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Fixed Deposit vs Recurring Deposit: Which One Should You Choose

By Priya Sharma26 May 20265 min read
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FD vs RD: Which deposit scheme suits your financial goals? Compare interest rates, flexibility, tax benefits, and returns to choose wisely.

Two Pillars of Safe Saving: FD and RD

Fixed Deposits (FDs) and Recurring Deposits (RDs) are the most popular savings instruments in India, trusted by over 250 million depositors. Both are offered by banks and post offices, carry zero principal risk, and provide guaranteed returns. The difference lies in how you invest — lump sum vs monthly instalments.

According to RBI data, bank deposits in India exceed ₹200 lakh crores, with FDs and RDs accounting for a significant majority. Understanding which is better for your situation is a foundational financial decision.

Fixed Deposit (FD): One Investment, Fixed Returns

A Fixed Deposit requires a lump sum investment upfront. The tenure typically ranges from 7 days to 10 years, with interest paid monthly, quarterly, or at maturity.

  • Minimum Investment: ₹1,000 (bank FD), ₹500 (post office FD)
  • Tenure: 7 days to 10 years
  • Interest Rate: 3.00% - 7.75% p.a. (2026, varies by bank and tenure)
  • Interest Payout: Monthly, quarterly, or at maturity
  • Loan Against FD: Available at 0.5-1% above FD rate

Recurring Deposit (RD): Disciplined Saving Month by Month

A Recurring Deposit builds a corpus through fixed monthly contributions. It's essentially a RD version of an SIP — ideal for people with regular income who want a structured savings habit.

  • Minimum Investment: ₹100-500 per month
  • Tenure: 6 months to 10 years
  • Interest Rate: 3.50% - 7.00% p.a. (typically 0.25-0.5% lower than FD)
  • Maturity: Lump sum at end of tenure
  • Premature Withdrawal: Allowed with reduced interest

Returns Comparison: FD vs RD

Let's compare a ₹5 lakh corpus over 3 years:

| Scenario | Fixed Deposit | Recurring Deposit | |---|---|---| | Monthly Investment | ₹1,00,000 lump sum | ₹13,200/month × 36 months | | Interest Rate | 7.00% p.a. | 6.50% p.a. | | Total Deposited | ₹1,00,000 | ₹4,75,200 | | Maturity Amount | ₹1,23,226 | ₹5,00,000 (approx) | | Effective Return | ~23% total | ~5% total |

The FD gives a slightly higher rate, while the RD's lower rate is offset by the fact that not all money is locked in for the full tenure.

Tax Benefits on FDs and RDs

Tax-Saving FD (80C): Tax-saving FDs with a 5-year lock-in qualify for deduction under Section 80C of the Income Tax Act, up to ₹1.5 lakhs per annum. The interest earned is taxable.

Regular FD/RD Interest: Interest earned on FD/RD is fully taxable as "Income from Other Sources." Banks deduct TDS (Tax Deducted at Source) at 10% if annual interest exceeds ₹40,000 (₹50,000 for senior citizens).

Post Office RD: Same tax treatment as bank RD — interest is taxable.

Senior Citizens: Senior citizens get 0.50% higher interest rate and can submit Form 15H to avoid TDS if total income is below the taxable threshold.

When to Choose FD vs RD

Choose FD if:

  • You have a lump sum amount to invest (bonus, inheritance, sale of asset)
  • You want the highest possible interest rate
  • You need a loan against your deposit (FDs offer better loan terms)
  • You want to ladder deposits for regular income (multiple FDs maturing at intervals)

Choose RD if:

  • You want to build a habit of regular savings
  • You have a regular monthly income and prefer forced discipline
  • You're saving for a specific goal with a fixed timeline (child's fees, down payment)
  • You want to avoid the temptation of a large balance sitting idle

Senior Citizen FD and RD Rates 2026

Senior citizens (60+) earn 0.25-0.50% extra on both FDs and RDs at most banks:

  • SBI Senior Citizen FD: 6.50% - 7.75% p.a. (depending on tenure)
  • HDFC Senior Citizen FD: 6.60% - 7.95% p.a.
  • Post Office Senior Citizen RD: 6.20% - 7.50% p.a.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which gives better returns: FD or RD?

FDs typically offer 0.25-0.5% higher interest rates than RDs for the same bank and tenure because banks pay interest on a lump sum for the full period in FD, while RD deposits accumulate gradually. A ₹1 lakh FD at 7% for 3 years earns more than a ₹1 lakh total RD at 6.5% for 3 years, even though the latter involves monthly deposits.

Can I withdraw my FD or RD before maturity?

Yes, both allow premature withdrawal, but with penalties. FD premature withdrawal typically reduces the interest rate by 0.5-1% from the contracted rate. RD premature withdrawal calculates interest on the amounts actually deposited for the period they were held. Some banks also charge a small penalty fee. Emergency provisions exist — 1-3 months' interest may be forfeited.

Is FD better than RD for tax planning under Section 80C?

Only tax-saving FDs with a 5-year lock-in qualify for 80C deduction. Regular FDs and RDs do not offer 80C benefits. If your goal is tax-saving, a tax-saving FD is better than an RD. However, the 5-year lock-in means no premature withdrawal — choose only if you can commit the funds for 5 years.

Both Have Their Place

FDs and RDs aren't mutually exclusive — many financial plans use both. Use an FD to park your emergency fund or a windfall, and an RD for systematic savings toward a goal. Use our FD vs RD Calculator to compare exact returns for your amount and tenure.

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Written by Priya Sharma

Finance writer at FinWiz24, covering personal finance, credit cards, and banking in India.