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  4. FD Calculator
  5. Hyderabad
Investment

Fixed Deposit Calculator — Hyderabad

Hyderabad's equity-first IT/ITES workforce still maintains FDs for emergency funds and short-term goals. Current bank rates in Hyderabad average 7% — but after 30% income tax, the effective yield is only 4.82%. Compare this against PPF at 7.1% tax-free (equivalent to 10.3% pre-tax).

Verified Formula|Source: Reserve Bank of India & AMFI|Last verified: April 2026Methodology
₹
₹5.0K₹1.00 Cr
%
1%12%
yrs
1 yrs10 yrs

Most Indian banks compound FD interest quarterly. Some small finance banks and NBFCs offer monthly compounding at slightly higher rates.

Maturity Value

₹7.11 L

Interest Earned

₹2,10,873

Detailed Breakdown

Principal

₹5,00,000

Effective Annual Rate

7.29%

Compounding

Quarterly

Tenure

5 Years

Investment vs Interest

Principal (70.3%)
Interest (29.7%)

Tax Impact (TDS on FD Interest)

If your annual FD interest exceeds Rs 40,000 (Rs 50,000 for senior citizens), the bank deducts TDS at 10%. For this FD, estimated annual interest is ₹42,175. Estimated total TDS over 5 years: ₹1,087. Your post-TDS maturity is approximately ₹7,09,786.

Submit Form 15G/15H if your total income is below the taxable limit to avoid TDS deduction.

Fixed Deposit Rates in Hyderabad: Emergency Fund and Short-Term Goals

Telangana's registration charge is only 0.5% — the lowest among all metro cities. On a Rs 80 lakh home in Gachibowli, this saves Rs 40,000 vs the 1% charged in Maharashtra or Tamil Nadu. Hyderabad is also non-metro for HRA purposes, meaning IT professionals get the 40% HRA cap, not 50%.

Hyderabad offers the best salary-to-cost-of-living ratio among metros — real estate in the western corridor (Gachibowli-Kondapur) has appreciated 60%+ in 5 years. Fixed deposits remain the backbone of conservative savings in Hyderabad, particularly for capital protection, emergency funds, and goals with a 1–5 year horizon. At 7% p.a., major bank branches in HITEC City / Financial District provide the certainty of knowing exactly how much your deposit will be worth at maturity — a quality that no equity investment can match. Andhra Bank (now Union Bank) and Bank of India are particularly prominent in Hyderabad's FD landscape.

FD Returns in Hyderabad: What Your Money Actually Earns at 7%

At 7% p.a. with quarterly compounding, here is what a Rs 5 lakh FD earns at different tenures at major Hyderabad banks:

  • 3 years: Maturity Rs 6,15,720 — total interest earned Rs 1,15,720
  • 5 years: Maturity Rs 7,07,389 — a common tax-saving FD tenure
  • 10 years: Maturity Rs 10,00,799 — for long-range goal planning
  • Senior citizen rate (7.5%): 5-year maturity Rs 7,24,974 — an additional Rs 17,585 compared to standard rate

Always verify current rates directly on the bank's website before investing — FD rates are revised quarterly in line with RBI repo rate decisions and the bank's own liquidity needs. Branches in HITEC City / Financial District have rate boards updated in real time.

FD Taxation in Hyderabad: The Full Cost at 7%

FD interest is taxable as "Income from Other Sources" at your applicable income slab rate — every rupee of FD interest is added to your gross income for the year. For a Hyderabad professional earning Rs 11.0 lakh annually (placing them in the 20–30% tax bracket), the effective FD yield after tax is:

  • At 30% slab: Post-tax yield = 4.82% p.a. (versus 7% nominal)
  • At 20% slab: Post-tax yield = 5.54% p.a.
  • Comparison — PPF at 7.1% tax-free: Pre-tax equivalent for 30% bracket = 10.3% — significantly superior to FD on an after-tax basis

TDS applies at 10% when total FD interest from a single bank exceeds Rs 40,000/year (Rs 50,000 for senior citizens). Submit Form 15G (below age 60, income below basic exemption) or Form 15H (senior citizens) to your bank's HITEC City branch at the start of each financial year to avoid TDS deduction. Telangana's professional tax of Rs 2500/year slightly reduces take-home, but does not reduce FD interest income for TDS purposes — the TDS threshold applies to the raw interest earned, not net income.

FD vs SIP for Hyderabad's IT/ITES Professionals: The Numbers at 7%

For Hyderabad's IT/ITES workforce, FDs serve a specific role: 3–6 months of expenses as an emergency fund, and parking for short-term goals (1–3 years). At 7% (4.82% post-tax at 30% slab), FDs are not wealth creators for the long term — they are capital protectors. Use the calculator above to model your specific FD scenario, and the SIP calculator for long-term wealth creation goals.

Hyderabad Real Estate 2025 and FDs: The Safe Parking Alternative

Kokapet and Narsingi (Financial District extension) led Hyderabad growth at 25–30% in FY2025. HITEC City luxury projects crossed Rs 12,000/sqft. Affordable zones — Miyapur, Kukatpally — remain accessible at Rs 5,500–7,000/sqft. When Hyderabad professionals sell property or receive large one-time proceeds (property sale, inheritance, ESOP vesting), a common interim strategy is to park proceeds in a 1–2 year FD at 7% while evaluating the next investment. This "safe parking" approach earns7% (taxable) rather than the 3–4% of a savings account, while keeping the capital fully liquid after the FD tenure. Small finance banks operating in Hyderabad offer 7.5–8.2% for the same tenures, with DICGC insurance covering up to Rs 5 lakh per depositor — making them a higher-yield but equally safe alternative for amounts within this limit.

Hyderabad's Employers and FD Investment Patterns

Employees at Microsoft, Google, Amazon in Hyderabad receive annual bonuses that often trigger FD investments. For Hyderabad professionals in the 30% bracket, a tax-saving FD (5-year lock-in, Section 80C, maximum Rs 1.5 lakh/year) saves Rs 46,800 in taxes, though the post-tax yield of 4.82% still lags ELSS historical returns significantly. If your primary goal is tax saving under 80C, ELSS (3-year lock-in, equity returns) is generally preferable to the tax-saving FD (5-year lock-in, 7% FD returns) — unless capital protection is a non-negotiable requirement.

Disclaimer

FD rate of 7% is the indicative average for major banks in Hyderabad as of 2025. Rates vary by bank, tenure, and deposit amount, and are subject to quarterly revision. Senior citizen rates are typically 7.5% (+0.5% premium). Post-tax returns calculated at 30% slab including 4% cess. TDS threshold of Rs 40,000/year per bank per Income Tax Act. This is not personalised financial advice. Consult a Chartered Accountant for tax planning guidance specific to your Hyderabad income situation.

Frequently Asked Questions — FD in Hyderabad

Hyderabad's fixed deposit landscape is shaped by two distinctive forces: the Telugu NRI community's large NRE FD holdings (Hyderabad sends one of India's largest proportions of US-settled Telugu IT professionals) and the city's bifurcated economy between HITEC City's high-income IT workforce and the older city's trading, manufacturing, and government service communities with more conservative, FD-centric savings preferences. SBI FD rates (FY2024-25): 6.80% (1-2 year), 7.00% (2-3 year), 6.50% (5-year); Andhra Pradesh and Telangana apply professional tax under their respective schedules — Hyderabad (Telangana) PT at approximately Rs 2,400-2,500/year for relevant salary brackets. Union Bank of India (formed by the merger of Andhra Bank and Corporation Bank in 2020) retains deep historical customer relationships with Telugu families across Hyderabad — many residents hold multi-decade FD relationships with Andhra Bank that now operate under Union Bank's digital platform. Mahindra Finance FD (Rs 5,000 minimum, 7.75-8.00%, CRISIL AA+) is widely popular among Hyderabad's automotive belt workers in Medchal-Malkajgiri and Sangareddy districts. HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, and Axis Bank all have strong HITEC City branch networks serving the high-income IT workforce. Small Finance Banks (AU SFB, Equitas SFB) offer 8.0-8.25% with full DICGC coverage for depositors seeking premium rates with bank-level safety.

Key Insight — Hyderabad

Hyderabad's defining FD insight is the Telugu NRI community's NRE FD vs FCNR(B) decision — a choice that determines whether currency risk during the FD tenure is borne by the depositor or neutralised by the instrument structure. NRE (Non-Resident External) FD: rupee-denominated, interest fully tax-free in India, principal and interest fully repatriable to the US (or UK, Australia, etc.), no TDS. Rate: 6.80-7.35% depending on bank and tenure (same as domestic FD rates). Risk: if the rupee depreciates 5% against USD during the 2-year FD tenure, the repatriated USD value of the maturity amount is 5% lower than when deposited in USD terms — the depositor bears this currency risk. FCNR(B) (Foreign Currency Non-Resident Banking): USD (or GBP, EUR, AUD, CAD) denominated FD, held in India, interest and principal paid in the same foreign currency, no rupee conversion during tenure. Rate: USD FCNR 5.00-5.25% (approximately) — lower nominal rate than NRE FD, but the depositor bears zero exchange rate risk during the tenure. For Telugu professionals in the US who plan to return to Hyderabad within 2-3 years: NRE FD in rupees is the better choice — they want to accumulate rupee wealth for Hyderabad property or living expenses on return. For Telugu professionals who may stay in the US long-term and want to invest in India temporarily: FCNR(B) in USD eliminates the INR depreciation concern and is repatriated in USD. The rule of thumb: if your future expenses will be in INR (Hyderabad return plan), use NRE FD in INR. If your future expenses will be in USD (US permanent residency plan), use FCNR(B) to keep the currency in USD.

Hyderabad's Financial Context and FD Calculator

SBI Hyderabad FD: 6.80% (1-2 year), 7.00% (2-3 year), 6.50% (5-year). Senior citizen: +0.50%. Union Bank of India (former Andhra Bank): 6.75-7.25% depending on tenor, strong legacy presence. Telangana PT: approximately Rs 2,400/year for relevant income brackets (deductible Section 16(iii) old regime). NRE FD rates (for NRIs): SBI 6.80-7.00% tax-free for NRI, fully repatriable. HDFC Bank NRE FD: 7.00-7.35% (tenure-specific), popular among HITEC City NRI returnees. FCNR(B): USD 5.00-5.25% (equivalent to approximately 7.5-8.5% when hedging cost is excluded — benefits NRIs who want currency risk protection). Mahindra Finance FD (NBFC, CRISIL AA+): 7.75-8.00% (2-5 year), Rs 5,000 minimum, no DICGC coverage. AU Small Finance Bank: 7.75-8.10% (1-2 year), DICGC covered. Bajaj Finance FD (CRISIL AAA): 7.5-8.1%, widest NBFC credibility in Hyderabad IT community. Post office TD: 7.0% (2 year), 7.5% (5 year, 80C). SCSS: 8.2% quarterly, max Rs 30L, available at SBI and post offices citywide. TDS: 10% on FD interest > Rs 40,000/year per bank (Rs 50,000 senior citizen). DICGC: Rs 5L per depositor per bank. Hyderabad HITEC City IT (30% slab): SBI FD 7.0% × 0.70 = 4.90% post-tax.

NRE FD vs FCNR(B) for Hyderabad's Telugu NRI Community

Hyderabad sends tens of thousands of Telugu IT professionals to the United States annually — Hyderabad is the largest single contributor of H-1B visa holders among Indian cities. These US-based professionals maintain deep financial ties to Hyderabad: parental support, property investments in Gachibowli, Kondapur, and Nallagandla, and eventual return planning. NRE FD at HDFC Bank Hyderabad (7.00-7.35% depending on tenure): the Telugu NRI in Seattle or Austin earns fully tax-free rupee interest while the NRE FD maintains rupee denomination. When the professional returns to Hyderabad for good, the NRE FD maturity directly funds property purchase or transition living expenses in rupees — no currency conversion needed at the time of need. FCNR(B) at State Bank of India (USD 5.00-5.25% for 1-5 year): the same Seattle-based Telugu professional who is uncertain about the India return timeline can hold USD FCNR(B) — if they stay in the US, the USD deposit matures in USD with no rupee depreciation impact over 3-5 years. Both NRE FD and FCNR(B) are fully repatriable (principal and interest can be sent to any foreign bank account). Both are tax-free on interest in India. The differential: FCNR(B) USD rate (5.0%) appears lower than NRE FD INR rate (7.0%), but this difference largely reflects the interest rate parity between USD and INR — theoretically, the INR depreciates versus USD by approximately 2% per year on average, making the effective dollar-adjusted returns of NRE FD and FCNR(B) similar over long tenures. For 1-2 year tenures where currency prediction is difficult, FCNR(B) eliminates the exchange rate uncertainty entirely — valuable for NRIs who need predictable USD returns.

Corporate FDs and HITEC City IT Professionals — Mahindra Finance, Bajaj Finance, and NBFC FD Safety

Hyderabad's IT workforce in HITEC City (Mindspace, Raheja IT Park, DLF Cybercity, WaveRock) brings high earnings with equity-first financial mindsets. FDs serve as emergency fund and short-term goal instruments. Corporate FDs from Mahindra Finance (CRISIL AA+, 7.75-8.00%) and Bajaj Finance (CRISIL AAA, 7.5-8.1%) are popular among Hyderabad's Rs 10L-25L CTC IT professionals who want higher rates than SBI without the complexity of SFBs. The key NBFC FD safety distinction: NBFC FDs are NOT covered by DICGC. Unlike bank FDs (scheduled commercial banks, SFBs) which carry DICGC Rs 5L insurance, NBFC FDs carry only the creditworthiness of the NBFC. Bajaj Finance (CRISIL AAA — highest credit rating, issued by CRISIL) and Mahindra Finance (CRISIL AA+) are highly rated NBFCs with diversified loan books and strong parentage. However, the credit risk is technically non-zero even for AAA-rated entities. The risk-return trade-off: Bajaj Finance at 8.1% versus SBI at 7.0% — the 110bps premium compensates for the DICGC coverage absence. For Hyderabad IT professionals depositing up to Rs 10-20L in Bajaj Finance FDs: the risk is managed by the CRISIL AAA rating, the NBFC's market capitalisation and diversified funding base. For deposits above Rs 25L: consider diversifying across Bajaj Finance, Mahindra Finance, and PSU banks (DICGC covered) rather than concentrating in any single NBFC. Hyderabad's Union Bank of India (former Andhra Bank) legacy customers: strong existing customer relationships enable preferential FD rates for bulk deposits or senior citizens at branch manager discretion — worth negotiating for Rs 5L+ FD placements.

More Questions — FD Calculator in Hyderabad

I'm in the US (H-1B, Telugu, based in New Jersey). I want to invest Rs 20L in India from my NRE account. Should I open NRE FD or FCNR(B)? I plan to return to Hyderabad in 3 years.

Given your 3-year India return plan with Hyderabad expenses, NRE FD in INR is the correct choice for your Rs 20L. Here's why: You will need INR on return — Hyderabad property, car, living setup will all be in rupees. NRE FD matures in INR directly, no USD-to-INR conversion needed on the day of return. HDFC Bank NRE FD at 7.10-7.35% (3-year tenor) on Rs 20L: maturity value approximately Rs 24.4-24.8L in 3 years. This directly funds your Hyderabad transition costs. FCNR(B) at USD 5.0% on equivalent USD amount: if you convert Rs 20L to USD today (say at USD/INR 84 = approximately $23,800), FCNR(B) at 5.0% for 3 years matures to approximately $27,600. On return: convert $27,600 back to INR at whatever the USD/INR rate is in 3 years (if INR depreciates to 90, you get Rs 24.8L — similar to NRE FD. If INR depreciates to 95, you get Rs 26.2L — better than NRE FD). FCNR(B) benefits you if INR depreciates faster than the interest rate differential implies. Since you want rupees in 3 years and the NRE FD provides a known INR maturity amount with tax-free interest and zero conversion hassle, NRE FD is simpler and adequately rewarding. Split the Rs 20L: HDFC NRE FD Rs 10L (7.35%, 3-year) + SBI NRE FD Rs 10L (7.00%, 3-year) — spread for institutional diversity. Both are DICGC covered up to Rs 5L each, but NRE FD principal above Rs 5L is not DICGC covered — this is standard for all NRE FDs above Rs 5L at any single bank.

I work at HITEC City (Infosys, Rs 14L CTC, 20% slab). Should I put my emergency fund in SBI FD or Small Finance Bank? Are SFBs safe?

Small Finance Banks (SFBs) are safe for your emergency fund up to Rs 5L and offer meaningfully better rates than SBI. Regulatory framework: SFBs are licensed by the Reserve Bank of India under the Banking Regulation Act 1949 — the same regulatory framework as SBI, HDFC Bank, and ICICI Bank. They are NOT cooperative banks, NOT NBFCs. SFBs are mandatory DICGC members — your deposit up to Rs 5L is insured. AU Small Finance Bank (Jaipur-HQ, pan-India, major Hyderabad presence): 8.00-8.10% for 1-year FD, fully DICGC-covered. Equitas Small Finance Bank (Chennai-HQ, major Hyderabad presence): 8.00-8.25% for 1-year FD, DICGC. Compared to SBI: 6.80% (1-year). The 120-145bps difference on your emergency fund of Rs 5L: Rs 5L × 8.0% = Rs 40,000/year at SFB vs Rs 5L × 6.80% = Rs 34,000/year at SBI. Extra interest: Rs 6,000/year for identical DICGC coverage. Post-tax at 20% slab: SFB Rs 32,000 vs SBI Rs 27,200. Practical suggestion: park your emergency fund (target Rs 3.6-6L for 6 months of Rs 60,000-1,00,000 monthly expenses) in AU SFB or Equitas SFB at 8.0-8.25%, DICGC covered. Keep it in 1-year auto-renewing FD. For amounts above Rs 5L in emergency fund: use SBI (DICGC covers the second tranche) or liquid mutual fund (daily liquidity, similar return). The SFB is the optimal choice for your profile — regulated, DICGC-insured, 100-145bps above SBI.

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