City
Epaper

No fee to be charged for updating nominees for PPF accounts: Finance Ministry

By ANI | Updated: April 3, 2025 13:41 IST

New Delhi [India] April 3 : The Union Government on Thursday announced that the financial or banking institutions will ...

Open in App

New Delhi [India] April 3 : The Union Government on Thursday announced that the financial or banking institutions will not charge any fee for updating nominees for Public Provident Fund or PPF accounts.

In an official notification, the Ministry of Finance added that necessary changes have now been made in the Government Savings Promotion General Rules 2018 via Gazette Notification 02/4/25, which will mandate the banking institutions to make changes without any charge.

As widely reported, the financial institutions were charging extra fees for adding nominees.

The rule comes as the Banking Amendment Bill 2025, passed recently, allows the nomination of up to four persons for the payment of depositors' money, articles kept in safe custody and safety lockers.

The order is effective from April 2, as per the official notification.

The notification reads, " In the Government Savings Promotion General Rules 2018, in the Schedule II, under Fee to be charged for services, the word and figures "(b) Cancellation or charge of nomination - Rs 50" shall be deleted."

In a post on microblogging site X (formerly Twitter), Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said, "Recently I was informed that a fee was being levied by financial institutions for updating/modifying nominee details in PPF accounts."

The post added, "Necessary changes are now made in the Government Savings Promotion General Rules 2018 via Gazette Notification 02/4/25 to remove any charges on the updation of nominees for PPF accounts."

PPF is a long-term investment scheme in India, offering tax benefits and guaranteed returns, with a minimum investment of Rs 500 and a maximum of Rs 1.5 lakh annually.

The Government proposed to merge the Government Savings Certificates Act, 1959 and the Public Provident Fund Act, 1968, with the Government Savings Banks Act, 1873.

The main objective of the common act is to bring uniformity to the provisions of different small savings schemes presently governed by the three Acts.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

TechnologyS. Korea to roll out cash aid late this month amid Middle East crisis

BusinessS. Korea to roll out cash aid late this month amid Middle East crisis

InternationalEU condemns "Illegal" Israeli expansion: 30 new West Bank settlements spark global outcry

CricketPSL 2026: Daryl Mitchell Walks Away In Frustration At Usman Tariq’s Pause; Video Goes Viral

EntertainmentRavi Babu’s 'Razor' to hit screens on May 8

Business Realted Stories

BusinessSEBI launches three new IT platforms to transform regulatory landscape

BusinessNSE to attain nanosecond order delivery acknowledgement across currency, commodity, cash, and equity derivatives segments

BusinessCommerce Ministry, Ports Department review packaging and shipping challenges amid West Asia crisis

BusinessTripura emerges fastest-growing economies in NE, attracts Rs 2,000 cr investment interest at Bengaluru conclave

Business4.05 lakh PNG connections gasified, not LPG: Petroleum Ministry