
In interior Maharashtra, like in several villages across Bharat, people still travel long distances to withdraw cash from banks or cooperative societies.
The recently proposed plan by the NPCI to enable UPI-based cash withdrawals of up to ₹10,000 at Business Correspondent (BC) outlets presents a practical solution to this long-standing issue, while also carrying broader implications for financial inclusion, last-mile reach, and the future of digital payments in India.
Currently, the Unified Payments Interface (UPI)-based cash withdrawals are restricted to select ATMs and some merchants, with prescribed limits designated for urban areas and rural areas. Extending this facility to BC outlets with a higher ceiling of ₹10,000 will significantly expand accessibility. With over three million BC touchpoints across the country, as per a Grameen Foundation report citing RBI data, many in underserved or semi-urban areas, the impact could be transformative. Customers can initiate a withdrawal using a simple QR code or a UPI app and collect cash from the BC in a single step.
This development offers several opportunities for the payments ecosystem. BCs would evolve from being facilitators of basic banking services to micro cash dispensers, helping bridge the gap between digital and physical cash. Banks could benefit from reduced dependence on ATMs, lowering the burden of cash logistics. For consumers, particularly those hesitant to fully embrace digital, such a facility builds confidence in UPI and highlights its utility beyond peer-to-peer transfers and merchant payments. Importantly, it also generates valuable transaction data, creating the foundation for offering additional services such as credit, insurance, or savings products.
There are, of course, risks that must be managed. BC outlets have, in the past, experienced instances of misuse and fraud, which necessitate strong controls. Real-time monitoring, robust KYC, geofencing, transaction limits, and anomaly detection must be embedded into the framework to ensure safety and trust. Settlement and reconciliation processes will need to be resilient and transparent to handle the larger volume of transactions that this initiative could unleash. We see our payments backbone and reconciliation expertise as fintech quite relevant here, offering secure and auditable settlement flows and API integrations with banks and BC networks.
For the proposal to succeed, a few key enablers are crucial. BCs must be equipped with reliable devices, connectivity, and simple onboarding processes. The customer journey should be as intuitive as existing UPI transactions, with quick QR scans and instant confirmations. Interoperability standards will be vital so that all banks and BCs operate within the same framework. And beyond technology, consumer awareness and agent training will be crucial in ensuring adoption and trust at the grassroots level.
If the RBI and NPCI approve and operationalise this initiative, India could take a significant step toward a hybrid cash-digital economy that serves both convenience and inclusion. For millions of people in semi-urban and rural India, this would mean faster access to cash, without the need for long journeys or reliance on cards. This proposal also presents an opportunity for fintechs, banks, BC networks and payment platforms to reimagine cash flows in an increasingly digital economy.
(The author is Co-founder and business head - Payments at Phi Commerce, a payments solutions provider)
(Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of YourStory.)


