The free run at automated teller machines might end soon, with banks
petitioning the Reserve Bank of India to put curbs on cash withdrawals at
third-party ATMs.

Representatives from the Indian Banks Association, who met central bank
officials late last month to make a case, said RBI had accepted most of
their suggestions and these are likely to come into effect soon.

Since April 1, customers have been allowed to withdraw cash and check
account balances without having to bear the interchange fee. The burden was
earlier passed on to bank clients.

After witnessing a surge in number of transactions but a fall in the ticket
value of each transaction, banks have sought modifications in the free ATM
rule. Chief among their suggestions is the imposition of a limit of Rs
10,000 per withdrawal when customers use a third-party ATM and a cap on the
number of free third-party transactions at five a month.

Sources, however, said RBI rejected the suggestion to impose a minimum
withdrawal limit per third-party ATM transaction.

Whenever a customer does a third-party ATM withdrawal the customer's bank,
or the issuing bank, has to pay an interchange fee of Rs 18 to Rs 20 to the
acquiring bank. This fee was earlier borne by the customer. Some big banks
such as ICICI Bank [ Get
Quote<http://portfolio.rediff.com/quotes/icici+bank+ltd>] are losing
Rs 4 crore to Rs 5 crore a month because more of their own
customers are using third-party ATMs. In contrast, State Bank of India [ Get
Quote <http://portfolio.rediff.com/quotes/state+bank+of+india> ], which has
the largest network, said the free-use policy has been cash-neutral because
the proportion of debit cards to ATM was optimum.

Banks have also proposed that they be allowed to pass on the interchange
cost to customers withdrawing funds from current accounts. Banks have argued
that current accounts, unlike savings bank accounts, do not have a minimum
balance requirement and money deposited in such accounts does not earn
interest.

Bankers said customers are making heavy withdrawals from current accounts.
The disadvantage for banks is that not only do they have to pay for the
customer using another bank's ATM but also have to deal with a low float, or
balance, on the account.

The suggestion to cap the number of free third party transactions is meant
to stem the losses of banks on account of interchange fees.

Some public sector banks were having problems replenishing ATMs at remote
locations with cash, according to a senior bank executive. The proposal to
impose an upper limit of Rs 10,000 per transaction seeks to curb this
problem. At present, the amount of cash a customer can withdraw from an ATM
at one go differs depending on the policy of each individual bank. "Although
about 95 per cent of withdrawals are for less than Rs 10,000 some public
sector banks were facing problems of excessive withdrawals. This will also
help banks earn interchange revenue since a single large withdrawal will
have to be split over two transactions," the executive said.

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