ICICI Bank Hikes Savings Minimum Balance to βΉ50,000
Breaking: ICICI Bank has sharply raised the minimum monthly average balance for new savings accounts to βΉ50,000 in metro and urban areas. This fiveβfold hike takes effect from August 1, 2025.
What Just Happened
From August 1, 2025, ICICI Bank now mandates a minimum average monthly balance (MAB) of βΉ50,000 for new savings accounts in metro and urban areas. This is a steep jump from the earlier βΉ10,000. Semiβurban accounts now require βΉ25,000, and rural accounts βΉ10,000. Existing accounts retain old thresholds. Customers who fall short face a penalty of 6β―% of the shortfall or βΉ500βwhichever is lower. The change contrasts with public sector peers who are scrapping or reducing such requirements :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}.
Immediate Impact
| Area Type | Old MAB | New MAB | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Metro / Urban (New accounts) | βΉ10,000 | βΉ50,000 | +β―βΉ40,000 (Γ5) |
| SemiβUrban (New accounts) | βΉ5,000 | βΉ25,000 | +β―βΉ20,000 (Γ5) |
| Rural (New accounts) | βΉ2,500β5,000 | βΉ10,000 | +β―βΉ5,000β7,500 |
| Existing Accounts (All areas) | Old thresholds remain | Same | No change |
Affected Sectors
Retail banking customers, especially in metro and urban areas, will feel the squeeze. Lowerβincome savers may face strain. The move also affects digital banking services, as more customers may switch to zeroβbalance or salary account options. The wider financial inclusion push by the government may be impacted.
Background Context
ICICI Bankβs latest hike is its first such MAB revision since 2015. It reflects a strategic shift toward a more affluent customer base. Meanwhile, many public sector banksβled by SBIβhave eliminated minimum balance requirements entirely since 2020 :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}. The finance ministry recently disclosed PSBs collected nearly βΉ9,000 crore in penalties for MAB nonβcompliance between 2020β25 :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}.
Economic Consequences
The new MAB regime may deter lowβbalance customers and reduce savings in formal banking channels. On one hand, ICICI could reduce operational costs and drive premium deposits. On the other, financial accessibility may suffer. The higher balance could boost fund availability for lending but could also depress liquidity among everyday savers.
Stakeholder Reactions
Customers expressed outrage on social media. Many called the move βelitistβ and questioned its fairness. Some voices even urged an RBI review :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}. Industry watchers say itβs part of a trend to segment banking services by customer segment.
Historical Comparisons
| Year | Bank | Urban MAB | Key Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | ICICI Bank (new accounts) | βΉ50,000 | Fiveβfold hike, highest in domestic banking |
| 2020 | SBI | Zero balance accounts nationwide | Eliminated MAB rules |
| 2025 | HDFC / Axis | βΉ10,000 | Steady thresholds for private banks |
Investor Implications
ICICI Bank investors may view this as a move to upscale client demographics. Higher balances could increase CASA (current & savings account) ratio quality. However, customer attrition is a risk. Retention of highβvalue clients must offset any volume loss. Public bank peers could benefit if displaced customers shift.
LongβTerm Outlook
If customers adapt or transition to other account types, ICICI may sustain higher deposit metrics. Regulatory pushback could still occur. In the long term, ICICI might roll out tiered savings products. Opposition pressure could prompt partial rollback. The impact on India’s wider financial inclusion goals remains to be seen.
Potential Resolutions
Possible remedies include: introducing midβtier accounts with lower MAB; enhancing zeroβbalance offerings; waiving fees for lowβincome demographics; or RBI intervening to set maximum MAB limits. Transparent communication and tiered products may ease public backlash.
Conclusion
ICICI Bankβs dramatic raise in minimum savings balance to βΉ50,000 for new metro/urban accounts marks a bold pivot. It’s a gambleβshifting toward affluent clientele, with potential shortβterm gains and longβterm risks. As customer behavior and regulatory response unfold, the bank must balance strategy with accessibility.

