Source: RBI Circular
Context:
On Thursday, April 9, 2026, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) issued a landmark circular to tackle the primary bottleneck in cross-border payments: the beneficiary leg. This is the time taken from when a bank receives a payment message from abroad to when the money actually reflects in the customer’s account.
As India remains the world’s largest recipient of remittances (surpassing $135 billion in 2025), these new rules aim to align Indian banking with the G20 roadmap for cheaper, faster, and more transparent international payments.
THE NEW TIMELINES & RULES
The RBI has shifted the responsibility onto beneficiary banks to eliminate the “dead time” where funds sit in bank accounts but are not accessible to the recipient.
1. Immediate Customer Intimation
- Rule: Banks must inform the customer immediately upon receiving an inward payment message from a foreign bank.
- Non-Business Hours: If the message arrives after operating hours, the bank must notify the customer at the start of the next business day.
2. Nostro Account Reconciliation
- The Old System: Many banks previously waited for “End-of-Day” (EoD) statements to confirm they had received the money in their foreign accounts (Nostro accounts) before crediting the Indian customer.
- The New Rule: Banks must now perform reconciliation on a near real-time basis or at periodic intervals not exceeding one hour.
3. Same-Day Credit Mandate
- Banks are now required to credit inward payments received during foreign exchange market hours on the same business day.
- For individual residents, banks are encouraged to use Straight-Through Processing (STP)—an automated system that credits funds without manual intervention, provided the risk and FEMA checks are clear.
THE “NOSTRO” FACTOR
A Nostro Account is an account that an Indian bank (e.g., SBI) holds in a foreign bank (e.g., JP Morgan in the US) in foreign currency.
When your relative sends money from the US, it first lands in the Indian bank’s Nostro account in New York. The delay happens because the Indian branch in Mumbai needs to confirm the money is actually there before giving you the INR equivalent. By mandating 1-hour reconciliation, the RBI ensures that “confirmation” happens almost instantly.
KEY BENEFITS FOR STAKEHOLDERS
| Stakeholder | Primary Benefit |
| Individual Recipients | Faster access to funds for family maintenance, education, or emergencies. |
| Exporters | Improved working capital cycles; funds from global sales are available the same day. |
| Economy | Enhanced liquidity and faster circulation of foreign exchange in the Indian market. |
| Banks | Competitive edge by offering speed; however, they must invest in better automated reconciliation tech. |
BACKGROUND CONCEPTS: Q&A FORMAT
Q: What is “Straight-Through Processing” (STP)?
A: STP is an automated electronic payment process that allows for the entire credit cycle—from receiving the foreign message to depositing INR in the account—to happen without any manual data entry or human eyes. This reduces errors and speeds up the process from hours to seconds.
Q: Why do banks wait for the “Nostro” statement?
A: When money is sent from New York to Delhi, the Delhi bank first receives it in its account in New York (the Nostro account). Previously, many Indian banks only checked this account once a day. The 2026 RBI mandate forces them to check every hour to ensure you get your money faster.
Q: Is receiving money from relatives abroad taxable?
A: Under Section 56(2) of the Income Tax Act, money received from “specified relatives” (parents, siblings, spouse) is generally tax-free. However, it must be declared, and a proper Purpose Code (like Family Maintenance) must be used.
Q: What is the difference between Inward and Outward remittance?
A: Inward is money coming into India (e.g., an NRI sending money home). Outward is money leaving India (e.g., an Indian parent paying a child’s tuition fee in London). Outward remittances are usually subject to TCS (Tax Collected at Source).
CONCEPTUAL MCQs
Q1. According to the new RBI mandate, what is the maximum permissible gap for banks to reconcile their Nostro accounts?
A) 15 Minutes
B) 30 Minutes
C) 1 Hour
D) 4 Hours
E) End-of-Day (EoD)
Q2. If an inward payment message is received after banking hours, when must the bank inform the customer?
A) Within 24 hours.
B) By the end of the week.
C) Immediately at the start of the next business day.
D) They do not need to inform the customer until the credit is successful.
E) Only if the amount exceeds ₹10 Lakh.
Q3. Which international roadmap is the RBI aligning with by mandating faster cross-border payments?
A) IMF Sustainability Goals
B) G20 Roadmap for Cross-Border Payments
C) WTO Trade Facilitation Agreement
D) BRICS Financial Integration Plan
E) ASEAN Banking Framework
Q4. What is a “Nostro Account”?
A) An account held by a foreign citizen in an Indian bank.
B) An account held by an Indian bank in a foreign bank, in foreign currency.
C) A specialized account for crypto-currency trading.
D) A zero-balance savings account for farmers.
E) An account used exclusively for government tax collection.
Q5. What was the approximate value of remittances India received in 2025?
A) $50 Billion
B) $85 Billion
C) $100 Billion
D) $135 Billion
E) $200 Billion
ANSWERS & EXPLANATIONS
| Question | Answer | Explanation |
| Q1 | C | Banks can no longer wait until the end of the day; 1 hour is the new limit. |
| Q2 | C | Communication transparency is key to the new “immediate intimation” rule. |
| Q3 | B | The G20 goals emphasize cheaper, faster, and more accessible global payments. |
| Q4 | B | “Nostro” comes from the Latin for “Ours” (Our money in your bank). |
| Q5 | D | India continues to be the world leader in inward remittances. |
EXAM RELEVANCE
| Exam | Focus Area | Relevance Level |
| RBI Grade B | Phase II (Finance – Payment Systems & FEMA) | Critical |
| UPSC CSE | GS-3 (Indian Economy – External Sector) | High |
| SBI / IBPS PO | General Awareness (Banking Technology & Operations) | High |





