The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has cancelled the license of Sarvodaya Co-operative Bank Ltd. This order was came on 12th of May, 2026 after business hours and order immediately stopped the bank from carrying out normal banking operations. RBI also clarified that mort of the depositors are protected under India’s deposit insurance system which will covers the deposits up to ₹5 lakh per depositor.
RBI Cancels Sarvodaya Co-operative Bank License
In the major regulatory action the RBI has RBI revoked the banking license of Sarvodaya Co-operative Bank after finding serious financial and compliance weaknesses.
According to the central bank of India, the lender failed to meet the several requirements under the Banking Regulation Act, 1949.
The key reasons behind the cancellation includes the,
- Inadequate capital base
- Weak future earnings prospects
- Failure to comply with regulatory norms
- Risk to depositor interests
The RBI stated that by allowing the bank to continue would be harmful for the public interest and unsafe for depositors.
What Banking Services Have Stopped?
After the licence cancellation, the bank can no longer function as the normal banking institution.
The restrictions include,
- No fresh deposits
- No deposit repayments
- No withdrawals
- No lending operations
- No regular customer banking transactions
This means account holders cannot operate their accounts in the regular manner.
Why RBI Took Such a Strong Action
Banking regulators usually take this step only when the financial institution is considered unfit to continue in future safely.
In this case, the RBI has concluded that the bank’s financial condition had become too weak.
The central bank specifically said the Sarvodaya would be unable to repay depositors fully using the its existing resources.
That is one of the most serious findings in the banking supervision.
The RBI has also asked the state of Maharashtra’s cooperative authorities to begin the process of the,
- Winding up the bank
- Appointing a liquidator
Are Depositors Funds Safe?
This is the biggest concern for the customers.
The RBI has clarified that deposits are protected under the Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC) framework.
Each depositor is eligible for the insurance coverage of up to,
- ₹5 lakh per depositor per bank
This includes,
- Savings account balances
- Fixed deposits
- Current accounts
- Recurring deposits
- Interest amount (within the total limit)
According to the RBI total 98.36% of depositors are expected to receive the full amount of their insured deposits.
What Is DICGC Deposit Insurance?
The Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC) is a wholly owned RBI subsidiary created to protect the depositors if any bank fails.
Key features Are,
- Insurance limit: ₹5 lakh
- Coverage basis: Per depositor, per bank
- Includes: Principal + accrued interest
Applicable to,
- Commercial banks
- Cooperative banks
- Small finance banks
- Eligible banking institutions
Important clarification
The ₹5 lakh limit applies to the total combined deposits in the one bank not per account.








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