Definition
UPI (Unified Payments Interface) is India's instant payment system, launched in April 2016 by the NPCI under the aegis of the RBI.
It is the largest payment system in the world by volume: ~16.7 billion transactions in December 2024 alone (~171 billion over the year). Like Pix in Brazil, it is a textbook case: a public, free and open rail that digitised an entire country in under 10 years.
Why UPI took off
- 2016 demonetisation: scrapping the 500 and 1,000 rupee notes forced digital adoption, just as UPI was being born.
- Free for individuals (a marginal, even nil, merchant fee since 2020).
- Open to fintechs: any TPAP (Third-Party App Provider) can build an app on the rail (PhonePe, Google Pay, Paytm).
- A simple identifier: the VPA (
alice@oksbi) replaces the bank details; you pay by scanning a QR code. - Aadhaar: coupling with the national digital identity enables ultra-fast onboarding.
How it works
Three layers: the NPCI operates the central rail that routes between banks, the PSP banks expose the accounts, and the TPAPs (PhonePe, Google Pay, Paytm, Amazon Pay, BHIM) are the user apps, backed by a PSP bank. The customer registers a VPA linked to an account, shares it (or a QR code), and each transaction goes through in under 5 seconds.
Key developments
- UPI Lite: payments < 500 INR without authentication (micropayment).
- UPI AutoPay: the equivalent of VRP / Pix Automático for recurring subscriptions.
- UPI Credit: backing with credit lines or RuPay cards.
- UPI International: roll-out in Singapore, the UAE, France (via PayNow, Lyra) and elsewhere.
- Cross-border: a UPI-Pix interconnection project led by BIS Nexus.
UPI vs Pix vs FedNow vs SCT Inst
| Criterion | UPI (India) | Pix (Brazil) | FedNow (US) | SCT Inst (EU) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Launch | 2016 | 2020 | 2023 | 2017 |
| Monthly volume | ~17bn tx | ~6bn tx | ramping up | hundreds of millions |
| User cost | Free | Free | Variable | Variable |
| Identifier | VPA / QR | Pix key / QR | Account number | IBAN |
| Bank mandate | Mandatory (RBI) | Mandatory (BCB) | Voluntary | Mandatory (2025) |
| Third-party apps | Yes (TPAP) | Bank/fintech apps | Bank apps | Bank apps |
What UPI is not
- Not a wallet: a rail, not an app; the money stays in bank accounts.
- Not a credit system (apart from the recent UPI Credit): immediate account-to-account debit/credit.
- Not Open Banking in the PSD2 sense: Indian aggregation falls under a separate framework (Account Aggregator).
- Not (yet) a global standard: it is being exported but remains very Indian in its design.
Within the global ecosystem
Along with Pix, UPI is the world reference for a successful instant payment system. Its TPAP architecture (third-party apps on a public rail) is being studied by European regulators for a retail digital euro, and the BIS Nexus project aims to interconnect UPI, Pix and FedNow.
Real-world examples
- Everyday use: a 20 INR tea paid for by scanning the vendor's QR code, credited instantly, with no cash or card.
- Dominant apps: PhonePe (Walmart, ~46%), Google Pay (~36%), Paytm (~7%), CRED, BHIM (government-run).
- Banks: more than 600 connected (SBI, HDFC, ICICI, Axis, Bank of Baroda, PNB).
- Volume: ~16-17bn transactions a month at the end of 2024, for a value of around €250bn a month.
- Merchant: even a roaming tea seller displays their UPI QR code, with no terminal or fee.
- International: usable in Singapore (PayNow), the UAE, France (CDG via Lyra), Bhutan and Sri Lanka.
- Inspiration: PayNow (Singapore), PromptPay (Thailand) and InstaPay (Philippines) are conceptual clones of it.