Best loan rates
in India

The lowest external benchmark lending rate today is 5.25%, offered by HSBC Bank. We benchmark 15 banks against the RBI repo rate of 5.25%, every day.

Live · updated 11 May 2026·EBLR & MCLR · Public · Private · Foreign · SFB

5.25%

RBI policy rate

Cheapest

5.25%

HSBC Bank

Cheapest

8.35%

HDFC Bank

Banks tracked

15

· · ·

The rate stack

From the RBI's policy rate to your loan, to your deposit.

Banks take in deposits at the bottom of the stack and lend at the top. The gap between the two is the system-wide : the bank's spread on every rupee that passes through.

01 · Cost of policy

5.25%

Where banks borrow overnight from the RBI

See full curve

02 · Cost of borrowing

EBLR

7.61%

+236 bps over repo

1Y MCLR

8.83%

+358 bps over repo

15 banks · external benchmark vs internal cost

03 · Return on deposit

Average 1Y

6.60%

Gap to EBLR +101 bps · to MCLR +223 bps

See FD leaderboard

The system-wide sits at +101 bps on -linked loans and +223 bps on . EBLR resets within 90 days of any move; MCLR loans typically reset annually. A CFO with both an idle-cash and a working-capital line is paying both sides of whichever benchmark their loan sits on.

Banks vs bonds

The premium a corporate pays to borrow from a bank instead of the sovereign.

For each tenor: average 1-year+ MCLR across 15 tracked banks, set against the same-tenor G-Sec yield. The gap is the bank's spread, and the floor on what a comparable corporate bond would price at.

Tenor MCLR G-SecSpread
  1. 3-month
    MCLR
    8.51%
    G-Sec
    5.27%
    +324 bps
  2. 6-month
    MCLR
    8.31%
    G-Sec
    5.44%
    +287 bps
  3. 1-year
    MCLR
    8.83%
    G-Sec
    5.86%
    +297 bps
  4. 2-year
    MCLR
    8.91%
    G-Sec
    6.23%
    +267 bps
  5. 3-year
    MCLR
    9.01%
    G-Sec
    6.39%
    +262 bps

Average MCLR across 15 banks · G-Sec from RBI curve · as of 11 May 2026

Capera observation

1-year MCLR averages 8.83% across 15 banks vs the same-tenor G-Sec at 5.86%, a spread of 297 bps. That is into the band where rated corporates start running bond issuance math.

Most retail home loans price off EBLR (repo + bank's spread). Most corporate term loans and pre-2019 retail loans sit on MCLR. Treasury teams have a third option: raise a bond at G-Sec + a credit spread of roughly 75–150 bps for an AAA.

When the MCLR-vs-G-Sec spread exceeds ~250 bps at a given tenor, the bond route typically wins on all-in cost for issuers with capital-market access, even after factoring legal, listing, and rating fees.

See the full sovereign curve →

The leaderboard

0 / 15

  1. No banks in this filter.

HSBC Bank leads on EBLR at 5.25%. On 1-year MCLR, the cheapest is HDFC Bank at 8.35%. Tomorrow's leader can be different, since banks revise on different schedules.

Capera observation

EBLR runs from 5.25% at HSBC Bank to 9.15% at Axis Bank. The gap of 390 bps is worth ₹39,000 per crore per year.

Lending vs deposit spread

What each bank charges, vs what it pays back.

Toggle between two reference combos: EBLR loan against a 1-year retail FD, or 1-year MCLR loan against the same FD. Banks rank by widest gap.

A note on what this is, and isn't. Most real-world exposures don't sit on these exact rates. Treasurers park idle cash in money-market funds, T-bills, or shorter FDs (3M/6M, not always 1Y); corporates borrow on negotiated MCLR spreads or working-capital lines, not raw EBLR. Use this as a comparable benchmark across banks, not a P&L of your own positions.

Compare

10 banks

Bank
  1. 01

    Axis Bank

    Pvt
    +290bps
    FD 6.25EBLR 9.15
  2. 02

    IndusInd Bank

    Pvt
    +210bps
    FD 6.75EBLR 8.85
  3. 03

    Central Bank of India

    PSU
    +205bps
    FD 6.20EBLR 8.25
  4. 04

    State Bank of India

    PSU
    +190bps
    FD 6.25EBLR 8.15
  5. 05

    Punjab National Bank

    PSU
    +180bps
    FD 6.30EBLR 8.10
  6. 06

    Union Bank of India

    PSU
    +175bps
    FD 6.25EBLR 8.00
  7. 07

    Bank of Baroda

    PSU
    +165bps
    FD 6.25EBLR 7.90
  8. 08

    ICICI Bank

    Pvt
    +125bps
    FD 6.25EBLR 7.50
  9. 09

    Kotak Mahindra Bank

    Pvt
    +110bps
    FD 6.50EBLR 7.60
  10. 10

    RBL Bank

    Pvt
    -100bps
    FD 7.00EBLR 6.00
1-year

Capera observation

The average bank charges 155 bps more on loans than it pays on deposits. Axis Bank runs the widest gap at 290 bps. Every rupee that sits there is paying both sides of the spread.

The Rate Compass

Where each bank sits on the borrow / save grid.

What each bank charges to lend, plotted against what it pays you to deposit. Medians split the chart into four pricing strategies. Top-left is where customers win on both sides; bottom-right is where the bank does.

CUSTOMER WINScheap loan, generous depositSAVER FRIENDLYhigh deposit, costly loanBORROWER FRIENDLYcheap loan, low depositBANK WINScostly loan, stingy depositEBLR · cost to borrow1-year FD · return on deposit8.056.25RBL BankEBLR 6.00 · FD 7.00ICICI BankEBLR 7.50 · FD 6.25Kotak Mahindra BankEBLR 7.60 · FD 6.50Bank of BarodaEBLR 7.90 · FD 6.25Union Bank of IndiaEBLR 8.00 · FD 6.25Punjab National BankEBLR 8.10 · FD 6.30State Bank of IndiaEBLR 8.15 · FD 6.25Central Bank of IndiaEBLR 8.25 · FD 6.20IndusInd BankEBLR 8.85 · FD 6.75Axis BankEBLR 9.15 · FD 6.25
Narrowest gapRBL Bank-100 bpsWidest gapAxis Bank290 bps

Hover a marker for the bank · click to open

Frequently asked

Questions, answered.

For CFOs

If you hold cash and carry debt at the same bank, you're paying both sides of the spread.

Capera continuously observes deposit and lending rates across the entire Indian market, routes idle cash to the highest yield, and flags when your loan is priced above the cheapest alternative.

How Capera works