Types of Bank Accounts and their features.
Answers
Explanation:
Types Of Bank Accounts
1. Current account
A current account is a deposit account for traders, business owners, and entrepreneurs, who need to make and receive payments more often than others. These accounts hold more liquid deposits with no limit on the number of transactions per day. Current accounts allow overdraft facility, that is withdrawing more than what is currently available in the account. Also, unlike savings accounts, where you earn some interest, these are zero-interest bearing accounts. You need to maintain a minimum balance to be able to operate current accounts.
2. Savings account
A savings bank account is a regular deposit account, where you earn a minimum rate of interest. Here, the number of transactions you can make each month is capped. Banks offer a variety of savings accounts based on the type of depositor, features of the product, age or purpose of holding the account, and so on. There are regular savings accounts, savings accounts for children, senior citizens or women, institutional savings accounts, family savings accounts, and so many more.
You have the option to pick from a range of savings products. There are zero-balance savings accounts and also advanced ones with features like auto sweep, debit cards, bill payments and cross-product benefits. A cross-product benefit is when you have a savings account with a bank and get to avail special offers on opening a second account such as a demat account.
3. Salary account
Among the different types of bank accounts, your salary account is the one you have opened as per the tie-up between your employer and the bank. This is the account, where salaries of every employee are credited to at the beginning of the pay cycle. Employees can pick their type of salary account based on the features they want. The bank, where you have a salary account, also maintains reimbursement accounts; this is where your allowances and reimbursements are credited to.
4. Fixed deposit account
To park your funds and earn a decent rate of interest on it, there are different types of accounts like fixed deposits and recurring deposits.
A fixed deposit (FD) account allows you to earn a fixed rate of interest for keeping a certain sum of money locked in for a given time, that is until the FD matures. FDs range between a maturity period of seven days to 10 years. The rate of interest you earn on FDs will vary depending on the tenure of the FD. Generally, you cannot withdraw money from an FD before it matures. Some banks offer a premature withdrawal facility. But in that case, the interest rate you earn is lower.
5. Recurring deposit account
A recurring deposit (RD) has a fixed tenure. You need to invest a fixed sum of money in it regularly -- every month or once a quarter -- to earn interest. Unlike FDs, where you need to make a lump sum deposit, the sum you need to invest here is smaller and more frequent. You cannot change the tenure of the RD and the amount to be invested each month or quarter. Even in the case of RDs, you face a penalty in the form of a lower interest rate for premature withdrawal. The maturity period of an RD could range between six months to 10 years.
6. NRI accounts
There are different types of bank accounts for Indians or Indian-origin people living overseas. These accounts are called overseas accounts. They include two types of savings accounts and fixed deposits -- NRO or non-resident ordinary and NRE or non-resident external accounts. Banks also offer foreign currency non-resident fixed deposit accounts. Let us quickly see the various types of bank accounts for NRIs-
a) Non-resident ordinary (NRO) savings accounts or fixed deposit accounts
NRO accounts are rupee accounts. When NRIs deposit money in these accounts, usually in foreign currency, it is converted into INR at the prevailing exchange rate. NRIs can park money earned in India or overseas in NRO bank accounts. Payments like rent, maturities, pension, among others, can be sent abroad through NRO accounts. The income earned on these deposit accounts is taxed.
b) Non-resident external (NRE) savings accounts or fixed deposit accounts
NRE deposit accounts are similar to NRO accounts and the funds in these accounts are maintained in INR. Any money deposited into these accounts is converted into INR at prevailing exchange rates. But, these accounts are only for parking your earnings from abroad. The funds, both principal and interest, are transferable. But, the interest earned on these deposit accounts is not taxed in India.
C) Foreign currency non-resident (FCNR) account
As the name suggests and unlike the other two types of bank accounts, FCNR accounts are maintained in foreign currency. The principal and interest from these accounts are transferable, but the interest earned is not taxed in India.
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