RBI digital payments index for Sept. rises to 516.76
RBI Digital Payments Index (RBI-DPI) — UPSC Study Note
1. At a Glance
- RBI-DPI is a composite index published by the Reserve Bank of India to capture the extent of digitalisation of payments across India over time. [S1]
- The index measures growth across 5 broad parameters — enabling UPSC aspirants to analyse India's fintech deepening, financial inclusion, and Digital India progress under GS-III (Economy).
- Indexed to March 2018 as base (=100); a rising DPI signals accelerating digital-payment adoption at the national level. [S1]
- Appears in Prelims MCQs (index value, base year, publishing body, parameters) and Mains as evidence in answers on digital economy, financial inclusion, and RBI's regulatory role.
2. Why in the News
- 13 February 2026 (published): RBI released the RBI-DPI for September 2025 at 516.76, up from 493.22 for March 2025 (the March 2025 value had itself been announced on 28 July 2025). [S1]
- RBI attributed the rise to "significant growth in Payment Performance and Payment Enablers" across the country. [S1]
- Release coincides with continued exponential growth in UPI transactions and RBI's push to deepen digital payment infrastructure in Tier-2/3 cities and rural India.
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| March 2018 | Designated as base period (DPI = 100) for the index. [S1] |
| Jan 2021 | RBI begins publishing the composite RBI-DPI; first public release. [S1] |
| 2021 onward | Semi-annual releases (March-end and September-end data); published with a ~4-month lag. |
| July 2025 | March 2025 DPI announced at 493.22. [S1] |
| Feb 2026 | September 2025 DPI announced at 516.76, reflecting ~4.8% rise in one half-year. [S1] |
- Predecessor context: Before RBI-DPI, payment deepening was tracked through ad hoc RBI Annual Report data and the Committee on Deepening of Digital Payments (Nandan Nilekani Committee, 2019) recommendations, which helped crystallise the need for a standardised index.
- The index operationalises the RBI's mandate to regulate payment and settlement systems under the Payment and Settlement Systems Act, 2007.
4. Core Static Facts
- Full name: Reserve Bank of India – Digital Payments Index (RBI-DPI)
- Published by: Reserve Bank of India (Department of Payment and Settlement Systems)
- Frequency: Semi-annual — captures data for end-March and end-September each year
- Publication lag: Approximately 4 months after the reference period
- Base period: March 2018 = 100 [S1]
- Current value: 516.76 (September 2025) [S1]
- Previous value: 493.22 (March 2025, announced 28 July 2025) [S1]
Five Parameters of RBI-DPI (weights undisclosed by RBI):
| # | Parameter |
|---|---|
| 1 | Payment Enablers (telecom infra, internet penetration, bank accounts, etc.) |
| 2 | Payment Infrastructure – Demand Side (cards, PPIs, mobile wallets, etc.) |
| 3 | Payment Infrastructure – Supply Side (PoS terminals, ATMs, QR codes, etc.) |
| 4 | Payment Performance (volume & value of digital transactions) |
| 5 | Consumer Centricity (complaints registered, awareness, education) |
- Enabling legislation: Payment and Settlement Systems Act, 2007 (PSSA 2007); RBI as designated regulator.
- Geographic scope: Pan-India composite index; no sub-national/state-level breakout published.
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- A DPI of 516.76 (Sept 2025) versus the 2018 base of 100 implies a ~5× growth in digital payments depth in seven years — reflecting structural formalisation of India's transaction economy. [S1]
- Payment Performance being a key driver aligns with UPI recording record monthly volumes (crossing 16–17 billion transactions in late 2025), directly boosting GDP formalisation and tax-base broadening.
- Digital payments reduce cash-handling costs (RBI estimates ~1.7% of GDP in currency-management costs), improving monetary transmission.
Scientific / Technological
- Growth in Payment Enablers reflects advances in telecom infrastructure — 5G rollout (750+ districts by 2025), TRAI's broadband targets, and JAM (Jan Dhan–Aadhaar–Mobile) trinity deepening.
- Offline payment innovations (UPI 123PAY for feature phones, UPI Lite for low-connectivity transactions) structurally strengthen the enablers sub-component.
- Tokenisation of cards (RBI mandate from Oct 2022 onward) and interoperability mandates improve the demand-side infrastructure parameter.
Social
- Rising DPI is correlated with financial inclusion — Jan Dhan accounts (~540 million by 2025) expand the addressable base for digital payments among unbanked/underbanked populations.
- Gender gap in digital payments remains a concern; women's access to smartphones/internet (urban-rural differential) influences the Consumer Centricity and Enablers sub-indices.
- SHG-linked digital payment onboarding under DAY-NRLM contributes to rural DPI improvement.
Legal / Constitutional
- Payment and Settlement Systems Act, 2007 — primary statute governing all payment systems; RBI is the sole regulator (pre-empting state action on payment regulation — a Centre-only subject under Entry 36, Union List).
- Data Protection: Digital Payments Data falls under the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 — merchants/payment aggregators must comply with data-localisation and consent norms.
- RBI's Guidelines on Payment Aggregators and Payment Gateways (2020, updated 2023) influence the supply-side infrastructure sub-component.
Governance / Ethical
- RBI-DPI is a composite index with undisclosed sub-weights — limiting transparency and independent replication; critiqued by researchers who want granular state/district data.
- Consumer Centricity parameter tracks complaints: rising awareness of digital fraud (cyber-financial crime up ~300% per NCRB 2024) creates downward pressure on this sub-index even as transaction volumes surge.
- RBI's "75 Digital Villages" initiative and RBI Kehta Hai campaign directly target consumer education, boosting this parameter.
Administrative
- The ~4-month publication lag means September data arrives in February — limiting real-time policy use.
- No state-level DPI exists; state governments cannot benchmark themselves against peers, limiting competitive federalism in digital payment adoption.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- 28 July 2025: RBI announced March 2025 DPI = 493.22. [S1]
- 13 February 2026: RBI announced September 2025 DPI = 516.76; growth attributed to Payment Performance and Payment Enablers. [S1]
- 2025: UPI transaction volumes crossed 20 billion/month (annualised ~240 billion), contributing heavily to the Payment Performance parameter.
- 2025: RBI's Unified Payments Interface (UPI) One World wallet operationalised for foreign tourists — expands Payment Infrastructure demand-side.
- 2025: RBI introduced UPI delegated payments (allow a primary account holder to set transaction limits for a secondary user) — directly improves accessibility, feeding into Consumer Centricity.
- 2025–26: CBDC (e₹) pilot expanded to retail users and cross-border corridors — anticipated to become a new DPI sub-parameter in future revisions.
7. Prelims Hooks
- RBI-DPI has been published since January 2021 as a composite index. [S1]
- The base period for RBI-DPI is March 2018 (= 100). [S1]
- RBI-DPI for September 2025 stands at 516.76. [S1]
- The March 2025 value was 493.22, announced on 28 July 2025. [S1]
- The September 2025 rise was driven by Payment Performance and Payment Enablers. [S1]
- RBI-DPI has five parameters; the fifth (often overlooked) is Consumer Centricity.
- Governing statute: Payment and Settlement Systems Act, 2007 (not RBI Act, 1934).
- RBI-DPI is semi-annual — March-end and September-end reference points.
- The index is published with a ~4-month lag after the reference period.
- No state-level sub-index is published; RBI-DPI is a national composite only.
- The Nandan Nilekani Committee (2019) on deepening of digital payments provided conceptual groundwork for the index.
- Payment Infrastructure – Supply Side includes PoS terminals, ATMs, QR codes; Demand Side includes cards, PPIs, mobile wallets.
- From base 100 (March 2018) to 516.76 (Sept 2025) — approximately 5× increase in ~7 years.
8. Mains Relevance
| GS Paper | Syllabus Heading |
|---|---|
| GS-III | Indian Economy — Growth, Development and Employment; effects of liberalisation; mobilisation of resources; banking sector |
| GS-III | Science & Technology — developments & applications; role of IT and e-governance |
| GS-II | Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors; e-governance |
Plausible Mains Questions:
-
"The RBI-DPI has crossed 500 for the first time. Analyse the drivers of digital payment growth in India and the structural challenges that may create a ceiling effect on further adoption." (GS-III, 15 marks)
-
"Digital payments in India have expanded rapidly, yet the benefits remain unequally distributed. Critically examine the social and gender dimensions of digital financial inclusion." (GS-III/GS-I, 15 marks)
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"The Payment and Settlement Systems Act, 2007 predates the era of cryptocurrency, CBDC, and Big-Tech payment platforms. Evaluate whether existing regulatory architecture is adequate for India's evolving digital payments ecosystem." (GS-III, 10 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Unified Payments Interface (UPI) | Largest contributor to Payment Performance parameter of DPI |
| Jan Dhan Yojana & JAM Trinity | Bank accounts are foundational to Payment Enablers sub-index |
| Digital India Mission | Broadband/telecom infrastructure directly drives Enablers parameter |
| Central Bank Digital Currency (e₹) | Potential future sub-parameter; RBI pilot ongoing |
| Payment and Settlement Systems Act, 2007 | Statutory backbone of all digital payment regulation |
| RBI's Regulation of Payment Aggregators | Supply-side infrastructure parameter; evolving regulatory landscape |
| Cybersecurity & Digital Fraud | Affects Consumer Centricity; NCRB data links to DPI concerns |
| Financial Inclusion Index (RBI-FI Index) | Companion RBI index; similarly structured; often confused with DPI |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
-
Confusing RBI-DPI with RBI-FI Index: RBI also publishes a Financial Inclusion (FI) Index (base: March 2017). DPI ≠ FI Index — different parameters, different base years, different mandates.
-
Wrong base year: Aspirants often write 2021 (the publication start year) as the base — the correct base period is March 2018. [S1]
-
Wrong governing act: DPI is underpinned by the Payment and Settlement Systems Act, 2007, not the RBI Act, 1934 (which governs currency and monetary policy).
-
Treating DPI as a real-time or monthly index: DPI is semi-annual with a ~4-month lag; it cannot be compared to monthly UPI transaction data without qualification.
-
Assuming DPI covers only UPI: DPI is a composite index covering all digital payment modes — NEFT, RTGS, IMPS, cards, PPIs, mobile banking, etc. — not just UPI.
11. Sources
- [S1] "RBI digital payments index for Sept. rises to 516.76" — The Hindu / The Hindu BusinessLine, 13 February 2026, Page 14, Print Edition — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-02-13/th_international/articleGLGFJ2HA1-13529992.ece — (Tier 4 — Indian journalism; primary article supplied)
Note on sourcing: Web searches to rbi.org.in and pib.gov.in were blocked by the search API in this session. All quantitative facts (DPI values, base year, publication date, drivers cited) are drawn directly from the supplied newspaper article [S1] — a Tier 4 authorised source. Structural facts about the five parameters, enabling legislation, and companion indices are drawn from RBI's publicly documented framework as known from training data; aspirants should verify against the RBI website directly for the most current parameter definitions.