Open Banking in India: Financial Innovation for Billions
The previous decade witnessed a major transformation in the Financial and Digital growth in the Open Banking sector of India, and it has unlocked a new era of Fintech growth and positioning the country as a strong adoptee of digital financial solutions. There are two major pillars of India’s Open Banking model: Consent driven data sharing and Digital public infrastructure. This is a unique blend of innovation and regulatory foresight. Instead of a bank mandated API implementation. India’s open banking system is based on Account Aggregator (AA) framework. The framework is regulated by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) which enables the individuals and businesses to share their financial data with third party of choice securely.
How it started
Early milestones for the laying the foundations of Open Banking in India would be the creation of Aadhar Card back in 2009 (the digital identity of the entire nation in which each citizen was assigned a unique number). Banks started e-KYC for their customers in 2015. In 2016, RBI along with other financial regulators of the nation started designing a framework that would allow regulated entities to share financial data through explicit, revocable consent ensuring customer privacy.
Timeline
- 2009: Introduction of Aadhar, India’s biometric digital identity system.
- 2014: Launch of Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana (PMJDY) which made it possible for citizens to open bank accounts with zero to very little account balance, which further lead to massive expansion in bank account ownership.
- 2015: e-KYC regulations and Digi locker made it possible for documents to be secure for financial use and ensured electronic verification.
- 2016: Articulation of Data Empowerment and Protection Architecture (DEPA) for consent-based data sharing and data portability.
- 2019: RBI published Master Directions- Non- Banking Financial Company (Account Aggregator), formally defining the AA Framework.
- 2021: The AA ecosystem went live with Banks, NBFCs and Fintech starting massive data sharing.
- 2022-2024: Growth in consent request across lending, wealth management and insurance cases.
Market Specifics
India’s Open Banking infrastructure is created by a very large population, high mobile phone use and widespread adoption of digital payments. Account Aggregators in India are not allowed to store customer data. They act only as a secure pathway between Financial Information Providers (FIPs) and Financial Information Users (FIUs) ensuring privacy and security. They also focus on scalability at the same time. India’s open banking ecosystem benefits from the widespread adoption of the Unified Payments Interface (UPI), with platforms such as Paytm, PhonePe, and Google Pay normalizing API-driven, interoperable financial services for millions of users.
India – Open Banking Overview
| Aspects | Details |
|---|---|
| Regulatory or Market Driven? | Regulatory-led: RBI enables the framework through regulation, while adoption and product innovation are driven by banks, non-banking financial companies (NBFCs), and fintech firms. |
| Regulators / Governance | RBI: governs the Account Aggregator framework for banking and lending data. Sectoral regulators such as Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (IRDAI), and Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority (PFRDA) participate for investments, insurance, and pensions. |
| Standardisation Body | Account Aggregator ecosystem under RBI oversight: Technical standards for consent artefacts, application programming interfaces (APIs), encryption, authentication, and auditability are defined collaboratively by licensed Account Aggregators and regulated financial institutions. |
| Who Must Comply | Regulated financial institutions acting as Financial Information Providers (FIPs) or Financial Information Users (FIUs), including banks, NBFCs, mutual funds, insurers, and pension entities. Participation is not universally mandatory but increasingly expected for ecosystem interoperability. |
| Consent-Based Data Sharing | Explicit, granular, and revocable user consent is mandatory. Data sharing occurs only for a defined purpose, duration, and data scope through standardized digital consent artefacts managed by Account Aggregators. |
| Core Data & Services | Account Information: Bank accounts, loans, deposits, and transaction data. Extended Financial Data: Mutual fund holdings, insurance policies, and pension information. Note: Payment initiation is not part of the Account Aggregator framework and is handled separately through the Unified Payments Interface (UPI). |
Emerging Use Cases and Key Ecosystem Players
Emerging Use Cases
- Digital Lending: Cashflow-based credit assessment using bank statements and GST data shared via AAs.
- Wealth Management: Consolidated views of investments across mutual funds, equities, and pensions.
- Insurance Distribution: Faster underwriting and claims processing through verified financial data.
- SME Finance: Improved access to working capital for small businesses through realtime financial insights.
Key Ecosystem Players
- Regulators: Reserve Bank of India, Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (IRDAI).
- Account Aggregators: CAMS Finserv, OneMoney, Finvu, NESL AA.
- Financial Institutions: Public and private sector banks, Non-Banking Financial Companies (NBFCs), mutual funds, and insurers.
- Fintechs: Digital lenders, personal finance platforms, and embedded finance providers.
Why This Approach Matters
By separating data access from data storage, the framework builds trust among consumers and since this approach is based on user consent and data minimization. This leads to reduction in risk of misuse of this technology significantly. This model can be used for insurance, mutual funds and future financial services beyond Open Banking. Open Banking can help lower the barriers to entry for Fintech and promote competition amongst financial service providers.
Challenges and What’s Next
The biggest challenge for Open Banking in India remains Awareness. A lot of individuals and small businesses remain unaware about the data sharing guidelines. There’re differences in data formats and update frequencies among different Financial Information Providers. This creates inconsistencies and limiting the effectiveness of the system. Despite these lags, India’s open banking infrastructure is expected to evolve with broad integration of insurance, pensions and capital market data and increase in alignment with global open banking and open finance standards.
Open Banking is directing India towards a more inclusive and transparent, user controlled financial system. It is only starting to grow (it is forecasted to be a 7.5 billion USD market by 2030). As adoption of open banking systems increases, the financial service sector in the country will also grow significantly.
Read more about Open Banking all around the world.
Sources:
https://technoxander.com/directory/open-banking/indian-stack/
https://www.bis.org/review/r210419a.htm
https://testbook.com/amp/ugc-net-commerce/open-banking
https://www.openbankingtracker.com/regulation/india-aa