Book FD

What is the Difference Between Repo Rate & Reverse Repo Rate?

AB

Ajeeta Bhatia

Author Updated on Jul 16, 2025

Share on:

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) lends money to commercial banks at a repo rate, which helps banks maintain liquidity in the event of a funding crisis or to meet regulatory requirements. The Repo Rate is a fundamental tool for controlling inflation and ensuring economic stability. Repo rate & reverse repo rate are interest rates that directly affect a country's economy. Both of these interest rates are important tools for central banks to monitor liquidity and control inflation, resulting in economic stability.

The reverse repo rate has a greater influence on citizens, particularly those who have taken out a loan. A central bank's modifications to the reverse repo rate affect a consumer's borrowing costs. This is why understanding these two interest rates is crucial since it allows the average person to choose a more affordable interest rate when applying for a loan. In this blog, we will discuss about the key differences about repo rate & reverse repo rate in detail-.

Latest Update: RBI has cut down the repo rate by 50 basis points on 6 June 2025.  Current RBI Repo rate is 5.5% which is reduced from 6%.  This the the third time this year that rate has been changed.

What is Repo Rate?

Repo rate (RR) is the interest rate on which RBI grants loans money to commercial banks. The term 'Repo' comes from the word "Repurchase Agreement." In layman's terms, a repo transaction is a short-term borrowing arrangement in which financial institutions, usually commercial banks, keep government securities as collateral to the central bank with an agreement to repurchase them in future. The Repo Rate is the interest rate on which the central bank grants loans to commercial banks against government securities as collateral.

Repo vs reverse repo rate

What is Reverse Repo Rate?

Reverse repo rate (RRR) is the opposite of the repo rate where RBI borrows from commercial banks and the bank charges RBI a reverse repo rate. This means that the RBI pays commercial banks interest for borrowing from them by selling securities. In this case, the central bank purchases securities from commercial banks with the intention of selling them back at a later period and at a predetermined price. It serves as a mechanism for removing excess liquidity from the financial system.

Current Repo Rate and Reserve Repo Rate

The RBI repo rate fell by 0.50% on June 6, 2025, and is currently around 5.5%. The repo rate was last modified in April by 0.25% to 6% and in February by 0.25% to 6.25%. The RBI has set the current RRR at 3.35%.

ALSO READ: RBI Investment Options for Resident and Non-Resident Indians

What is the Difference Between Repo Rate And Reverse Repo Rate?

Here are the key distinctions between RR and RRR:

Purpose

RR and RRR are the tools that are used by RBI to manage liquidity in the market. Repo rate is used to add excess cash in the market by lending money to banks from the central bank to cover their short-term needs. On the other hand, reverse repo rates are used by the central bank to remove excess liquidity by taking funds from the commercial banks.

Direction of the Transaction:

Repo rate transfers money from the central bank to commercial banks whereas RRR transfers money from commercial banks to the central bank.

Economic impact

A high repo rate raises borrowing costs, which can cut inflation while slowing economic development. A low repo rate achieves the opposite. A high RRR, on the other hand, encourages banks to deposit more funds with the central bank, lowering the money supply and keeping inflation under control. Low reverse repo rates incentivize lending.

Collateral

Repo rates require banks to keep government securities as collateral with the central bank whereas in reverse repo rates, the central bank has to keep its securities as collateral with the banks.

Frequency of use

Repo rates are frequently used to regulate short-term liquidity and control the inflation whereas reverse repo rates are used to absorb excess liquidity and manage the money supply.

ALSO READ: RBI’s Role in Strengthening DICGC Insurance in FD for Investor’s Safety

Conclusion

As discussed above, this is how the RR and RRR regulate the economy. These rates have a direct impact on the interest rates that people and corporations pay, affecting everything from personal loans to corporate funding.

RBI-regulated

Book an FD and

get ₹100 voucher

The proof writes itself Trusted by 50 lakh+ customers

backed by the best


© 2026 Stable-Alpha Technologies Pvt. Ltd.

ISO 27001:2022

Address - Third floor, Block A, Stable Money, Bhive HSR Premium Campus, Krishna Reddy Industrial Area, Kudlu gate,
Bommanahalli, Bangalore, Karnataka, India, 560068

STABLE FINSERV PRIVATE LIMITED (CIN: U66309KA2023PTC172771)

Registered Address: Third floor, Block A, Stable Money, Bhive HSR Premium Campus, Krishna Reddy Industrial Area, Kudlu gate,
Bommanahalli, Bangalore, Karnataka, India, 560068

Research Analyst: SEBI Registration Number: INH000024912 | BSE Enlisting Number: 6952


Disclaimer: Registration granted by SEBI, enlistment with BSE and certification from NISM in no way guarantee performance of the intermediary or provide any assurance of returns to investors.

Contact us: help@stablemoney.in

Mutual Fund Distributor : Stable Finserv Private Limited (AMFI-registered Mutual Fund Distributor) | ARN: 269315 | Current Validity till 17-May-2029 | Scheme Documents| Commission Disclosure

Disclaimer : Mutual fund investments are subject to market risks, read all scheme related documents carefully. Past Performance of the Scheme is neither an indicator nor a guarantee of future performance.

Disclaimer : FDs and Co-branded Credit Cards are not regulated by SEBI and are outside the SCORES/Exchange Arbitration framework. Stable Money acts only as a distributor.


The proof writes itself Trusted by 50 lakh+ customers

© 2026 Stable-Alpha Technologies Pvt. Ltd.

ISO 27001:2022

Address - Third floor, Block A, Stable Money, Bhive HSR Premium Campus, Krishna Reddy Industrial Area, Kudlu gate, Bommanahalli, Bangalore, Karnataka, India, 560068

Disclaimers : FDs and Co-branded Credit Cards are not regulated by SEBI and are outside the SCORES/Exchange Arbitration framework. Stable Money acts only as a distributor.

Mutual Fund Distributor: Stable Finserv Private Limited (AMFI-registered Mutual Fund Distributor) | ARN: 269315 | Current Validity till 17-May-2029 | Scheme Documents| Commission Disclosure

Disclaimer: Mutual fund investments are subject to market risks, read all scheme related documents carefully. Past Performance of the Scheme is neither an indicator nor a guarantee of future performance.

STABLE FINSERV PRIVATE LIMITED (CIN: U66309KA2023PTC172771)

Registered Address: Third floor, Block A, Stable Money, Bhive HSR Premium Campus, Krishna Reddy Industrial Area, Kudlu gate,
Bommanahalli, Bangalore, Karnataka, India, 560068

Research Analyst: SEBI Registration Number: INH000024912 | BSE Enlisting Number: 6952


Disclaimer: Registration granted by SEBI, enlistment with BSE and certification from NISM in no way guarantee performance of the intermediary or provide any assurance of returns to investors.