Starting April 1, 2026, several significant changes to digital payment and banking rules in India have come into effect as the Reserve Bank of India has introduced stricter rules aimed at reducing fraud and strengthening accountability. Under the new framework, two-factor authentication (2FA) will become mandatory for all digital transactions, fundamentally changing how users pay via UPI, cards, and mobile wallets.
The move comes in response to the growing risks associated with OTP-based systems, which have become vulnerable to fraud techniques such as phishing and SIM swap scams.
The RBI’s new framework requires every digital payment (UPI, cards, or wallets) to be verified using at least two independent factors. Under the revised rules, OTP will remain one component of authentication, but it must be combined with another independent verification step.
This means one-time passwords (OTPs) alone will no longer suffice, and every transaction will require an additional verification layer such as a PIN, password, biometric authentication, or secure token. In effect, all payments will pass through two levels of security, making the process slightly longer but significantly safer.
To balance security with convenience, banks will use a risk-based approach.
Alongside this, the RBI has also tightened accountability norms, placing greater responsibility on banks and payment platforms to ensure secure systems.
The National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) has introduced several efficiency-focused limits.
Beyond digital payments, other financial and travel-related changes are also coming into effect. Indian Railways has revised its ticket cancellation policy, reducing the refund window. Passengers cancelling tickets within eight hours of departure will no longer be eligible for refunds, compared to the earlier four-hour cutoff.
Meanwhile, the National Highways Authority of India has increased the FASTag annual pass fee from Rs 3,000 to Rs 3,075 for the financial year 2026–27, effective April 1.
From April 1, 2026, new PAN card rules make Aadhaar-only applications invalid, requiring additional proof of birth. Applicants must provide supporting documents like a birth certificate or passport. Additionally, the name on the PAN must match Aadhaar, and new category-specific forms (Form 93-96) are mandatory.
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