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RD Calculator

Calculate your Recurring Deposit maturity value with quarterly compounding. Compare different tenures and monthly deposits instantly.

🏦 Bank Deposits 📊 Quarterly Compounding ⚡ Instant
₹500₹1,00,000
4%9%
6 mo10 yrs (120 mo)
Maturity Amount
₹0
Total Deposited
₹0
Interest Earned
₹0
Effective Annual Yield
0%

Load Bank Rate (2-Year RD)

SBI
6.5%
General
HDFC
7.0%
General
ICICI
7.1%
General
Post Office
6.7%
5 Yr Fixed
Small Finance
7.5%+
Varies
Senior Citizen
7.75%
+0.5% extra

Cumulative Deposit vs Maturity Value

What is a Recurring Deposit (RD)?

A Recurring Deposit (RD) is a savings instrument offered by banks and post offices where you deposit a fixed amount every month for a predetermined tenure. At the end of the tenure, you receive your total deposits plus the accumulated interest — all in one lump sum.

Unlike a Fixed Deposit (FD) where you invest a lump sum upfront, an RD is designed for people who want to save small amounts regularly. Think of it as a forced savings habit: you commit to depositing ₹5,000 every month for 2 years, and at maturity, you get back approximately ₹1.32 lakh (at 6.5% rate) — more than if you had simply kept the money in a savings account.

RD vs FD — Key Differences

FeatureRecurring Deposit (RD)Fixed Deposit (FD)
Investment StyleMonthly installmentsLump sum upfront
Minimum Amount₹100/month (varies by bank)₹1,000–₹5,000 lump sum
Interest RateSlightly lower (0.1–0.25%)Slightly higher
CompoundingQuarterlyQuarterly or monthly
FlexibilityFixed monthly commitmentOne-time, flexible tenor
Best ForRegular savers, salariedLump sum available
Tax on InterestTaxable as incomeTaxable as income

RD Formula — Quarterly Compounding Explained

Banks use quarterly compounding for RDs. This means interest is compounded 4 times per year. The standard RD maturity formula is:

RD Maturity Formula (Quarterly Compounding) M = R × [(1 + r/4)^(4n) – 1] / [1 – (1 + r/4)^(–1/3)]

Where: M = Maturity Value | R = Monthly installment | r = Annual interest rate (decimal) | n = Tenure in years

This formula accounts for the fact that each monthly installment earns compound interest for a different number of quarters (the first installment earns interest for the full tenure, while the last installment earns interest for just one month).

Worked Example

Monthly deposit: ₹5,000 | Rate: 6.5% | Tenure: 24 months (2 years)

  • Total deposited: ₹5,000 × 24 = ₹1,20,000
  • Maturity amount (quarterly compounding): ≈ ₹1,28,600
  • Interest earned: ≈ ₹8,600
  • Effective annual yield: ~7.17% (slightly higher than stated 6.5% due to quarterly compounding effect)

Quarterly compounding tip: The effective annual yield of a 6.5% RD is actually ~6.66% due to quarterly compounding. This is why RD interest appears to be slightly higher than the stated nominal rate.

Current RD Rates (Indicative — 2025–26)

Bank1 Year RD2 Year RD5 Year RDSenior Citizen
SBI6.80%6.50%6.50%+0.50%
HDFC Bank6.60%7.00%7.00%+0.50%
ICICI Bank6.70%7.10%7.00%+0.50%
Post Office (PO-RD)6.70%
Small Finance Banks7.50%+7.50%+7.75%++0.50%

* Rates are indicative and change frequently. Check your bank's website for current rates before investing.

RD vs SIP — Which is Better for Monthly Savings?

FactorRD (Bank)SIP (Mutual Fund)
Returns6–7.5% (guaranteed)10–15% (market-linked, historical)
Safety100% safe (DICGC insured up to ₹5L)Market risk present
Tax on ReturnsTaxable as income12.5% LTCG (above ₹1.25L for equity)
Inflation BeatingBarely (6.5% vs 6% inflation)Yes (12% vs 6% inflation)
LiquidityGood (penalty only 0.5–1%)Excellent (T+3 days)
Ideal ForShort goals (1–3 yrs), emergency fundLong-term goals (5+ yrs)

Smart strategy: Use RD for short-term goals (1–3 years) where capital protection matters most. Use SIP for goals 5+ years away where market returns can significantly outperform. Never use RD as a long-term wealth creation tool — inflation erodes real returns.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the penalty for premature RD withdrawal? +
Most banks charge a 0.5%–1% reduction in the applicable interest rate. If your RD rate was 6.5% and you close early, you'll receive 5.5%–6% instead. Some banks require a minimum tenure (3–6 months) before premature closure. Post Office RDs have a 3-year lock-in — no premature closure before 3 years.
Is TDS deducted on RD interest? +
Yes. TDS at 10% is deducted if total interest from all deposits in a bank exceeds ₹40,000/year (₹50,000 for senior citizens). Submit Form 15G (or 15H for seniors) if your total income is below the basic exemption limit to avoid TDS deduction.
What is the minimum tenure for an RD? +
Most banks offer RDs from 6 months to 10 years in flexible monthly intervals. Post Office RD has a fixed 5-year tenure. Some banks like SBI offer as short as 3 months. For maximum interest, choose tenures that align with the bank's peak rate slabs (often 1–2 years or 3–5 years).
Can I change the monthly deposit amount in an existing RD? +
No. The monthly installment is fixed at the time of opening and cannot be changed. If you want to invest more, open a second RD. Missing installments typically incurs a penalty of ₹1.50 per ₹100 per month for private banks.
Can I open a joint RD account? +
Yes, most banks allow joint RD accounts (up to 2 holders). Both share equal ownership. In case of the primary holder's death, the surviving holder retains full ownership. TDS is deducted in the primary account holder's PAN.
What are Post Office RD rates and benefits? +
Post Office RD currently offers 6.7% p.a. with quarterly compounding, for a fixed 5-year tenure. Benefits: government-backed (100% safe), minimum ₹100/month, available at all post offices. Ideal for rural investors and those seeking government-guaranteed savings.
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₹1.84 lakh crore sits unclaimed in India.

Because families didn't know where to look. Fix that in 10 minutes.

Start your Quillo →