India’s retail credit landscape has reached a dramatic tipping point. In the 2025–26 fiscal year (FY26), fintech lenders successfully cornered a staggering 77% market share by volume in the personal loan segment. This explosive growth underscores an absolute shift in consumer behavior, as digital-first platforms outpace traditional banking institutions through hyper-automated onboarding and instant ticket issuance.
However, a closer look at the data reveals a sharp divergence between the number of loans issued and the total value of capital disbursed, exposing two entirely different lending strategies playing out in the Indian economy.
Volume vs. Value: The Ticket Size Divide
While fintech platforms dominate the sheer quantity of loans being processed daily, traditional commercial banks and established non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) continue to hold the fort when it comes to actual financial weight.
| Lender Type | Share by Loan Volume (Number of Loans) | Share by Loan Value (Total Rupee Amount) | Primary Focus Segment |
| Fintech Lenders | 77% | Relatively Small Share | Small-ticket, short-term unsecured loans (< ₹50,000) |
| Traditional Banks & NBFCs | 23% | Dominant Share | High-value, long-term credit (Prime borrowers, salaried professionals) |
This divide highlights the core strength of fintech players: friction-free, small-ticket digital lending. By targeting tech-savvy millennials, Gen Z consumers, and underbanked segments with micro-loans—frequently under ₹50,000—fintechs have generated massive transaction volumes that traditional banks, bound by manual underwriting and legacy paperwork, simply cannot replicate.
Rising Regulated Partnerships
The massive footprint of fintechs is rarely built on standalone balance sheets. Instead, this 77% volume dominance is heavily fueled by “co-lending” models and strategic partnerships. Fintechs act as the agile, consumer-facing front end, using advanced algorithms and alternative data to assess risk within seconds. Meanwhile, large, regulated NBFCs and private banks supply the underlying capital pipeline.
This symbiotic relationship allows traditional financial institutions to indirectly tap into India’s booming rural and semi-urban retail credit demand without expanding physical branch networks.
The Looming Regulatory Tightrope
While the FY26 numbers paint a picture of unrivaled growth, the sector is entering a more cautious phase. With the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) consistently warning against the rapid expansion of unsecured consumer credit, both fintechs and their banking partners are under intense pressure to maintain rigid risk controls.
As the volume of digital loans peaks, the industry’s next challenge will not be finding new borrowers, but ensuring that asset quality holds up against potential defaults in the unsecured micro-loan segment.
