40.1 C
Delhi
Thursday, April 23, 2026

RBI withdraws 2000 Rs currency notes from circulation, can be exchanged till 30th September

Date:

Share post:

On Friday, 19th May, the Reserve Bank of India decided to withdraw the 2000 Rs currency notes from circulation under the ‘Clean Note Policy’. The banknotes will continue to be legal tender. In a circular released about the same, the RBI also said, “To complete the exercise in a time-bound manner, and to provide adequate time to the members of the public, all banks shall provide deposit and/or exchange facility for 2000 Rs banknotes until 30th September, 2023”.

The RBI has asked all the banks to stop issuing 2000 Rs notes with immediate effect, and the exchange of these banknotes into notes of other denominations can be made up to a limit of 20, 000 Rupees at a time, starting from May 23rd, 2023.

As per the RBI, the purpose of these banknotes was fulfilled once banknotes in other denominations became available in adequate quantities.

The 2000 Rs banknotes were introduced in November, 2016 under Section 24(1) of the RBI Act, 1934 to meet the currency requirement of the economy after the legal tender status of Rs 500 and Rs 1000 banknotes was withdrawn. Further, about 89 percent of the 2000 Rs notes were issued before March, 2017 and are now at the end of their lifespan of 4-5 years.

Sonakshi Datta
Sonakshi Datta
Journalist who wants to cover the truth which others look the other way from.

Related articles

“The most powerful nation is the one that never abandons its soldiers.”

The story from that cold evening in 1997, when Bill Clinton stopped his motorcade to sit beside a...

Past Lessons, Future Risks: The Iran Ceasefire and the Shifting Balance of Power

The two week US-Iran ceasefire expires on 22 Apr. It was more of a tactical pause than a...

Honour Lord Parshuram by Fighting Corruption, Not Enabling It

 Goa does not suffer from a shortage of symbols. It suffers from a shortage of spine.Every few months,...

Trump Can Block the Persian Gulf, But the Caspian Sea Is Iran’s Backdoor

There is a tendency in global strategic thinking - particularly in Washington - to assume that geography behaves...