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  4. RD Calculator
  5. Hyderabad
Investment

Recurring Deposit Calculator — Hyderabad

Calculate your RD maturity using current Hyderabad bank rates at 7% p.a. A monthly RD of Rs 9,000 — 10% of Hyderabad's average monthly salary — matures to Rs 4,53,902 in 3 years and Rs 9,58,563 in 5 years. No market risk, fully predictable returns.

Verified Formula|Source: Reserve Bank of India & AMFI|Last verified: April 2026Methodology
₹
₹100₹5.00 L
%
4%10%
mo
6 mo10 yr

Interest compounded quarterly (standard for Indian banks). TDS of 10% applies if annual interest exceeds Rs 40,000.

Total Deposits

₹3,00,000

Interest Earned

₹59,664

Maturity Amount

₹3.60 L

Effective Yield

Annual effective rate

3.69%

TDS Impact

No TDS (interest < Rs 40K/yr)

Nil

Maturity Breakdown

Growth Over Time

Year-by-Year Breakdown

YearDepositsInterestBalance
Year 1₹60,000₹2,311₹62,311
Year 2₹1,20,000₹9,099₹1,29,099
Year 3₹1,80,000₹20,686₹2,00,686
Year 4₹2,40,000₹37,418₹2,77,418
Year 5₹3,00,000₹59,664₹3,59,664

Recurring Deposits in Hyderabad: Guaranteed Monthly Savings at 7%

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.Recurring Deposits are the monthly-savings equivalent of a Fixed Deposit — you contribute a fixed amount each month, earning the bank's FD rate for the chosen tenure, with zero market exposure. In Hyderabad, RDs are most popular among salary earners in IT/ITES and Pharma who want the discipline of forced monthly savings with a guaranteed, pre-known maturity value. Unlike SIPs, there is no uncertainty: you know exactly what Rs 9,000/month will become at the end of your chosen tenure.

RD Maturity at Hyderabad's 7% Bank Rate: Three Scenarios

For a Hyderabad professional depositing Rs 9,000/month (10% of the average Rs 91,667/month salary), here is what different tenures yield at 7% with quarterly compounding:

  • 1 year (12 months): Maturity Rs 1,21,109— total deposited Rs 1,08,000, interest earned Rs 13,109
  • 3 years (36 months): Maturity Rs 4,53,902— total deposited Rs 3,24,000, interest earned Rs 1,29,902
  • 5 years (60 months): Maturity Rs 9,58,563— total deposited Rs 5,40,000, total interest Rs 4,18,563
  • Post Office RD — 5 years at 6.7% (sovereign guarantee): Maturity Rs 9,33,792 — slightly lower return but zero credit risk, backed by the Government of India

Post Office RD: The Overlooked Sovereign Option in Hyderabad

The Post Office Recurring Deposit (PORD) — available at India Post branches across Hyderabad — offers 6.7% p.a. with quarterly compounding for a mandatory 5-year tenure. Unlike bank RDs (insured up to Rs 5 lakh per bank via DICGC), PORD carries a sovereign guarantee from the Government of India — there is no deposit amount limit on the guarantee. For Hyderabad residents depositing above Rs 5 lakh across RDs or for those who want absolute government backing, PORD is the superior safety option.

In Hyderabad, India Post branches in HITEC City and Gachibowli offer PORD account opening with minimal documentation. Online management is available through the India Post Payments Bank (IPPB) app for Hyderabad account holders.

Bank RD vs Post Office RD vs SIP: The Hyderabad Comparison

For a Hyderabad investor saving Rs 9,000/month for 5 years, the three options produce:

  • Bank RD at 7%: Rs 9,58,563— fully taxable interest, quarterly compounding
  • Post Office RD at 6.7%: Rs 9,33,792— sovereign guarantee, slightly lower return, same tax treatment
  • Equity SIP at 12% CAGR: Rs 7,42,377— higher return, market-linked (no capital guarantee), LTCG tax at 12.5% on gains above Rs 1.25 lakh

The SIP produces Rs -2,16,186 more than the bank RD over 5 years — but with market risk. For Hyderabadinvestors whose 5-year goal is non-negotiable (home down payment, child's school fees), the certainty of the RD maturity value is worth the lower return. For goals beyond 7 years, the SIP advantage becomes compelling.

RD Taxation in Hyderabad: TDS and the Rs 40,000 Threshold

RD interest is taxed as income at your applicable slab rate — the same as FD interest. TDS is deducted at 10% when total interest income (RD + FD combined) from a single bank exceeds Rs 40,000/year for regular taxpayers (Rs 50,000 for senior citizens). For a 5-year RD at Rs 9,000/month, the annual interest builds up progressively — by year 3–4 of the RD, the annual interest component can exceed the TDS threshold. Plan accordingly by submitting Form 15G (if income below basic exemption limit) or by spreading deposits across banks to stay below the per-bank TDS trigger.

Telangana&apos;s professional tax of Rs 2500/year reduces take-home but does not affect the RD itself — it simply reduces the amount available to deposit. When calculating your RD budget, subtract PT (Rs 208/month) from take-home first before determining the 10% RD allocation.

Hyderabad Real Estate 2025 and RDs: Short-Term Parking for Property Buyers

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. For Hyderabad professionals saving for a home down payment in HITEC City or Gachibowli, a 2–3 year RD at7% is a common strategy to accumulate a target corpus with certainty. A 900 sqft 2BHK at Rs 7,800/sqft requires approximately Rs 14,04,000 as a 20% down payment. An RD of Rs 58,500/month for 2 years at 7% accumulates close to this target — with the exact maturity known from day one.

Key Financial Facts for Hyderabad RD Investors

  • Average bank RD rate in Hyderabad: 7% p.a.
  • Suggested monthly RD (10% of average income): Rs 9,000
  • Post Office RD rate: 6.7% p.a. (sovereign guarantee, 5-year mandatory tenure)
  • TDS deducted if annual bank interest exceeds Rs 40,000
  • Small finance banks in Hyderabad: 7.4–8% for same tenures (DICGC insured up to Rs 5 lakh)
  • Professional tax in Telangana: Rs 2500/year

Disclaimer

RD calculations use 7% p.a. with quarterly compounding — indicative average for major banks in Hyderabad as of 2025. Post Office RD rate 6.7% as per Ministry of Finance notification. Rates subject to change. RD interest is taxable at income slab rate. TDS threshold Rs 40,000/year per bank. Professional tax Rs 2500/year per Telangana law. This is not personalised financial advice. Consult a Chartered Accountant for personalised guidance.

Frequently Asked Questions — RD in Hyderabad

Hyderabad's recurring deposit landscape reflects the city's dual financial character — a sophisticated pharma and IT sector that uses RD selectively as a goal-based tool, and a large Telangana state government employee base that has been the backbone of bank RD business for decades. The city's significant Muslim population brings Riba (interest) considerations into the RD conversation — Islamic finance alternatives and the role of RD in financial planning for households with religious constraints is a genuine Hyderabad financial planning topic. The Gachibowli and Hi-Tech City IT clusters generate large numbers of young professionals who face the same 'first savings product' decision as their Bengaluru peers. Old Hyderabad's trading community (Laad Bazaar, Sultan Bazaar) uses short-duration bank RDs as a working capital tool between trading seasons. The city's rapidly growing real estate market (Raidurgam, Tellapur, Financial District) creates property-related goal savings in the Rs 10-30L range over 3-5 year horizons — a sweet spot for hybrid approaches where RD provides stability.

Key Insight — Hyderabad

Hyderabad's defining RD insight is the Telangana government employee's 'double fixed income' problem — where a Hyderabad state government employee receiving state GPF (at Telangana's state rate), already invested in LIC endowments (popular with government employees), and also contributing to group insurance schemes has 70-80% of their monthly savings in fixed-income instruments, and adding an RD 'for safety' creates dangerously over-concentrated fixed-income exposure at a time when equity's 12% CAGR compound advantage is most powerful. The Telangana government employee's portfolio x-ray: Ramaiah, Deputy Collector, Hyderabad (basic Rs 85,000/month, 40 years old, 20 years to retirement): GPF contribution 10%: Rs 8,500/month (fixed income, 8% government rate). LIC Jeevan Anand premium: Rs 8,000/month (effectively ~5% internal rate of return after charges). Group Insurance (GIS): Rs 1,200/month. APGLI (Andhra Pradesh Government Life Insurance): Rs 2,500/month. RD he just started: Rs 10,000/month. Total fixed-income savings: Rs 30,200/month. Total equity savings: Rs 0. At 40 years old with 20 years to retirement, Ramaiah has zero equity exposure. The RD is not the problem alone — it's the last straw in a portfolio already completely devoid of equity. The correct action: pause new RD contributions. Start Nifty 50 SIP Rs 10,000/month immediately. 20 years at 12% CAGR: Rs 10,000/month → Rs 99.9L. vs Rs 10,000/month RD for 20 years (rolling over annually): approximately Rs 31.5L (at 4.9% net effective). Equity vs RD over 20 years: Rs 68.4L more wealth from the SAME monthly savings.

Hyderabad's Financial Context and RD Calculator

Hyderabad RD context — Telangana: Bank RDs (SBI, Andhra Bank, Bank of Baroda, HDFC, Axis) at 6.5-7.5%. Post Office RD: 6.7% compounded quarterly, 5-year tenure. TDS on RD interest: 10% if aggregate interest > Rs 40,000/year (Rs 50,000 for senior citizens). RD interest = Income from Other Sources — slab rate taxation. Telangana state employees: State GPF. HUF possibility for old Hyderabad Hindu trading families (Komati merchants, Marwari settlers). No 80C benefit for RD. HMDA property: rapidly growing suburbs (Mokila, Kottur, Tellapur) with price points Rs 60L-1.5Cr create large down payment needs. Islamic finance context: Riba prohibition for some Muslim investors — RD (which earns interest) is not permissible under strict Islamic finance. Alternatives: Sukuk (Islamic bonds), equity mutual funds (permissible if screened for Sharia compliance), gold (permissible). Hyderabad's large NRI community (US-Hyderabadi tech workers): repatriation and re-entry investment patterns.

Hyderabad Property Down Payment RD — Financial District Apartment Fund Building

Hyderabad's Financial District, Gachibowli, and Hi-Tech City corridor has seen apartment prices reach Rs 70L-1.5Cr for 2-3BHK units. A Rs 90L apartment requires Rs 18-22L down payment (20-25% of registration value). Building this corpus requires a structured 3-5 year savings plan, and for most Hyderabad IT professionals, RD forms the guaranteed base of this fund. The property fund RD calculation: Hyderabad IT professional, goal: Rs 18L down payment in 3 years. Monthly RD needed: SBI 36-month RD at 7%: approximately Rs 45,000/month. This is extremely high — viable only for dual-income Gachibowli couples (combined take-home Rs 2.5-3L/month). For most single-income professionals: Rs 20,000/month RD + lump-sum annual bonus deployment. Rs 20,000/month RD for 3 years at 7%: Rs 8.03L. Plus: Rs 2L annual bonus in short-term FD each year for 3 years (Rs 2L × 3 = Rs 6L + interest Rs 70,000): Rs 6.7L. Total: Rs 14.73L. Shortfall: Rs 3.27L — covered by end of year 3 salary increment saving. The hybrid add-on: Rs 10,000/month in HDFC Balanced Advantage SIP (alongside the RD): 3-year return at 9% CAGR = Rs 3.97L. With this: total Rs 18.7L — goal achieved. The Hyderabad property fund framework: Core (guaranteed): Rs 20,000/month RD + Rs 2L annual FD deployment. Supplementary (slightly variable): Rs 10,000/month balanced advantage SIP. Emergency protection: do NOT raid this fund for other expenses — it's the Hyderabad property entry ticket. Post-purchase note: once property is bought, stop the RD and redirect Rs 20,000/month to Nifty SIP — the wealth-building phase begins post-purchase.

Islamic Finance Alternative to RD — Hyderabad Muslim Investor's Options

A significant portion of Hyderabad's population follows Islam and may have religious objections to interest-bearing instruments (RD, FD, bonds). Riba (unjustified increase in a loan or exchange) is prohibited in Islamic jurisprudence, and standard bank RDs earn interest. This creates a genuine planning challenge for observant Muslim investors seeking equivalent savings discipline without Riba exposure. The Islamic finance alternatives for RD equivalents: Alternative 1 — Sharia-compliant equity mutual funds: several Indian fund houses offer screened equity funds that exclude interest-bearing businesses (banks, conventional NBFCs, insurance companies with conventional operations). These funds invest in equity of businesses that pass Sharia screening (no alcohol, no tobacco, no conventional finance, no weapons). Returns: equity market returns minus screening exclusion effect. These are inherently volatile — not equivalent to RD's stability, but are the primary Riba-free growth vehicle. Alternative 2 — Gold accumulation: physical gold and Gold ETFs are permissible under Islamic finance (gold is a real asset, not a debt instrument). Rs 5,000/month in Gold ETF or Sovereign Gold Bond: disciplined gold accumulation equivalent to the savings discipline of RD without Riba. Over 5 years at 9% gold CAGR: Rs 3L invested → Rs 3.73L. Tax: LTCG 12.5% on gains above Rs 1.25L (>24 months holding). Alternative 3 — Real estate (Halal): direct property investment (rental income = Halal, capital appreciation = Halal). Not monthly-installment equivalent but conceptually Riba-free. Practical Islamic finance planning for Hyderabad: monthly Rs 10,000 savings goal — split between Sharia-compliant equity SIP Rs 7,000 + Gold ETF Rs 3,000. Over 10 years: equity at 10% CAGR (post-screening adjustment) + gold at 9% CAGR: combined corpus Rs 1.57Cr invested → approximately Rs 2.8L + Rs 5.5L in 10 years (total approximately Rs 8.3L from Rs 1.2L total invested). Not a direct RD comparison due to volatility — but Riba-free.

More Questions — RD Calculator in Hyderabad

I'm 55, retired Telangana government officer (Executive Engineer). Getting Rs 48,000/month pension. I have Rs 15L in savings. My son says RD, my daughter says FD, I don't know what's right. What should I do?

Retired Telangana Engineer, Rs 48,000/month pension + Rs 15L savings: The pension context is critical: Rs 48,000/month already covers Hyderabad living expenses comfortably (Hyderabad is affordable for government retirees at this pension level). The Rs 15L is NOT needed for monthly income — it's wealth and emergency capital. The income argument for RD/FD is moot. Son's RD: Rs 15L in RD at 7% generates approximately Rs 17,400/year interest per Rs 2.5L tranche (if spread over multiple RDs). Post-tax at 30%: Rs 12,200/year from that Rs 2.5L tranche. Effectively 4.9% net — Rs 15L FD/RD generates Rs 73,500/year net. This is supplemental income you don't need (pension already covers expenses). The correct framework for Rs 15L at age 55 with no income need: Emergency/medical reserve: Rs 3L in SBI savings/liquid fund (medical emergencies at 55+). Children's event fund: Rs 2L in bank FD (1-year) for any upcoming family events (weddings, travel). Growth portfolio: Rs 10L in balanced allocation. Rs 5L in Balanced Advantage Fund (STP Rs 1.25L/month for 4 months). Rs 5L in SGB (next SGB tranche — 8-year maturity, zero LTCG, 2.5% annual interest). 10-year outcome: Balanced Advantage Rs 5L at 9%: Rs 11.8L. SGB Rs 5L at 9%: Rs 11.8L. Total: Rs 23.6L + FD + liquid. vs all-RD: Rs 15L at 4.9% for 10 years = Rs 24.1L. Actually comparable! But SGB/balanced advantage leaves estate value and has compounding potential; RD's 24.1L is nominal, the real value after 6% inflation = Rs 13.5L. The growth approach preserves real wealth. Senior citizen FD rider: open SCSS Rs 5L (8.2%, quarterly income Rs 10,250/quarter) if quarterly income is desired — better rate than RD or FD for post-retirement steady income.

I'm 30, Hyderabad IT (Rs 18L CTC). I have Rs 5L in bank savings doing nothing. I want to start an RD of Rs 15,000/month also. My goal is general wealth building. Is this the right plan?

Rs 18L CTC Hyderabad IT, Rs 5L idle + Rs 15,000/month RD for 'general wealth building': The problem: 'general wealth building' is NOT an appropriate use case for RD. RD is for specific, short-term goals with known timelines (under 3 years). For general wealth building with a 30+ year horizon, RD at 4.9% net is dramatically inferior to equity. The correct use of your Rs 5L idle savings: Don't touch it for 1 month. Use it to build habit first. Then: Rs 1L in liquid fund (emergency fund top-up — assuming you have 3 months expenses covered). Rs 4L in Nifty 50 via 4-week STP (Rs 1L/week). At 12% CAGR for 30 years: Rs 4L → Rs 1.19Cr. vs Rs 4L in RD (rolling annual) for 30 years at 4.9% net: Rs 19.8L. Equity vs RD on Rs 4L idle: Rs 1.17Cr MORE. The correct use of Rs 15,000/month savings: All Rs 15,000/month to Nifty 50 SIP (you're 30 — this is wealth-building time, not capital-preservation time). 30-year SIP: Rs 15,000/month at 12% CAGR: Rs 5.24Cr. vs Rs 15,000/month RD for 30 years at 4.9% net: approximately Rs 1.25Cr. Equity SIP over 30 years: Rs 3.99Cr MORE. When to use RD: when you have a specific goal under 3 years — house in Hyderabad in 2.5 years, car upgrade in 18 months, etc. At that point, park the goal-specific savings in RD. The general savings: equity SIP, no question.

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