NEWS

SBI's cash withdrawal charges from July

Beyond the first 4 cash withdrawals per month, SBI will charge at branches, ATMs and cash distributing machines; this will come into force from 1 July.

State Bank of India (SBI) on Tuesday said its customers with basic savings bank deposit (BSBD) accounts will be charged fees for cash withdrawals that exceed four free transactions per month starting 1 July.

Charges for cheque books with more than 10 leaves in a year would be imposed on SBI BSBD account holders.

The charges would range from Rs 15 to Rs 75 for "extra value-added services" with effect from 1 July 2021, according to the adjustment in service costs for BSBD accounts.

Non-financial and transfer transactions will be free for BSBD account holders at branches, ATMs, and CDM (cash distributing machines).

SBI said after the first four free cash withdrawals, it would charge Rs 15 plus GST for each cash withdrawal made at bank branches, SBI ATMs, or other banks' ATMs. In terms of cheque book services, the first ten cheque leaves will be provided free of charge each fiscal year.

Following that, a 10-leaf cheque book would cost Rs 40 plus GST, a 25-leaf cheque book will cost Rs 75 plus GST, and an emergency cheque book will cost Rs 50 plus GST for 10 leaves or portion thereof, according to SBI. "Senior citizen clients, on the other hand, are excluded (from cheque book services)," the state-owned bank said.

Any individual can open a BSBD account after providing appropriate KYC (know your customer) documents. These accounts are primarily intended for the poorest members of society to encourage them to begin saving without incurring any penalties or fees. According to research published by IIT-Bombay in April of this year, SBI made over Rs 300 crore by charging service fees to over 12 crore BSBD account holders during 2015-22, news agency PTI reported.

According to the research, SBI charging BSBD account users Rs 17.70 for every debit transaction beyond four was not "fair." Apart from SBI, Punjab National Bank, the second-largest public sector lender, received Rs 9.9 crore from 3.9 crore BSBD accounts over the same time”.

The levying of charges on the BSBDA is governed by RBI rules issued in September 2013. These accounts' users are 'permitted more than four withdrawals in a month, at the bank's discretion, as long as the bank does not charge for them, according to the directive.