RBI’s New 1-Hour UPI Buffer Rule & "Friction-by-Design" for IBPS PO, SBI Clerk & RRB 2026
Picture this — a stranger calls you, pretends to be a bank officer, and tells you your account will be frozen in 10 minutes unless you transfer ₹15,000 right now. In panic, you open your UPI app and send the money. Gone. Instantly. No undo button.
This is exactly the kind of fraud the RBI wants to stop. On April 10, 2026, the Reserve Bank of India released a landmark discussion paper titled “Exploring Safeguards in Digital Payments to Curb Frauds.” It proposes a 1-hour delay on certain UPI transactions — and it’s already the hottest topic in banking current affairs for 2026 exams.
If you’re preparing for IBPS PO, SBI Clerk, RRB PO/Clerk, or any banking exam this year, you must understand this topic cold. Let’s break it down — simply, accurately, and exam-ready.
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The RBI released a public discussion paper proposing new safety rules for digital payments. The biggest proposal: a mandatory 1-hour “cooling-off” window on UPI and IMPS peer-to-peer (P2P) transfers above ₹10,000.
Here’s what that means in plain English — when you send more than ₹10,000 to another person via UPI, your account gets debited immediately, but the money sits with the bank for up to 60 minutes before it reaches the recipient. During that window, you can cancel the transfer if something feels wrong.
Important for your exam: This is still a proposal, not a final rule. The RBI has opened public feedback through its Connect 2 Regulate portal until May 8, 2026. After that, the RBI will finalize guidelines.
Digital fraud in India has grown at a frightening pace. Here are the verified figures from the National Cyber Crime Reporting Portal (NCRP), cited directly in the RBI’s discussion paper:
The core problem is something called Authorised Push Payment (APP) Fraud — where the victim, not the fraudster, initiates the transfer. Since UPI is instant and almost irreversible, there’s no time to think. The 1-hour pause gives users exactly that — time.
For UPI and IMPS P2P transfers above ₹10,000, the money is debited immediately but held for up to 1 hour before the recipient gets it. During this window, the sender can cancel the transaction. Banks can also send alerts if suspicious activity is detected.
Merchant payments (QR code payments at shops) are excluded — your grocery and food deliveries stay instant.
Users will get a single button to instantly disable all digital payments from their account — UPI, IMPS, net banking, and cards — in one tap. If you suspect fraud, you press it and everything freezes immediately. Reactivating may require visiting a bank branch or multi-factor authentication.
For individuals aged 70 and above and persons with disabilities, any transfer above ₹50,000 requires prior approval from a nominated trusted person. This directly targets the fact that 92% of reported fraud value (from NCRP data) involves senior citizens aged 70+.
Fraudsters move stolen money through “mule accounts” — regular accounts used to funnel illegal funds. The RBI proposes placing a ₹25 lakh per year cap on incoming credits for accounts without enhanced due diligence. Amounts beyond this limit are held as “shadow credit” and returned to the sender if not justified within 30 days.
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| Transaction Type | Affected by 1-Hour Rule? |
|---|---|
| UPI P2P transfer above ₹10,000 | ✅ Yes — 1-hour hold applies |
| UPI P2P transfer below ₹10,000 | ❌ No — remains instant |
| Merchant/QR code payments | ❌ No — excluded from rule |
| NACH / e-mandates / bill payments | ❌ No — excluded |
| Payments to “whitelisted” (trusted) contacts | ❌ No — likely exempt |
| Transfers by 70+ individuals above ₹50,000 | ✅ Yes — trusted person approval needed |
Regulators and bankers use the term “friction-by-design” to describe the deliberate introduction of small delays or steps into a payment system — not to make things inconvenient, but to break the psychological pressure fraudsters create.
The RBI’s own discussion paper says it best: “Fraudsters typically rely on creating urgency and maintaining continuous psychological pressure on the victim to prevent deliberation. Introducing lag at the payer’s end breaks the fraudster’s psychological control.”
India’s 60-minute proposed delay is actually shorter than the UK’s 72-hour window or Singapore’s 12-hour model for high-risk actions. The RBI has deliberately kept it shorter to preserve UPI’s speed advantage while adding a targeted safety net.
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The RBI’s 1-hour UPI buffer rule is not about slowing down India’s digital economy. It’s about making sure that the speed of UPI doesn’t become a weapon in a fraudster’s hands. As a banking aspirant, understanding the why behind such policy moves separates a good answer from a great one in your exam.
Stay updated, keep practicing, and remember — banking awareness is not just about memorising facts. It’s about understanding how India’s financial system works and evolves.
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No. As of April 15, 2026, it is still a discussion paper proposal. The RBI has invited public feedback until May 8, 2026. The final rule will be announced after the RBI reviews all responses.
Only peer-to-peer (P2P) transfers above ₹10,000 via UPI and IMPS will face the delay. Merchant payments, NACH, bill payments, and e-mandates are excluded and will remain instant.
Yes. Under the proposal, the sender will have the full 1-hour window to cancel the transaction before the money reaches the recipient. This is the key protective feature of the rule.
The kill switch is a single-tap feature that lets users instantly disable ALL digital payment channels from their account — UPI, IMPS, net banking, and cards — in one action. It’s an emergency freeze tool if you suspect fraud or account compromise.
RBI data shows that transactions above ₹10,000 account for 98.5% of the total value lost to digital fraud, even though they represent only 45% of fraud cases by volume. This threshold targets maximum financial damage while leaving everyday small transactions completely unaffected.
APP stands for Authorised Push Payment fraud. This is when the victim — not the fraudster — initiates the transfer, usually under psychological pressure or deception. Since UPI payments are instant and nearly irreversible, APP fraud causes huge losses. The 1-hour pause directly addresses this by giving victims time to realize they’ve been tricked.
For individuals aged 70 and above and persons with disabilities, any transfer above ₹50,000 requires prior approval from a nominated trusted person. This is because over 92% of reported digital fraud value (from NCRP data) involves senior citizens aged 70+.
Mule accounts are regular bank accounts used by fraudsters to receive and move stolen money. The RBI proposes capping incoming credits at ₹25 lakh per year for accounts without enhanced due diligence. Any amount beyond this is held as “shadow credit” and returned to the sender if not justified within 30 days.
No. Payments to contacts you have already “whitelisted” or marked as trusted on your UPI app are likely to remain instant under the proposal. The delay specifically targets first-time or unfamiliar recipients where fraud risk is highest.
India’s proposed 60-minute hold is shorter than the UK’s 72-hour window and Singapore’s 12-hour model for high-risk transactions. The RBI has deliberately kept it shorter to preserve UPI’s competitive speed advantage while adding a targeted safety net for high-value transfers.
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