A significant sum of customer capital—nearly ₹800 crore—remains languishing in Paytm Payments Bank (PPBL) accounts two years after regulators halted its operations. Despite extended windows for fund migration and repeated alerts, the drawdown of these remaining balances has effectively stalled.
The Anatomy of the Stuck Funds
According to sources familiar with the matter, the remaining balance is split into two primary categories:
-
Frozen Accounts: Approximately ₹400 crore is locked in accounts currently under “freeze” status due to various compliance or legal issues.
-
Unclaimed Deposits: Another ₹400 crore sits in accounts where customers have simply not initiated a withdrawal or transfer.
Compliance and Scale: By the Numbers
The sheer volume of accounts has complicated the clean-up process. At the time of the regulatory crackdown, the bank’s profile was marked by:
-
Total Deposits: Over ₹5,500 crore (pre-action).
-
Account Base: Roughly 35 crore total accounts.
-
Active vs. Dormant: Only 10–10.5 crore accounts were active; the remaining ~25 crore were largely dormant, frozen, or flagged as “mule accounts”—a major red flag for the RBI.
Regulatory Hurdles and Future Implications
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) had initially aimed to cancel the bank’s license by March 2025. However, the timeline was extended due to the quasi-judicial nature of the proceedings and a commitment to ensuring an orderly transition for consumers.
Key takeaways for Paytm’s future:
-
Approval Roadblocks: Sources suggest that these past compliance lapses may weigh heavily on any future regulatory applications from the Paytm group.
-
No New Licenses: To date, Paytm has not applied for new Prepaid Payment Instrument (PPI) or wallet licenses.
-
Wallet Transition: There have been no formal requests to move the formerly dominant wallet business back to the parent company, One 97 Communications.
Note: While the RBI pushed for active communication and reminders to users, the lack of “meaningful drawdown” over the last year suggests that the remaining ₹800 crore may prove difficult to clear without further legal or administrative intervention.
