Tuesday, June 30, 2026

The Hidden Agenda Behind SIR?


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The Passport of Dissent: When the Voter List Becomes a Weapon

A man who shaped front pages that thundered from Kolkata to Delhi, a journalist whose headlines were art, and whose newspaper became a tiny leak in the bulldozed landscape of Indian media — today he stands at the passport office, not as an editor but as a suspect. R. Rajagopal, former editor of The Telegraph, cannot renew his passport. The reason? His name is missing from the voter list. And the voter list, we are being told, now determines whether you can travel, whether you can eat from the ration shop, whether you are still a citizen without a sword hanging over your head.

The Headlines That Made Someone Uncomfortable

If you never saw The Telegraph's front page under Rajagopal, you missed a rare thing: a newspaper that didn't bow. After 2014, while Delhi's papers gradually surrendered to the lapdog media template, Rajagopal's team kept asking questions. When Manipur burned and the Prime Minister remained silent for 79 days, the front page carried 79 crocodiles — a visual scream against the “crocodile tears” shed only after the damage was done.

In another edition, they called Smriti Irani “aanti national”, a pun so sharp it became a national talking point. And when a man named Gopal Sharma pulled a pistol on Jamia students during the anti-CAA protests and called himself “Rambhakt Gopal”, the paper asked on its front page: “Hey Rambhakt?” A perfectly fair question. But these were not just headlines. For someone sitting in the corridors of power, they were evidence of “anti-Modi venom”. And the punishment for that venom would arrive not through a press council notice, but through the quiet deletion of a name from the electoral roll.

The Voter Who Vanished

In February 2026, Rajagopal applied for passport renewal. Normally a 10-15 day affair, it has now been over 100 days. He later learned that in March, his name was removed from the voter list of Ballygunge constituency, Kolkata. The reason? During the Special Summary Revision (SIR) exercise, his name — and that of his deceased father, a retired Gandhian professor — could not be found in the 2002 electoral roll. Yes, 2002. A year when many of us were still in school, and Rajagopal was already a working journalist. His father passed away in 2016. But the absence of their names in a 24-year-old list became ground enough to erase him today.

Rajagopal wrote in a post (translated from English): “I completed biometric formalities on 19 March 2026, but police verification was not cleared because my name is no longer on the voters' list. Despite submitting several alternative documents, I was told they are not enough. On 27 June 2026, it will be the 100th day since my biometrics were taken. Last week the passport authority formally informed me that Kolkata Police had sent a negative report citing the removal of my name from the voters' list.”

The 100-Day Ordeal of an Editor
Feb 2026Rajagopal applies for passport renewal.
19 Mar 2026Biometrics submitted. Application enters police verification.
March 2026Name silently removed from Ballygunge voter list during SIR.
April 2026He misses his daughter's wedding in the US (holds valid 10-year US visa).
June 2026Passport office reveals adverse police report citing missing voter status.
27 June 2026100th day without passport renewal. Appointment given only for 17 July.

The Passport Isn't a Citizenship Proof — But Don't Tell the Police

The Ministry of External Affairs has repeated: a passport is a travel document, not proof of citizenship. Yet the Kolkata Police station, as Rajagopal narrates, insisted on seeing a voter ID for verification — something the passport form itself marks as “if available”, purely optional. He showed his Aadhaar. They refused. One-time password through voter ID was the only route they would accept.

This is not a clerical oversight. It is a deliberate conflation. Once your name is deleted from the voter list, the police writes “adverse”, and the passport office freezes. The government may claim the two are separate, but on the ground, the bureaucrat has learned a new lesson: a deleted name means a suspect. If you are among the 27 lakh people whose names were removed due to “logical inconsistency” — the vague, mysterious category introduced during SIR — you may soon discover that your passport, your ration card, even your children's school admission, are slipping away.

Who Gets Deleted? The 27-Lakh Question

In West Bengal, the Election Commission brought a new weapon: logical inconsistency. If a voter had five children, or if the age gap between parent and child was less than 15 years, or if the spelling of ‘Maqbool' had a Q instead of a K, names were struck off. Anil Mukherjee became Anil Mukhopadhyay in a university certificate — deleted. Maqbool with a K — deleted. Not a single foreigner was found, but 27 lakh Indian citizens were branded doubtful. The Election Commission has not claimed these 27 lakh are non-citizens. They have only been dumped into an adjudication queue.

Now a tribunal set up under Supreme Court orders is supposed to decide their fate. The tribunal started on 20 March 2026. With the current pace, clearing the backlog will take 20 years. Twenty years. Meanwhile, your ration stops. Your passport is blocked. Your children's school asks questions. And you cannot vote in the next election. Did you notice the trap? You can't vote to change the government that did this to you.

The Numerical Irony: 63% of India is Now Suspicious

Here is a number that should frighten every supporter of this government as well — if they can still think. In the 2019 Lok Sabha election, the BJP got about 37.4% of the votes. In 2024, it rose only to about 38%. That means over 60% of voters did not vote for the BJP. They are, in the government's binary logic, “opposition”. By the reasoning that a journalist who criticized the Prime Minister must be punished, what do you do with those 63%? Delete them all? Deny them a passport? Make them run from pillar to post with papers from 1952?

Election YearBJP Vote ShareNon-BJP Vote Share
2019 Lok Sabha37.4%62.6%
2024 Lok Sabha~38%~62%

Visualizing who actually stands where:

BJP 38%
38%
Rest of India 62%
62%

The message being sent is unmistakable: if you don't clap for the regime, your documentary existence will be questioned. The voter list is no longer a register of citizens; it is becoming a register of loyalty.

The Editors Guild Speaks, a Government Advisor Snarls

The Editors Guild of India issued a statement condemning the treatment meted out to Rajagopal, noting that a person who spent decades in public life as a journalist and editor has been disenfranchised and stranded. The reply came not from a minister, but from Kanchan Gupta, an advisor to the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting. He tweeted: “Where were the Editors Guild's principles when R. Rajagopal ran a venomous campaign against the Modi government? Remember how Smriti Irani was called ‘aanti national' on the front page? So roll up your outrage and smoke it.”

Read that again. A government advisor is telling journalists: you criticised us, you called a minister names, now face the consequences. When someone pointed out that Gupta himself had written against Mrs. Gandhi in the past, he wriggled out saying he was talking about “selective outrage”. But the statement he attacked was precisely about the passport denial. This is not a slip of the tongue. It is the official mindset. It reveals that somewhere inside the system, a file moves with a note: “anti-Modi editor – delay passport”.

The Security Control Organisation – Treating an Editor Like an Infiltrator

And then comes the most chilling detail. Journalist Ullekh NP reported in Open magazine that Rajagopal's case has been forwarded to the Security Control Organisation (SCO). For those who don't know, the SCO handles registration and deportation of Bangladeshi, Pakistani, Nepali and other foreign nationals. Rajagopal, a man whose byline was read by millions, who holds a valid 10-year US visa, has been bracketed with potential illegal immigrants.

Ask yourself: was his father's missing name in the 2002 list the real reason? Or was it the crocodiles on the front page? The question “Hey Rambhakt?” after a student was shot? Because if a senior editor can be sent to the SCO queue, what chance does a daily wage worker, a Muslim weaver, or a tribal farmer have when their name is deleted because of a spelling error?

Ration, School, Dignity — The Chain of Punishment

The Telegraph reported on 28 June 2026 that in several parts of Bengal, ration shops have put up notices: those whose names are cut from the voter list must contact the ration office, or their cards may be cancelled. Spelling mistake? Logical inconsistency? No ration. In Bihar too, welfare measures were denied to those deleted during the SIR exercise. The late Jagdeep Chhokar of ADR had warned years ago: “You were voting comfortably till 2024. Suddenly, you are put in a suspect category. What was the Election Commission doing from 2004 to 2024?” Now his warning is a documentary on repeat.

The Unspoken Warning: Speak, and Your Documents Vanish

Rajagopal himself does not want this to be only about him. He told The Wire that the key problem is structural: the SIR was meant to clean the electoral roll, not decide citizenship. The Supreme Court upheld it for that limited purpose, and asked the EC to forward deleted names to the Home Ministry for any citizenship action. But on the ground, police stations, passport offices, and ration dealers are already treating a deleted name as a citizenship void.

This is what happens when the state wants to silence you. Not with a knock on the door at midnight, but with a form that remains pending for 100 days. Not with a direct order, but with a negative police report that no one will show you. You become a citizen in limbo. You are not deported, but you cannot leave. You are not jailed, but you cannot eat. You are not declared a foreigner, but you are made to feel like one in your own country.

Criticisms

  • The Modi government is systematically converting electoral rolls into loyalty registers. Critical journalists, opposition voters, and marginalised communities are being deleted under the garb of “logical inconsistency”, and then denied passports, ration, and basic rights.
  • The Election Commission has abdicated its constitutional duty by allowing a reckless SIR drive that brands 27 lakh citizens as suspect without evidence of foreign origin. It hasn't even disclosed how many actual foreigners were found.
  • The Kolkata Police and passport authorities are weaponizing a non-mandatory voter ID requirement to block Rajagopal's renewal — a clear case of administrative vendetta against a Modi critic.
  • Kanchan Gupta, as an I&B Ministry advisor, publicly justified the targeting of a journalist by referencing past critical coverage. This normalises state retaliation against the press and reveals the government's punitive intent.
  • The glacial tribunal set up for SIR deletions — which will take 20 years to clear cases — is a deliberate design to keep millions in documentary purgatory, exhausting them into submission or silence.
  • The forwarding of Rajagopal's file to the Security Control Organisation, an agency meant for illegal immigrants, is a grotesque insult and an attempt to humiliate an independent voice into irrelevance.
  • The government's silence on the passport-voter linkage, despite the MEA's own clarification that passport is not citizenship proof, exposes a dual strategy: say one thing in court, let the police do the opposite on the ground.

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Tags: Ravish Kumar,Hindi,Indian Politics,Constitution of India,

Unit 5 - Exploring bivariate numerical data (2026 Jun 21)


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xmean = 24.1 ymean = 12.9 sx = 12 sy = 16.2 r = 0.9 m = r * (sy/sx) c = ymean - m*xmean print("m, c:", round(m, 3), round(c, 3)) # KA's Answers: 1.22, -16.38 #2
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Chanakya Niti: Shlok 6


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आपदर्थे धनं रक्षेद् दारान् रक्षेद् धनैरपि।
आत्मानं सततं रक्षेद् दारैरपि धनैरपि।।६।।

मनुष्य को विपत्ति के समय काम आने के लिए धन का संचय करना चाहिए। यदि उस धन का उपयोग अपनी पत्नी अथवा परिवार की रक्षा के लिए करना पड़े, तो बिना संकोच उसे खर्च कर देना चाहिए। चाणक्य कहते हैं कि यदि स्वयं के प्राणों की रक्षा के लिए धन और परिवार—दोनों का भी त्याग करना पड़े, तो उसमें भी संकोच नहीं करना चाहिए।

भविष्य में आने वाली विपत्ति की आशंका से मनुष्य यथाशक्ति धन का संचय करता है। किन्तु चाणक्य का कहना है कि यदि अपने घर की स्त्रियों अथवा अपनी पत्नी पर किसी प्रकार का संकट आ जाए, तो संचित धन के प्रति मोह नहीं रखना चाहिए। ऐसे समय में उनकी रक्षा के लिए धन का व्यय करने में तनिक भी संकोच नहीं करना चाहिए। इसी प्रकार यदि स्वयं व्यक्ति पर कोई संकट आ पड़े, तो उसका निवारण हर सम्भव उपाय से करना चाहिए।

प्रत्येक परिस्थिति में मनुष्य का प्रथम कर्तव्य अपनी रक्षा करना है, चाहे इसके लिए धन और परिवार—दोनों का ही त्याग क्यों न करना पड़े। इसका स्पष्ट आशय यह है कि यदि व्यक्ति स्वयं सुरक्षित बच जाता है, तो वह अपने परिश्रम से पुनः धन अर्जित कर सकता है और अपने जीवन का पुनर्निर्माण कर सकता है। परन्तु यदि वह अपनी रक्षा ही न कर सके, तो पत्नी, परिवार और धन—इन सबका उसके लिए कोई महत्त्व नहीं रह जाता। यदि व्यक्ति स्वयं जीवित नहीं रहेगा, तो इन सबका उपयोग अन्य लोग ही करेंगे।

चाणक्य धन के महत्त्व को कम नहीं आँकते, क्योंकि धन के माध्यम से व्यक्ति अनेक संकटों से उबर सकता है। किन्तु उनका यह भी मत है कि किसी भी परिवार की भली स्त्रियों का महत्त्व धन से कहीं अधिक है। इसलिए उनकी सुरक्षा और सम्मान की रक्षा के लिए हर सम्भव प्रयास करना चाहिए। उनके संरक्षण में किया गया धन का व्यय कभी व्यर्थ नहीं जाता, क्योंकि उनकी मान-मर्यादा की रक्षा में ही परिवार के सम्मान और प्रतिष्ठा की रक्षा निहित होती है।

साथ ही, चाणक्य यह भी कहते हैं कि मनुष्य का अपना जीवन सबसे अधिक मूल्यवान है। अतः आवश्यकता पड़ने पर उसे धन और परिवार के हितों से भी ऊपर अपनी सुरक्षा को प्राथमिकता देनी चाहिए। यदि व्यक्ति स्वयं सुरक्षित नहीं रहेगा, तो न धन सुरक्षित रह सकेगा और न ही परिवार।

भारतीय इतिहास में ऐसे अनेक प्रसंग मिलते हैं जहाँ लोगों ने जीवन, परिवार और राज्य की रक्षा के लिए अत्यन्त कठिन निर्णय लिए। उदाहरणस्वरूप, कुछ राजपूत राज्यों में जब पराजय निश्चित हो गई और राज्य की रक्षा असम्भव प्रतीत हुई, तब स्त्रियों द्वारा जौहर किए जाने की घटनाओं का उल्लेख मिलता है। इन प्रसंगों को उनके ऐतिहासिक और सामाजिक संदर्भ में समझना चाहिए।



In English

Verse:
Save wealth for times of adversity. Protect your spouse and family even at the cost of wealth. But above all, always protect yourself, even if it requires sacrificing wealth and family.

~~~

One should accumulate wealth so that it may be of use in times of adversity. If that wealth must be spent to protect one's spouse or family, it should be used without hesitation. Chanakya further teaches that if the preservation of one's own life requires sacrificing both wealth and family, one should not hesitate to do so.

People naturally save money in anticipation of future hardships or unforeseen emergencies. However, Chanakya advises that if one's wife or the women of one's household face any danger, one should not become attached to accumulated wealth. At such a time, wealth should be spent willingly and without reluctance to ensure their safety. Likewise, if a person himself encounters a grave danger, every possible effort should be made to overcome it.

In every circumstance, a person's foremost duty is to protect his own life, even if doing so requires sacrificing wealth and other worldly attachments. The underlying principle is clear: if a person survives, he can, through his own efforts, earn wealth again and rebuild his life. But if he fails to preserve his own life, neither wealth nor family will be of any use to him. If he is no longer alive, they will inevitably pass into the hands of others.

Chanakya does not diminish the importance of wealth. On the contrary, he recognizes that wealth enables a person to overcome many hardships and difficulties. At the same time, he maintains that the well-being and honor of the women of a household are even more valuable than wealth. Therefore, every effort should be made to protect their safety and dignity. Money spent for their protection is never wasted, for safeguarding their honor is inseparable from preserving the honor and reputation of the family itself.

Chanakya also emphasizes that one's own life is of the highest value. Therefore, when circumstances demand it, a person should place the preservation of his life above both wealth and family. If one cannot protect oneself, neither wealth nor family can ultimately be protected.

Indian history contains many examples of people making extraordinarily difficult choices to protect their lives, their families, and their kingdoms. For instance, there are accounts of women in certain Rajput kingdoms performing *jauhar* when defeat became inevitable and the defense of the kingdom was no longer possible. Such events should be understood within their historical and social context rather than judged outside the circumstances in which they occurred.


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Chanakya Niti: Shlok 5


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दुष्टा भार्या शठं मित्रं भृत्यश्चोत्तरदायकः।
ससर्पे च गृहे वासो मृत्युरेव न संशयः।।५।।

जिस व्यक्ति की पत्नी दुष्ट हो, जिसके मित्र नीच स्वभाव के हों, जिसका सेवक आज्ञा का पालन न करता हो, और जिसे ऐसे घर में रहना पड़े जहाँ साँप रहता हो, वह निश्चय ही सदा मृत्यु के भय के बीच जीवन बिताता है। अर्थात् ऐसे व्यक्ति का जीवन निरन्तर संकट से घिरा रहता है।

किसी भी सद्गृहस्थ के लिए पत्नी का दुष्ट स्वभाव अत्यन्त दुःखदायी होता है। यदि पत्नी अपने पति के प्रति श्रद्धा, विश्वास और समर्पण का भाव न रखे, तो उसका पारिवारिक जीवन अशान्त और कष्टमय हो जाता है। ऐसी स्थिति में व्यक्ति मानसिक तनाव, निराशा और असहायता का अनुभव कर सकता है। घर में रहने वाली दुष्ट प्रवृत्ति की पत्नी परिवार के सुख और शान्ति को निरन्तर भंग करती रहती है।

इसी प्रकार यदि किसी व्यक्ति के मित्र धूर्त और नीच स्वभाव के हों, तो उनसे कभी भी वास्तविक भलाई की आशा नहीं की जा सकती। मित्र के रूप में निकट रहकर वे किसी भी समय उसका अहित कर सकते हैं। शत्रु से तो व्यक्ति स्वाभाविक रूप से सावधान रहता है, क्योंकि उसे ज्ञात होता है कि वह उसका विरोधी है। किन्तु जिसे वह अपना मित्र समझता है, वही यदि मूर्ख या कपटी हो, तो उससे हानि होने की सम्भावना और भी अधिक होती है। इसी कारण कहा गया है कि **"मूर्ख मित्र से बुद्धिमान शत्रु अच्छा होता है।"** इसलिए व्यक्ति को ऐसे मित्रों के सम्पर्क से बचना चाहिए।

इसी प्रकार अपने स्वामी की आज्ञा का पालन न करने वाला सेवक भी उसके लिए संकट का कारण बनता है। ऐसा सेवक न तो कार्यों को स्वामी की इच्छा के अनुरूप करता है और न ही उत्तरदायित्व का निर्वाह ईमानदारी से करता है। वह बहाने बनाकर या मनमानी करके कार्य बिगाड़ सकता है, जिससे स्वामी की चिन्ता और तनाव बढ़ते हैं। यदि उसे घर या परिवार के गुप्त विषयों की जानकारी हो, तो उसकी अविश्वसनीयता और भी अधिक हानिकारक सिद्ध हो सकती है।

अन्त में, जिस घर में साँप रहता हो, वहाँ कोई भी व्यक्ति निश्चिन्त होकर नहीं रह सकता। हर समय सावधानी और भय के वातावरण में जीवन बिताना पड़ता है। तनिक-सी असावधानी भी प्राणघातक सिद्ध हो सकती है। इसलिए आचार्य का आशय यह है कि दुष्ट पत्नी, कपटी मित्र, अवज्ञाकारी सेवक और साँप वाले घर में निवास—ये सभी ऐसी परिस्थितियाँ हैं जो मनुष्य के जीवन को निरन्तर संकट में डाल देती हैं; इसलिए इनसे यथासम्भव बचना ही बुद्धिमानी है।



In English:


A person whose wife is wicked, whose friends are of low character, whose servant is disobedient, and who lives in a house where a snake resides, is always living under the shadow of death. In other words, such a person's life remains constantly surrounded by danger and anxiety.

For any respectable householder, having a wife of evil character is a source of immense suffering. If a wife lacks respect, trust, and devotion toward her husband, family life becomes disturbed and miserable. Such circumstances can leave a person feeling mentally distressed, helpless, and deeply unhappy. A malicious or ill-natured spouse continually disrupts the peace and harmony of the household.

Likewise, if a person's friends are deceitful and ignoble, one can never expect genuine goodwill from them. Under the guise of friendship, they may cause harm at any moment. A person naturally remains cautious of an enemy because the threat is obvious. However, when someone who is trusted as a friend is actually foolish or dishonest, the danger is even greater. This is why the saying goes: **"A wise enemy is better than a foolish friend."** Therefore, one should avoid the company of such friends.

Similarly, a servant who refuses to obey or faithfully carry out the master's instructions becomes a source of trouble. Such a servant may neglect responsibilities, act carelessly, or deliberately ignore directions, causing unnecessary difficulties and increasing the master's worries. If such a person is also aware of the household's confidential matters, the potential harm becomes even greater.

Finally, no one can live peacefully in a house where a snake is known to dwell. Life in such a place is marked by constant vigilance and fear, for even a moment of carelessness may prove fatal. Through this analogy, Chanakya teaches that a wicked spouse, deceitful friends, a disobedient servant, and living in a house with a snake are all conditions that keep a person in continual danger. Wisdom therefore lies in recognizing such circumstances early and avoiding them whenever possible.

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Monday, June 29, 2026

Small Finance Bank FDs: 8.50% Returns and Key Risks Explained

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5 Key Takeaways

  • Small finance banks offer FD rates up to 8.10% for general citizens and 8.50% for senior citizens, significantly higher than large commercial banks.
  • Deposits up to ₹5 lakh per bank are insured by DICGC, so spread larger amounts across multiple SFBs to stay fully covered.
  • The best rates are typically on medium-term tenures (1–3 years), including special periods like 375, 501, 888, or 991 days.
  • Before investing, check premature withdrawal penalties and compare net returns; a slightly lower rate with flexible exit can be smarter.
  • Interest on FDs is fully taxable per your income slab, so consider your tax bracket and diversify across banks for optimal post-tax returns.



This HTML delivers a polished, magazine-style blog post about small finance bank fixed deposits (FDs), complete with rate comparison tables and practical guidance for depositors.

Fixed Deposits at Small Finance Banks: How to Earn Up to 8.50% and What to Watch Out For


If you have been searching for a safe, predictable way to make your idle cash work harder, there is a corner of Indian banking that deserves your attention right now. Small finance banks are offering fixed deposit (FD) rates that stand head and shoulders above what most large commercial banks can match—going up to 8.30 per cent a year for general citizens and crossing 8.50 per cent for senior citizens on select tenures. At a time when deposit rates at many big banks have been drifting lower, these numbers are a powerful reminder that being selective about where you park your money can add meaningful rupees to your savings.

But the full story is not just about chasing a high headline rate. It is also about understanding who these small finance banks are, how the deposit insurance safety net works, and what practical steps you should take before you lock in your funds. This post walks you through the latest rates, the context behind them, and the essential points every depositor should weigh.


Why small finance bank FDs are suddenly in the spotlight

Over the past year, many large commercial banks have gradually trimmed the interest they pay on fixed deposits. This trend has been driven by abundant liquidity in the banking system and a broader monetary policy stance that has pushed down the cost of funds. For the conservative saver who relies on FDs for a guaranteed return, the steady decline in rates has been a quiet disappointment.

Small finance banks (SFBs) have bucked this trend. These are not the branch-on-every-corner giants you see everywhere. SFBs are a special category of banks licensed by the Reserve Bank of India with a mandate to further financial inclusion. They primarily lend to small business units, marginal farmers, micro-enterprises, and the unorganised sector. To fund that lending, they need a stable pool of retail deposits. Because they compete for your savings in a crowded market, they tend to offer significantly higher deposit rates than their larger cousins.

For depositors, the arithmetic is simple: if you can earn 7–8.30 per cent instead of 5.5–6.5 per cent on the same fixed deposit, your maturity corpus swells without any extra risk-taking. That is precisely why SFB fixed deposits have moved to the centre of the conversation for anyone building a fixed-income portfolio.


How safe is your money in a small finance bank?

Before we get into specific rates, let us address the safety question, because it is the one everyone asks first. Deposits in all scheduled banks—including every small finance bank named in this post—are covered by the Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC). The insurance covers up to Rs 5 lakh per depositor per bank. This limit includes both the principal amount and the interest payable. So, even in an extremely unlikely scenario where a bank fails, your money up to that limit is protected.

The practical takeaway: Do not put all your eggs in one basket, no matter how attractive the rate. If you have Rs 15 lakh to invest, spreading it as Rs 5 lakh each across three different SFBs would keep your entire corpus within the DICGC cover. It is a simple, powerful way to combine high returns with institutional-grade safety.

What is a fixed deposit, and why do tenures matter?

A fixed deposit is a straightforward financial contract. You give the bank a lump sum for a pre-agreed period—say one year, 500 days, or three years. In return, the bank pays you a guaranteed rate of interest for that entire duration. When the deposit matures, you get back your original amount plus the total interest earned. There is no stock-market volatility, no fund manager risk, and no complex product features to decode.

The "tenure" is the length of time for which you commit your money. Banks usually offer different rates for different tenures. Often, the highest rates are concentrated in a sweet spot—typically between one and three years. That is exactly what we see in the current SFB landscape: the most competitive rates cluster around medium-term durations, which can align well with goals like saving for a child's college fees, building a wedding corpus, or creating an emergency fund that you do not intend to touch for a while.


Small finance bank FD rates: the top offers for general citizens

As of June 2026, small finance banks are offering general citizens FD rates that range from about 3.50 per cent all the way up to 8.30 per cent per annum on select special tenures. While the precise peak rate advertised can touch 8.30 per cent, the highest widely published general-citizen rates sit around 8.10 per cent. Here is a snapshot of the best offers available right now:

Small Finance Bank Highest FD Rate (p.a.) Tenure
Suryoday Small Finance Bank 8.10% 30 Months
ESAF Small Finance Bank 8.00% 501 Days
Jana Small Finance Bank 8.00% 375–400 Days
North East Small Finance Bank 7.75% 18 Months 1 Day–18 Months 2 Days
Ujjivan Small Finance Bank 7.55% 991 Days–60 Months
Utkarsh Small Finance Bank 7.50% 2 Years–3 Years
Equitas Small Finance Bank 7.40% 888 Days
Unity Small Finance Bank 7.25% 1 Year
Capital Small Finance Bank 7.15% 600 Days (Special FD)
AU Small Finance Bank 7.10% 30–36 Months

A few details are worth underlining. Suryoday's 30-month deposit offering 8.10 per cent is among the highest straightforward rates for a non-senior depositor. ESAF and Jana both touch 8.00 per cent, but on different tenures—501 days for ESAF and 375–400 days for Jana—which gives you some flexibility depending on your liquidity needs. Ujjivan's rate of 7.55 per cent is available on longer tenures stretching from nearly three years to five years, making it useful if you want to lock in a decent rate for a longer horizon.


What senior citizens can earn

Nearly every bank offers an additional interest rate mark-up for depositors who are 60 years and above. The extra benefit typically ranges from 0.50 to 0.75 percentage points, and in certain cases the cumulative return becomes extremely compelling.

Here is how the top SFB senior-citizen FD rates stack up:

Small Finance Bank Highest Senior Citizen Rate (p.a.) Tenure
ESAF Small Finance Bank 8.50% 501 Days
Suryoday Small Finance Bank 8.25% 30 Months
Jana Small Finance Bank 8.00% More than 2 Years to 3 Years
Equitas Small Finance Bank 8.00% 888 Days
Utkarsh Small Finance Bank 8.00% 2 Years–3 Years
Ujjivan Small Finance Bank 8.05%* 991 Days–60 Months
North East Small Finance Bank 7.75% 18 Months 1 Day–18 Months 2 Days
Capital Small Finance Bank 7.65% 600 Days (Special FD)
Unity Small Finance Bank 7.75% 1 Year
AU Small Finance Bank 7.60%* 30–36 Months

*Ujjivan's rate includes a 0.50% extra senior citizen benefit. *AU Small Finance Bank's rate includes the senior citizen benefit.

The standout here is ESAF's 501-day deposit, which delivers 8.50 per cent for senior citizens. That is a full 0.50 percentage point above the already high general-citizen rate. Suryoday comes in at 8.25 per cent for the 30-month tenure, and several other banks—Jana, Equitas, Utkarsh—offer a flat 8.00 per cent on their respective best tenures. Even the relatively lower yields in this list are far above what most large universal banks are offering to senior depositors right now.


Why medium-term deposits are the sweet spot

You may have noticed that the highest rates are clustered around durations of one year to three years, with special tenures like 375 days, 501 days, 600 days, 888 days, and 991 days. This is no accident. Banks want stable deposits that help them manage their asset-liability matching, and they are willing to pay a premium for moderately long commitments. For savers, these tenures often match short- to medium-term goals—such as building a house down-payment, funding an overseas trip, or just earning a superior return on money that would otherwise lie in a low-interest savings account.

Before you commit, however, ask about premature withdrawal penalties. If there is a chance you might need the money before the tenure ends, the penalty can eat into your effective return. Some banks offer lower penalties or even partial flexibility on special FDs. A little upfront homework ensures that the high headline rate translates into a high realised return.


Beyond the rate card: what smart depositors do

A high rate is only one part of a sound fixed-income decision. Here are three simple but essential steps to take before you open an SFB fixed deposit:

  1. Stay within the DICGC cover. As emphasised earlier, the Rs 5 lakh insurance limit per bank per depositor is your bedrock of safety. If your savings exceed that threshold, divide them across multiple SFBs or even a mix of an SFB, a large public-sector bank, and a post office deposit. That way, even a tail-risk event does not disturb your financial peace.
  2. Compare the net return after premature withdrawal costs. Some of the highest quoted rates apply only if you stay invested for the full tenure. If you withdraw early, you may receive a lower interest rate for the period the money was with the bank plus a penalty. Check each bank's policy on the specific deposit scheme. A slightly lower rate with a lenient exit option can sometimes be a smarter choice for money you may need without notice.
  3. Look at the tax angle. Interest earned on fixed deposits is fully taxable as per your income tax slab. The higher the FD rate, the more tax you will pay unless you manage it through tax-saving FDs (which have a five-year lock-in) or by planning your overall tax liability. While SFB FDs typically do not offer tax-free returns, their high pre-tax yields can still leave you with a better post-tax return than many alternatives, especially for investors in lower tax brackets.

What is driving these elevated rates, and will they last?

Small finance banks are not immune to the broader interest-rate environment, but they face distinct dynamics. Their ability to offer high deposit rates is tied to their need for retail funding. Unlike large banks that enjoy the float from current accounts and salary accounts, many SFBs depend heavily on term deposits. As long as their lending book can absorb the higher cost of funds, they will likely continue to price deposits aggressively.

That said, no rate lasts forever. As the central bank's monetary policy evolves and system liquidity changes, SFBs may revisit their rate cards. The window of opportunity is here today. Locking in a medium-term deposit now could give you a steady, superior return for the next one to three years, regardless of where the market moves tomorrow.


A practical example

Seeing the Difference in Rupees

Imagine you are a general citizen with Rs 4 lakh to invest. Placing it in a regular one-year FD at a large bank might fetch you around 6.00 per cent. That would grow to approximately Rs 4.24 lakh in a year.

The same Rs 4 lakh parked in SFB deposits—say Suryoday's 30-month offer at 8.10 per cent—would grow to about Rs 4.35 lakh over a comparable shorter period, and even more if held to maturity.

For a senior citizen, the same principal in ESAF's 501-day deposit at 8.50 per cent would accumulate to roughly Rs 4.54 lakh in less than a year and a half. The compounding effect over successive deposit cycles widens the gap further.

The numbers are not magic; they are a straightforward consequence of earning three to five extra percentage points per year. When safety is comparable—thanks to DICGC insurance—allocating a portion of your fixed-income portfolio to high-yield SFB deposits becomes a pragmatic decision.


What to do next

Start by listing your near-term financial goals and the amount you are comfortable locking away for at least one to three years. Then cross-reference that list with the tenure that offers the best rate. Remember to split large sums across multiple banks so that your deposit with any one institution does not exceed Rs 5 lakh. Check the specific scheme's features, not just the advertised rate, because premature withdrawal terms and senior citizen eligibility conditions can differ.

Finally, open the deposit either through the bank's website or by visiting a branch. Most SFBs now have smooth digital processes, making it easy to complete the formalities from home. In a world of uncertain returns, a guaranteed 8 per cent-plus fixed deposit is a tool worth using—provided you use it with eyes open and risk carefully managed.

For the conservative saver who prizes predictability, the current set of small finance bank FDs offers one of the most compelling fixed-income opportunities in years. The rates are high, the insurance safety net is clear, and the choice of tenures gives you control. By taking a little time to compare your options and diversify smartly, you can earn a significantly better return on your savings without turning into a speculator. That, in itself, is a quietly powerful way to build wealth.

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