What is Digital E-Rupee? How to Buy & Use Digital Rupee in India?

What is Digital Rupee
Digital E-Rupee India 2026 — What It Is, How to Buy & Use It
Reserve Bank of India · CBDC-Retail · Digital Indian Rupee · e₹ · Updated 2026
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RBI · CBDC · Digital Currency

Your complete, plain-English guide to India’s Central Bank Digital Currency — what it is, how it works, how to get it, and why it matters for every Indian.

e-Rupee · e₹ CBDC-Retail RBI Issued Legal Tender Not Crypto 19 Banks

What Exactly Is the Digital e-Rupee (e₹)?

Simply put, the Digital e-Rupee, also known as e₹, is a legal tender and digital version of physical cash issued directly by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). It has the exact same value as paper money — 1 digital rupee = ₹1 cash, no more, no less.

Official Definition · RBI CBDC

The Retail Digital Rupee (CBDC-R)

The retail e-rupee — formally called Central Bank Digital Currency (Retail) or CBDC-R — is a digital version of physical cash. It is issued in the same denominations as current banknotes and coins (₹50, ₹100, ₹200, ₹500, etc.) but exists entirely in electronic form. Unlike money in your bank account, the e₹ is a token — it is the money itself, not a representation of it.

The e-rupee is available in electronic form and works as a prepaid digital token sent to the beneficiary’s mobile phone via an SMS or a QR code. The beneficiary can redeem it at any merchant that accepts UPI e-prepaid vouchers — without needing a card, payment app, or even internet banking. It is authorised by a verification code shared by the beneficiary.

Legal Tender RBI Issued Token-Based Not Cryptocurrency Offline Capable No Bank Needed
₹1
= 1 e₹
(always)
19
banks in
the pilot
₹1L
max per
voucher
1 yr
max voucher
validity
0%
interest
earned
⚠️

Important: The e-rupee is not a cryptocurrency. It does not fluctuate in value, is not decentralised, carries no investment risk, and is fully backed and issued by the RBI — just like physical currency. Think of it as a digital banknote, not Bitcoin.

The e-rupee was launched to promote digital payments, reduce dependence on physical currency, and enable a new class of programmable, traceable welfare disbursements by the government — all while keeping the currency firmly under the control of India’s central bank.

How to Buy / Get the RBI Digital e₹

You don’t “buy” the e-rupee the way you buy shares or crypto. You load it into a digital wallet by converting your regular bank balance. Here’s how to get access:

Phase-wise rollout of banks

The RBI launched the e₹ pilot in a phased approach, selecting banks gradually before a full rollout. The pilot began in four cities — Mumbai, Bengaluru, New Delhi, and Bhubaneswar — before expanding nationwide.

01
Visit your participating bank’s official app or website
Check if your bank is part of the e₹ pilot (see the full list below). Open the official mobile banking app of that bank.
02
Register for the e₹ Wallet
Look for the “Digital Rupee” or “e₹” section in the app. Register using your mobile number linked to your bank account and complete KYC verification if required.
03
Wait for Closed User Group (CUG) Invitation
Your bank will notify you via SMS and email when you are selected to join the Closed User Group (CUG) — the pilot programme for the digital rupee. Currently, not all users are onboarded simultaneously.
04
Load money into your e₹-R Wallet
Once onboarded, load funds from your linked bank account or various UPI apps into the e₹-R (Retail) digital wallet. This wallet lives on your smartphone — think of it as a digital version of the cash in your physical wallet.
05
Start transacting in e-rupee
Once loaded, you can pay merchants via QR code, send money person-to-person, or use it for any supported transaction — all without needing internet connectivity for small offline transactions.
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Pro tip: The e₹-R wallet is separate from your UPI apps or bank account. It stores the digital tokens directly — like physical notes in a physical wallet. You can also download the standalone e-RUPI app from the Google Play Store or Apple App Store and link it to your bank account.

How to Use the Digital e-Rupee in India

Using the digital rupee is designed to feel as simple as handing over physical cash — but entirely from your smartphone. Here is how the system works end to end:

1
RBI issues e₹ as electronic tokens
The RBI creates and issues the retail digital rupee as an electronic token — a digital file that is the currency, not a promise to pay. These tokens are distributed through banks acting as intermediaries.
2
Your bank gives you a Digital Wallet
Participating banks provide you a secure digital wallet within their app (or via a standalone e-RUPI wallet) on your smartphone. This is where your e₹ tokens live.
3
Pay merchants using QR codes (P2M)
At a shop, mall, or merchant counter, scan the displayed QR code using your e₹ wallet. The payment is settled instantly — the digital token moves directly from your wallet to the merchant’s. No bank settlement delay.
4
Send money directly to individuals (P2P)
Transfer e₹ tokens directly to another person’s digital wallet — like handing them a ₹100 note. The money is theirs the moment they receive it. This is called settlement finality.
5
Use Offline for areas with no connectivity
The RBI has built an Offline mode — allowing e₹ transactions even without a mobile network or internet. This is especially transformative for Tier 3 cities, villages, and remote areas across India.
6
Convert back to bank deposits
You can convert your digital rupees back into regular bank deposits at any time. The conversion is always 1:1. There is no lock-in and no loss of value.
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Government & Welfare Use: The e-rupee is especially powerful for government agencies. It enables programmable, transparent welfare payments and subsidies — for example, an e₹ voucher for cooking gas subsidies can only be spent on LPG, preventing leakage and corruption. This is a game-changer for India’s Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) architecture.

How is the Digital e-Rupee Different from UPI?

This is the most common question — and the answer is more fundamental than most people expect. UPI and e₹ are not competing technologies; they are fundamentally different in nature.

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UPI (Unified Payments Interface)

UPI is a payment rail — a system for moving money between bank accounts. When you pay via UPI, you instruct your bank to debit your account and credit another bank’s account. The money travels through multiple settlement systems (RBI, NPCI, banks). It is always “in transit” until the inter-bank settlement is complete. This introduces a small but real settlement risk.

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Digital e-Rupee (e₹)

e₹ is the money itself in digital form. When you send someone e₹, the digital token moves directly from your wallet to theirs — just like handing over a physical banknote. There is no intermediary bank, no settlement delay, no transit risk. The money is the receiver’s property the instant the transaction completes. This is settlement finality — the same guarantee physical cash provides.

Parameter 🔵 UPI 🟢 Digital e₹
What is it?Payment messaging railDigital currency (token)
Intermediary needed?Yes — banks & NPCINo — direct wallet-to-wallet
SettlementDeferred (T+1 or intraday)Instant (settlement finality)
Settlement riskExists (small)Zero
Bank account required?YesNo (wallet only)
Works offline?NoYes (RBI offline feature)
Interest earned?Yes (on bank balance)No (like physical cash)
AnonymityLimitedPossible for small values
ProgrammabilityLimitedHigh (earmarked for specific uses)
Issued byNPCI (infrastructure)RBI directly

“With e-rupee, there is no intermediary. It is the electronic equivalent of handing cash over to another person — the money is never ‘in transit’, and there is no need for inter-bank settlement.”

Why Did the RBI Launch the Digital e-Rupee?

The RBI’s concept document, published ahead of the e₹ launch, outlined four principal motivations:

Cut physical cash costs Printing, storing, transporting, and destroying physical currency costs the government thousands of crores each year. A digital rupee eliminates much of this overhead while maintaining sovereign legal tender status.

Accelerate digital payments India’s digital payments revolution via UPI has been transformational, but cash still dominates in rural and semi-urban areas. e₹ — especially with its offline feature — can reach where UPI still struggles.

Drive financial inclusion The Offline feature of e₹ enables transactions in remote areas with poor connectivity. Even without a bank account, a citizen can hold and spend e₹ via a basic mobile phone.

Safe alternative to crypto Private cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin carry extreme volatility and regulatory uncertainty. e₹ gives Indians a safe, RBI-backed digital currency with zero investment risk and full legal standing.

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Who benefits most? Government agencies using it for targeted welfare delivery · Remote and rural citizens gaining access via offline mode · Businesses wanting instant, guaranteed settlement · Individuals seeking anonymous small-value transactions

Who Can Use the Digital e-Rupee?

The digital e-rupee is designed to be accessible to every Indian citizen, business, and government body. Here’s a breakdown of who benefits most and how:

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Government Agencies & Regulatory Bodies

Digital e-rupee is especially useful for government agencies and regulatory bodies. It enables them to provide welfare benefits and subsidies to the intended beneficiaries transparently and efficiently. e-RUPI also ensures that the funds are used for the specific purpose or activity for which they are issued — thus preventing leakage and corruption. For example, a fuel subsidy voucher can only be redeemed at a fuel pump, and an education voucher only at a school.

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Individuals & Businesses

You can use e-RUPI for personal or business transactions — buying goods and services, paying bills, booking tickets, or making everyday payments. Any Indian citizen with a mobile phone and an account with a participating bank can register for a digital rupee wallet. Even those without a traditional bank account can hold and spend e₹ using a basic mobile device, making it a powerful tool for financial inclusion.

Unbanked & Underbanked Citizens Those without access to traditional banking can hold and spend e₹ using just a mobile phone — no bank account required.

Rural & Remote Residents With the offline feature, e₹ can be transacted without internet or mobile network — reaching India’s most connectivity-challenged regions.

Merchants & Small Businesses Any UPI-enabled merchant can accept e₹ via QR code — no separate hardware or app needed beyond existing QR infrastructure.

Corporates & Institutions Businesses can use the wholesale CBDC (CBDC-W) for large-value inter-bank and intercompany settlements with instant settlement finality.

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Key use case — Government Welfare: The government can issue e₹ earmarked for specific schemes — cooking gas subsidies, food coupons, education fees, healthcare — ensuring every rupee reaches the right beneficiary and is spent on the right purpose. This makes e-RUPI a revolutionary tool for India’s Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) architecture.

What Does the Digital e-Rupee Mean for Everyday Users?

With the digital rupee, we could be looking at a whole new era of convenience in digital payments. Transferring funds will be the literal equivalent of handing cash over — totally instantaneous, with no intermediary involved. Here is what the e₹ means for you in practice:

Instant, Friction-Free Payments
Sending e₹ is the digital equivalent of handing someone a ₹100 note — it is completely instantaneous. There is no settlement delay, no “pending” status, and no possibility of reversal once transferred. The funds become the receiver’s property the moment the transaction is done. This is especially useful for high-frequency, small-value transactions.
Offline Transactions — A Game Changer for Remote India
The RBI has built an Offline feature into the e₹ system, allowing transactions to occur even without a mobile network or internet connection. This is especially beneficial for remote areas where the penetration of digital payments has historically suffered. A farmer in a village with no internet can now pay and receive money digitally — for the first time.
Reduction in Cash Dependence & Digital Fraud
A digital currency would reduce dependence on cash and significantly reduce fraud in digital transactions. Since e₹ tokens are centrally issued by the RBI, counterfeit tokens are technically impossible. Unlike card-based or account-based payment systems, there are no card numbers to steal or credentials to phish.
Better Government-to-Citizen Fund Transfers
The government can use the e-rupee to improve the mechanism of directly transferring funds to beneficiaries of welfare schemes. Funds can be programmed to arrive only to verified beneficiaries, spent only on specific goods or services, and tracked without any human intermediary — eliminating corruption and ensuring every rupee reaches its intended recipient.
Reasonable Anonymity for Small Transactions
One feature of physical cash is anonymity — there is no digital trail. The RBI has suggested that “reasonable anonymity for small-value transactions” could be a desirable option for CBDC-R. This means you could potentially transfer small amounts without leaving a complete record — just like handing over a ₹50 note. However, such anonymous transactions will likely be capped at a certain value to prevent misuse.
No Interest — e₹ is Spending Money, Not Saving Money
It is important to note that e-rupees will not bear any interest — the RBI has confirmed this, noting that physical cash does not carry interest either. The e₹ is designed purely as a medium of exchange, not a savings instrument. To earn returns on your money, you would need to move it to a savings account, FD, or investment product.

“A digital currency would reduce dependence on cash, reduce fraud in digital transactions, and let the government improve the direct transfer of funds to scheme beneficiaries — with zero leakage.”

Benefits of the Digital e-Rupee

The digital rupee brings a set of advantages that make it a convenient and efficient option for both consumers and businesses. Here are the core benefits:

Fast & Easy Payments
e-Rupee digital payments are fast and easy, as they do not require any intermediary or bank account. You can simply scan a QR code or input an SMS string to make or receive payments instantly — at any participating shop, mall, or merchant.
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Cost-Effective — Zero Transaction Fees
e-Rupee transactions are completely cost-effective, as they do not involve any transaction fees or charges. You save money by avoiding fees levied by banks, payment gateways, or other service providers. Both sender and receiver transact for free.
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Secure & Private
e-Rupee transactions are secure and private, as they do not expose any personal or financial information. You can maintain your anonymity and confidentiality while making payments — especially for small-value transactions where “reasonable anonymity” is supported by the RBI.
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Inclusive — Reaches the Unbanked
e-Rupee transactions are inclusive, as they reach out to the unbanked and underbanked segments of the population. Users who do not have access to traditional banking services can use e-rupee to fully participate in the digital economy — with just a basic mobile phone.

In addition to the above core benefits, the digital e-rupee also delivers:

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Works Offline
Payments without internet or mobile network — a revolution for Tier 3 cities, villages, and remote India.
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Programmable Money
Government can earmark e₹ for specific uses (fuel, food, education) — preventing leakage and ensuring correct subsidy use.
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Reduces Fraud
RBI-issued tokens cannot be counterfeited. Reduces fraud in both cash handling and digital transaction systems.
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Eco-Friendly
No printing, transportation, or destruction of physical notes — dramatically reducing the environmental cost of currency management.
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Note on interest: Like physical cash, the digital e-rupee does not earn any interest. This is by design — the RBI wants e₹ to function as a medium of exchange (spending money), not a savings instrument. If you want your money to earn returns, keep it in a savings account, FD, or mutual fund.

Which Banks Support Digital e-Rupee?

The RBI’s e₹ pilot has expanded steadily. Here are all 19 banks currently participating in the digital rupee programme:

# Bank Name Type Pilot Phase
1State Bank of India (SBI)Public SectorPhase 1
2ICICI BankPrivate SectorPhase 1
3Yes BankPrivate SectorPhase 1
4IDFC FIRST BankPrivate SectorPhase 1
5HDFC BankPrivate SectorPhase 2
6Union Bank of IndiaPublic SectorPhase 2
7Bank of BarodaPublic SectorPhase 2
8Kotak Mahindra BankPrivate SectorPhase 2
9Punjab National Bank (PNB)Public SectorExpanded
10Canara BankPublic SectorExpanded
11Indian BankPublic SectorExpanded
12UCO BankPublic SectorExpanded
13Bank of MaharashtraPublic SectorExpanded
14Bank of IndiaPublic SectorExpanded
15Axis BankPrivate SectorExpanded
16IndusInd BankPrivate SectorExpanded
17Federal BankPrivate SectorExpanded
18Karnataka BankPrivate SectorExpanded
19IDBI BankPublic SectorExpanded
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To use the e₹, simply look for the Digital Rupee or e₹ section within your bank’s official mobile app. Alternatively, download the dedicated e-RUPI app from the Google Play Store or Apple App Store, register with your mobile number, and link your bank account to begin.

The Future of Digital e-Rupee in India

The e-rupee could have a transformative effect, deepening and widening the reach of digital payments across India’s farthest corners. It is important to note that the RBI intends the e₹ to complement — not replace — existing forms of money, including physical cash and UPI.

19+
Banks enrolled

From 4 in Phase 1, the programme now spans all major public and private banks across India.

100%
Offline capable

The offline feature will allow e₹ transactions in remote areas with zero connectivity — a first in digital payments.

₹1L
Per voucher limit

Current cap is ₹1 lakh per voucher, though regulators can revise this as the programme matures.

140Cr
Potential users

Every Indian with a mobile phone is a potential e₹ user — the largest addressable market for any CBDC globally.

“In the next few years, will the e-rupee become as much a way of life for businesses and consumers as UPI? India’s track record with digital payments — from 0 to ₹20 lakh crore monthly via UPI — suggests the answer may well be yes.”

What to watch for

Cross-border payments: The RBI is actively exploring e₹ for international remittances and trade settlements, which could significantly reduce forex costs for Indian exporters and the diaspora.

Programmable money at scale: Imagine PM Kisan funds that can only be spent on agricultural inputs, or education subsidies that can only be used for school fees. e₹’s programmability could eliminate subsidy leakage entirely.

Interoperability with UPI: Future developments are expected to integrate e₹ seamlessly with existing UPI rails, so users won’t even notice a distinction — they’ll just pay and receive, faster and safer than ever.

e-Rupee FAQs — Every Common Question Answered

The digital Indian rupee is officially known as the e-Rupee or e₹. Its formal RBI designation is the Central Bank Digital Currency (Retail), or CBDC-R for the retail version used by everyday consumers, and CBDC-W for the wholesale version used by financial institutions for large-value inter-bank settlements.
You don’t invest in the e-rupee — it is not an investment instrument. Its value is always exactly equal to ₹1. To get it, register with a participating bank’s app, join the pilot programme, and simply load money from your bank account into your e₹ digital wallet. The RBI expanded the pilot across FY2023–24 and is continuing to scale.
The e-rupee operates on a strict 1:1 parity with the Indian Rupee — meaning 1 e₹ = ₹1 INR always. It does not fluctuate, appreciate, or depreciate. It is not an investment; it is a digital cash equivalent.
Download the e-RUPI app from the Google Play Store (Android) or Apple App Store (iOS). Once downloaded, register with your mobile number linked to your bank, complete the verification process, link your bank account, and you are ready to use it for digital transactions.
The validity of an e-RUPI voucher is determined by the Issuer Bank or Payer PSP based on the specific use case. The maximum validity is one year per voucher. After expiry, the voucher amount is typically returned to the source account.
The maximum amount per e-rupee voucher is currently ₹1,00,000 (₹1 lakh) per voucher, unless the regulator sets a different limit for a specific use case. For example, welfare vouchers may have much lower capped amounts.
No. Like physical cash, the e-rupee does not earn any interest. The RBI has explicitly stated this by design — e₹ is meant to function as a medium of exchange, not a savings or investment vehicle. If you want your idle money to grow, move it to a savings account, FD, or mutual fund.
Absolutely not. The e-rupee is the exact opposite of a private cryptocurrency in key ways: it is issued and controlled by the RBI (centralised), it has a stable and fixed value (₹1 always = 1 e₹), it is legal tender with full government backing, and it carries zero investment risk. Private cryptos like Bitcoin are decentralised, volatile, unregulated in India, and carry significant risk.
Yes — this is one of the most powerful aspects of the e-rupee. A person without a traditional bank account can hold and spend e₹ using a basic mobile phone. This makes it a key tool for financial inclusion among India’s unbanked and underbanked population, especially in rural areas.

Issued by the Reserve Bank of India · CBDC-Retail Programme · Updated 2026

Sources: RBI Concept Note on Central Bank Digital Currency (Oct 2022) · RBI e-Rupee pilot announcements (FY2023–24) · Official bank announcements for e₹ pilot phases.

This blog is for informational and educational purposes only. Always refer to the official RBI website for the latest guidelines and updates on the digital rupee programme.

RBI Official Website  ·  NPCI  ·  Government of India