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HomeNewsBusinessPersonal FinanceHow sweep-in fixed deposits can put idle cash to work without locking it away

How sweep-in fixed deposits can put idle cash to work without locking it away

A sweep-in setup helps you earn fixed-deposit-like returns on surplus cash while keeping day-to-day liquidity in your savings account.

December 22, 2025 / 13:02 IST
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A sweep-in facility links your savings account to a fixed deposit. You set a threshold balance you want to keep readily available in the savings account. Any amount above that threshold is automatically “swept” into a linked fixed deposit. When you need money and the savings balance falls below the threshold, the bank “reverse sweeps” by breaking only the required portion of the fixed deposit and moving it back to savings. The key advantage is that you do not have to manually open and break fixed deposits to keep idle money working. This is the underlying structure used by common bank offerings such as SBI’s MOD auto sweep and similar sweep-in notes and terms published by large private banks.

How it works in practice

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A good way to think about sweep-in is “salary account convenience, fixed deposit yield discipline.” If you typically maintain large balances for quarterly taxes, school fees, investments, or irregular income cycles, the facility converts the surplus into fixed-deposit units. When a big payment hits, the bank breaks deposits on a defined basis (many banks disclose a last-in-first-out approach) and only for the amount required. This reduces the chance of cheque or auto-debit failures while keeping most of the surplus earning the fixed deposit rate.

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