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Banking Laws Amendment Act, 2025: A Milestone for Depositors and the Indian Financial System for Transparency, Efficiency and Modernization

India enacted the Banking Laws (Amendment) Act, 2025 — updating regulations across core banking legislation to bolster depositor protection, governance, and transparency. Key reforms include a modernised nomination framework, raised thresholds for substantial interest, enhanced audit norms for public banks, and procedural changes for operational efficiency.
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New Delhi: The Indian banking sector stands at a pivotal moment. India announced that the Banking Laws (Amendment) Act, 2025 has been enacted — marking a major overhaul aimed at modernising and strengthening the regulatory, governance, and depositor-protection architecture of banks in India. 

From providing new flexibility to depositors and nominees, to improving audit quality and compliance across public sector and co-operative banks — the Act is being framed as a “step towards New Age Banking in India.” 

Background of Banking Laws Amendment Act 2025

India’s banking regulation has evolved over decades through a series of foundational legislations. These laid the groundwork for a banking system designed to serve a developing economy. 

  • The Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934 established the central bank’s statutory foundation. 
  • The Banking Regulation Act, 1949 offered a uniform legal structure to regulate banking operations. 
  • The State Bank of India Act, 1955 led to the modern incarnation of the State Bank of India, enabling expansion of banking services across rural and semi-urban regions. 
  • Post-nationalisation reforms such as the Banking Companies (Acquisition and Transfer of Undertakings) Act, 1970 and its 1980 counterpart further shaped banking structure and ownership. 
  • Over time, numerous amendments — such as the Banking Regulation (Amendment) Act, 1994, the 2007 amendments, and the Banking Laws (Amendment) Act, 2012 — addressed evolving needs related to governance, liquidity, regulation and flexibility. 
  • More recently, the Banking Regulation (Amendment) Act, 2020 expanded the regulatory reach over cooperative banks. 

However, as India’s economy rapidly digitised and financial inclusion rose — propelled by initiatives such as Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana and identity-based banking (e.g. using Aadhaar), the gap between regulatory frameworks and modern banking reality widened. 

Read also: Government Confirms FDI Limit in Public Sector Banks to Remain at 20%, No Proposal for Increase

The new Amendment Act, 2025, thus emerges as a necessary recalibration — to update definitions, governance norms, depositor safeguards, and audit & reporting standards in line with contemporary banking dynamics. 

Key Reforms Under the Banking Laws Amendment Act 2025

The 2025 Act makes 19 amendments across following five major legislations; 

  • The Reserve Bank of India Act (1934)
  • Banking Regulation Act (1949)
  • State Bank of India Act (1955)
  • Banking Companies (Acquisition and Transfer of Undertakings) Acts of 1970 and 1980. 

The major reforms introduced under the Act include:

1. Modernised Nomination Framework (Sections 10–13): Depositors can now nominate up to four persons for their bank accounts, whether deposit accounts or lockers. It includes two modes of nomination:

  • Simultaneous Nomination: Allocate percentages among nominees (summing up to 100%). 
  • Successive Nomination: A priority-order nominee becomes operative if the prior nominee passes away — ensuring smooth succession. 

> Importance: Much wealth in the banking system remained unclaimed because no nominee was recorded. The improved nomination framework aims to cut delays in claim settlements and ensure families can access assets without lengthy legal procedures. 

2. Redefinition of “Substantial Interest” (Section 3): The threshold for “substantial interest” — a measure relevant to governance and conflict-of-interest rules — has been raised dramatically: from ₹ 5 lakh (dating to 1968) to ₹ 2 crore. 

This change reflects the inflation and scale expansion in India’s banking and corporate sectors, allowing governance and regulatory provisions to stay meaningful in the modern context. 

3. Governance Reforms in Co-operative Banks (Sections 4 & 14): For co-operative banks, the maximum tenure of directors (excluding chairperson and whole-time directors) has been extended from 8 to 10 years. 

This aligns with the 97th Constitutional Amendment Act, 2011 — reinforcing democratic governance and stability in cooperatives. 

4. Audit Reforms & Enhancing Transparency in Public Sector Banks (PSBs) (Sections 15–20): Public sector banks are now permitted to remunerate statutory auditors, allowing them to attract more qualified professionals — thereby improving audit quality. 

PSBs can now transfer unclaimed shares, interest, and bond redemption amounts to the Investor Education and Protection Fund (IEPF), aligning their practices with companies regulated under the Companies Act, 2013. 

5. Procedural & Reporting Efficiency: The Act revises certain operational definitions and statutory deadlines — for instance, redefining “fortnight” in the central bank’s context for clearer regulatory timelines. 

Reporting dates for banks and co-operative banks that earlier referred to ambiguous markers (like “last Friday” or “alternate Fridays”) have now been aligned with the last day of the month or last day of fortnight. This change aims to promote automation, reduce manual work, and improve systemic efficiency. 

Key Implementation Timeline of Banking Laws Amendment Act 2025

The provisions under the Amendment Act have been rolled out in phases:

  • Stage 1 (effective from 1 August 2025): Sections 3, 4, 5, and 15–20 came into force. 
  • Stage 2 (effective from 1 November 2025): Sections 10–13 (which include modernised nomination framework) became operational. 

The staggered implementation allows banks to adjust procedures, compliance mechanisms, and systems without operational disruption. 

Broader Implications of Banking Laws Amendment Act 2025

Strengthening Depositor & Investor Confidence: By simplifying nomination, ensuring smoother succession of assets, and facilitating transfer of unclaimed funds to IEPF — the Act significantly reduces uncertainty for depositors and their families. This increased transparency and convenience aims to boost public trust in the banking system. 

Reinforcing Governance & Accountability: The updated threshold for substantial interest, longer director tenures in co-operative banks, and improved audit & reporting practices strengthen corporate governance across the banking sector. This helps guard against conflicts of interest, mismanagement, and promotes stability. 

Modernising Regulatory Architecture for a Digital Banking Era: The reforms reflect the transformation of India’s banking ecosystem — from paper-based branch banking to a digital, inclusive, and technology-driven system. By updating definitions, processes, and compliance requirements, the Act seeks to bring regulatory frameworks in sync with current realities. 

Operational Efficiency & Reduced Compliance Burden: Standardising reporting cycles and aligning statutory deadlines with accounting cycles will ease operational load on banks, encourage automation, and reduce manual interventions — thereby fostering efficiency and reducing institutional risks. 

Key Challenges & What to Watch

While the Act offers comprehensive reform, certain challenges remain:

Implementation across diverse banks: India’s banking ecosystem includes large public banks, small co-operative banks, regional rural banks, and private banks. Ensuring uniform adoption — especially in smaller cooperatives — will require capacity building.

Awareness among depositors: Many depositors may not be aware of their right to nominate multiple persons or update nominations. Banks and regulators must conduct awareness drives.

Operational readiness: Updating internal systems, audit practices, and compliance processes — especially in legacy banks — might take time.

Nominee disputes & documentation: Even with multiple nominees allowed, clarity in documentation and proper record-keeping will be vital to avoid future disputes.

Despite these, the policy push reflects a forward-looking regulatory mindset.

Read also: India Plans Mega Public Sector Bank Consolidation: Could Reduce Banks to Four Major Institutions


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