- Multiple accounts reduce ATM withdrawal charges significantly.
For most Indians, one bank account feels like enough. Financial experts say that putting all your money in a single account is not simplicity. It is a risk.
Here’s why multiple bank accounts might actually work better for you and what to watch out for.
Your Safety Net Has A Single Point Of Failure
Indian banks depend heavily on technology to give you access to your money. Server outages, UPI failures, and technical glitches are not rare, and if you have just one account, you are stuck. Those with a second account at a different bank can keep transacting without interruption.
Also Read: Wall Street Slips From Record Highs As Chip Stocks Retreat, Iran Talks In Focus
Why Online Fraud In India Makes A Second Account Worth It
Online and UPI-based fraud has risen sharply in India over the past three years. A simple safeguard that people miss is to keep a separate account linked to your UPI for online shopping and park only limited funds in it. Even if a fraudster gains access to that account, your primary savings stay untouched. It is not foolproof, but it meaningfully limits your exposure.
How Multiple Bank Accounts Can Cut Your ATM Charges
Most banks offer between three and five free ATM withdrawals per month. After that, every transaction carries a fee. If you withdraw cash regularly, those charges add up across a year. Having multiple bank accounts splits withdrawals and increases your free withdrawal limit at no extra cost.
Tracking Your Money Becomes Cleaner
Having your salary credited, getting government subsidies, and making UPI transactions all through one account makes your statement look like a mess. Separating accounts by purpose, one for income and fixed expenses and another for daily spending, makes tracking easier and reduces the chances of missing payment errors or wrongful charges.
Also Read: China Defies Trump Sanctions Push, Tells Firms To Keep Buying Iranian Oil
But Multiple Accounts Come With Real Costs Too
Every savings account in India requires a minimum balance typically between Rs 1,000 and Rs 10,000, depending on the bank and account type. Failure to maintain it can mean mounting penalties, especially if you have multiple accounts.
There is also the dormancy risk. The RBI requires banks to mark any account inactive for over two years as dormant. For most salaried individuals, the right number of bank accounts depends on their income and spending patterns.


