Summary of this article
March‑on‑March data shows that online spending increased 2.3 per cent, even as transaction volumes slipped. Average spend per transaction jumped nearly 20 per cent, from Rs 4,271 to Rs 5,107, with consumers consolidating purchases and taking advantage of offers.
Debit cards offer rewards, discounts and cashback comparable to premium credit cards. Customers want to enjoy these benefits and improve their savings month on month.
Banks have expanded rewards programmes, often tying them to digital usage and select merchant categories.
Debit cards are staging a comeback, with the number in circulation rising at the fastest pace in five years, as lenders reposition the once‑stagnant product to capture larger digital spends and reward‑seeking customers.
Outstanding debit cards rose 5.4 per cent year‑on‑year in March 2026 to 104.4 crore, up from 99.08 crore a year earlier, according to data from the Reserve Bank of India. This is the sharpest expansion since 2021 and reveals how consumers now prefer to use their cards. With fewer cash withdrawals, banks are rejuvenating debit cards via digital spends, premiumisation and loyalty schemes to rival UPI and credit cards.
The change in behaviour is visible in spending patterns. Total debit card spending fell 10 per cent year‑on‑year to Rs 4.45 trillion, and transactions dropped 20 per cent, while ATM withdrawals declined 11 per cent. Yet, average transaction values have climbed. The typical debit card purchase rose 13 per cent to Rs 3,479 in March, revealing that fewer but higher‑value transactions are being driven by e‑commerce and digital payments.
Online Spends Get Bigger As Customers Lap Up Deals
March‑on‑March data shows that online spending increased 2.3 per cent, even as transaction volumes slipped. Average spend per transaction jumped nearly 20 per cent, from Rs 4,271 to Rs 5,107, with consumers consolidating purchases and taking advantage of offers. Industry executives say bargain‑hunting is not confined to credit cards: debit products are keeping pace.
“Debit cards offer rewards, discounts and cashback comparable to premium credit cards. Customers want to enjoy these benefits and improve their savings month on month,” says Manish Agrawal, President & Business Head of Kotak811, a digital banking app. Apart from cashback, movie deals, discounted dining, and airport lounge access are part of the benefit basket aimed at the aspirational, young, salaried spender.
Banks have expanded rewards programmes, often tying them to digital usage and select merchant categories. This has made debit cards more viable for customers who prefer not to borrow, yet expect the same incentives traditionally associated with credit products.
UPI Daily Limits Shift Larger Spends To Cards
Spending limits are also shaping usage. UPI, the dominant retail payments option, typically applies a daily cap of Rs 1 lakh for transactions. Debit cards, by contrast, allow users to spend up to the available balance in their bank accounts. This makes them a practical option for larger purchases, both online and at point‑of‑sale terminals.
“Higher spending is possible via debit cards. UPI has a daily limit of Rs 1 lakh, and often, customers need to spend much more. A debit card gives them an additional option,” Agrawal said.
Evolving Form Factor Resonates With Customers
Another factor is the evolving form factor of the product itself. Banks are shifting customers towards premium debit cards, including metal variants and wearable formats, which carry a stronger visual and tactile appeal. Agrawal says this has translated into higher activation rates and deeper engagement.
“When the card is premium and worth flaunting, customers are more likely to activate and use it, which we see with metal cards, especially. As a result, spending is fewer but larger,” Agrawal says.
Security Features Boost Consumer Sentiment
The repositioning comes at a time when debit cards risked irrelevance amid the rapid rise of UPI and expanding credit card penetration. Instead, banks are carving out a niche, targeting affluent and digitally active customers who prefer to transact using their own funds while retaining access to offers and convenience.
Security improvements have also supported the recovery. Over recent quarters, regulatory changes and bank‑led upgrades have introduced stronger authentication requirements, transaction alerts, and user controls, making debit cards more resilient to fraud. Features such as dynamic transaction limits, international usage toggles and real‑time notifications have improved user confidence.
“The modern debit card is fundamentally different from what customers experienced even a few years ago,” says Agrawal, adding that “enhanced security, coupled with better control over spending, has made it a credible tool for digital transactions, especially for those wary of risk.”
Even as digital payments expand rapidly, a segment of conservative users remains cautious about relying entirely on instant transfer systems or credit products. For such customers, debit cards offer familiarity and a higher sense of control.
“There is still a meaningful cohort of consumers who prefer direct‑debit instruments over borrowed funds or real‑time transfers,” says Agrawal, adding, “Debit cards provide that flexibility without introducing credit exposure, and that matters for a certain type of customer.”
Bankers say the renewed momentum is unlikely to restore debit cards to their earlier dominance in transaction volumes, but it does point to a more defined role within the world of payments. As customers consolidate spending and seek higher‑value transactions with built‑in rewards, debit cards are gaining relevance in areas once ceded to credit cards.
FAQs
1. Why is debit card making a comeback?
Debit cards come with value added features like cashback offers, discounts, lounge access and enhanced security features being offered by issuers, pushing customers to use them for their digital transactions.
2. What is the difference between debit cards and UPI in making high-value transactions?
UPI has a limit of Rs 1 lakh transaction per day, but there is no such limit on the money that can be transacted through debit cards. Debit cards permit customers to transact as much as they have in their account.
3. Why are debit card transactions down, but value of transactions rising?
Debit cards are increasingly being used for high value transactions like online shopping, e-commerce transactions, cashbacks etc. instead of low-value payments.












