Ultimate Guide to the Top 50 Arithmetic Questions for 2026 Banking Exams
Ever wondered why India Post Payment Bank can’t give you a loan, or why SBI can do almost everything a bank can? The answer lies in the type of banking licence each of them holds.
For banking exam aspirants preparing for IBPS PO, SBI PO, IBPS Clerk, RRB PO, and similar exams in 2026, questions on banking licences, their features, and key differences appear regularly. This guide breaks it all down — simply, visually, and with exam-ready tips you can actually use.
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All banking licences in India are issued by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) under Section 22 of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949. No entity can carry out banking business in India without an RBI licence.
As of August 1, 2025 (latest official data), India’s commercial banking sector consists of:
🎯 Exam Tip: Total commercial banks = 124 scheduled + 4 non-scheduled = 128 as of August 2025. Source: Wikipedia / RBI Data, August 2025
Universal Bank
Full-service licence. Can do everything — deposits, loans, investments, forex.
Small Finance Bank
Deposits + loans. Focused on underserved segments. Can upgrade to universal bank.
Payments Bank
Deposits only (max ₹2 lakh). Payments and remittances. Cannot give loans.
Regional Rural Bank
Serves rural areas. Owned by Centre (50%), State (15%), Sponsor Bank (35%).
Co-operative Bank
Member-owned. Dual regulated by RBI + Registrar of Cooperative Societies.
Foreign Bank
Foreign institutions operating in India via branches or wholly owned subsidiaries.
Local Area Bank
Covers 3 contiguous districts only. Only 2 operational as of 2025.
🎯 Can you answer this? Which type of bank can accept deposits but NOT give loans?
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A Universal Bank is the most comprehensive type of banking licence. These banks can do it all — accept deposits, give home loans, business loans, offer credit cards, conduct forex transactions, and even manage investments.
Examples: State Bank of India, HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, Punjab National Bank.
The RBI updated the Universal Bank Licensing Guidelines in 2025, making the process more transparent. Key requirements:
🎯 Exam Tip: On-tap licensing for universal banks introduced in August 2016; overhauled in 2025 Guidelines. Source: RBI Universal Banks – Licensing Guidelines, 2025
Small Finance Banks were introduced in 2015–16 to bring banking services to the sections that traditional banks often miss — small farmers, micro-entrepreneurs, unorganised sector workers, and MSMEs.
Examples: AU Small Finance Bank, Equitas SFB, Ujjivan SFB, Capital SFB.
🎯 Exam Tip: SFB min capital = ₹300 crore. CRAR = 15%. PSL target = 75%. Source: RBI (Small Finance Banks – Licensing) Guidelines, 2025
Payments Banks are a unique concept — they can take your deposits and facilitate payments, but cannot give you a loan or issue a credit card. They were designed to push digital payments and financial inclusion to the last mile.
Examples: Airtel Payments Bank, India Post Payments Bank, Paytm Payments Bank, Fino Payments Bank, Jio Payments Bank.
🎯 Exam Tip: Payments Bank deposit cap = ₹2 lakh. They CANNOT lend money. Min capital = ₹100 crore. As of 2026, there are 5 operational payments banks. Source: RBI Payments Bank Guidelines; RBI Circular DoR.LIC.REC.5/16.13.218/2021-22
Regional Rural Banks (RRBs) were set up under the RRB Act, 1976, with the first RRB — Prathama Bank — established on October 2, 1975. Their primary purpose is to provide banking services to rural India — especially small farmers, artisans, and agricultural labourers.
Examples: Baroda UP Bank, Karnataka Gramin Bank, Dakshin Bihar Gramin Bank.
🎯 Exam Tip: First RRB = Prathama Bank (1975). Ownership = 50:15:35 (Centre:State:Sponsor Bank). Regulated by NABARD + RBI. Source: Ministry of Finance / RBI
Co-operative Banks are member-owned institutions governed by the cooperative principle. They serve rural and urban communities, with a focus on agricultural credit, rural financing, and micro-financing.
🎯 Exam Tip: Co-operative banks are dual-regulated — by RBI and the state Registrar. Urban Co-operative Banks now must follow new digital banking directions effective January 1, 2026. Source: RBI / Ministry of Finance
Did you know a Payments Bank or Small Finance Bank can become a Universal Bank? Here’s how:
Payments Bank
₹100Cr min
Small Finance Bank
₹300Cr min
Universal Bank
₹1,000Cr net worth
To convert from SFB → Universal Bank: 5 years of satisfactory track record + net worth ≥ ₹1,000 crore + GNPA ≤ 3% + listed on stock exchange. Source: RBI Universal Banks – Licensing Guidelines, 2025
| Licence Type | Can Lend? | Deposit Limit | Min Capital | PSL Target | # Active (2025) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Universal Bank (PSB) | ✅ Yes | No cap | — | 40% of ANBC | 12 |
| Universal Bank (Private) | ✅ Yes | No cap | ₹500 crore | 40% of ANBC | 21 |
| Small Finance Bank | ✅ Yes | No cap | ₹300 crore | 75% of ANBC | 12 |
| Payments Bank | ❌ No | ₹2 lakh/customer | ₹100 crore | N/A | 5 |
| Regional Rural Bank | ✅ Yes | No cap | — | — | 28 |
| Co-operative Bank | ✅ Yes | No cap | Varies | — | Many |
| Foreign Bank | ✅ Yes | No cap | — | 40% of ANBC | 44 |
| Local Area Bank | ✅ Yes | No cap | ₹5 crore | — | 2 |
Now test yourself on everything above!
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Banking licences in India are not all the same — and that’s exactly why the RBI designed them that way. Different licences serve different purposes: Universal Banks handle everything, Small Finance Banks focus on the underserved, Payments Banks push digital inclusion, and RRBs serve rural India.
For your banking exam, the key is to remember the 3 Ds for each licence type: Definition, Differentiators, and Data (capital requirements, deposit limits, counts). That’s what examiners test.
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The RBI issues several types of banking licences in India: Universal Bank (Public Sector + Private Sector), Small Finance Bank, Payments Bank, Regional Rural Bank, Co-operative Bank, Foreign Bank, and Local Area Bank. Each licence has different eligibility criteria, capital requirements, and permitted activities. All licences are issued under Section 22 of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949. Source: RBI / Ministry of Finance
The maximum deposit limit per customer in a Payments Bank is ₹2 lakh. This was raised from ₹1 lakh in April 2021 by RBI to encourage financial inclusion and allow payment banks to serve MSMEs and small traders better. Payments Banks cannot give loans or issue credit cards. Source: RBI Circular DoR.LIC.REC.5/16.13.218/2021-22
RRBs have a unique ownership structure: Central Government 50%, State Government 15%, and Sponsor Bank (usually a public sector bank) 35%. They are regulated by both RBI and NABARD. India’s first RRB was Prathama Bank, established on October 2, 1975. As of August 2025, there are 28 RRBs operational across India. Source: Ministry of Finance / RBI
Yes! As per the RBI Universal Banks – Licensing Guidelines, 2025, an SFB can voluntarily transition to a Universal Bank if it meets these conditions: minimum net worth of ₹1,000 crore, at least 5 years of satisfactory performance, GNPA ≤ 3% and NNPA ≤ 1% for the last two years, shares listed on a stock exchange, and scheduled bank status. The transition is not automatic — RBI approval is mandatory.
“On-tap” licensing means eligible entities can apply for a banking licence at any time — there’s no fixed window or periodic announcement. The RBI introduced on-tap licensing for Universal Banks in August 2016 and updated the guidelines in 2025. It also applies to Small Finance Banks under the RBI (Small Finance Banks – Licensing) Guidelines, 2025. This contrasts with the older “stop-and-go” approach where licences were issued in batches.
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