quarterly basis
Several products offer better rates, especially for seniors; that said, never try to optimise returns when you need money in the short term
As cash is priority, you can delay payment. But there will be loss in interest income
Interest rates were also cut for a senior citizens saving scheme and National Savings Certificate
Bond yields will also be under pressure due to Rs 2.7 trillion of switches in FY21, which increases duration risk
In another notification, the ministry said it has decided to extend submission of Aadhaar details for small savings scheme investors until further orders
Since 2016, the government has linked the small savings deposit rate with the benchmark Government Securities (G-Sec) rate