98.47% of Rs 2,000 Notes Returned Since Withdrawal: RBI

The Reserve Bank of India announced that 98.47% of Rs 2,000 denomination notes have been returned since the withdrawal announcement in May 2023. The total value of these notes in circulation plummeted from Rs 3.56 lakh crore to just Rs 5,451 crore by April 2026. Exchange and deposit facilities continue at 19 RBI issue offices and through India Post. The central bank clarified that Rs 2,000 notes remain legal tender despite the withdrawal.

Key Points: 98.47% of Rs 2,000 Notes Returned: RBI Update

  • 98.47% of Rs 2,000 notes returned since May 2023 withdrawal
  • Value fell from Rs 3.56 lakh crore to Rs 5,451 crore by April 2026
  • Exchange facility available at 19 RBI offices and via India Post
  • Rs 2,000 notes remain legal tender despite withdrawal
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98.47 pc of Rs 2,000 notes returned since withdrawal announcement: RBI

RBI reports 98.47% of Rs 2,000 notes returned since May 2023 withdrawal; value drops from Rs 3.56 lakh crore to Rs 5,451 crore as of April 2026.

"98.47 per cent of the Rs 2,000 banknotes in circulation as on May 19, 2023, have since been returned - RBI"

Mumbai, May 1

The Reserve Bank of India on Friday said that 98.47 per cent of the Rs 2,000 denomination banknotes in circulation have been returned, nearly three years after it announced their withdrawal.

The central bank had declared the withdrawal of Rs 2,000 notes from circulation on May 19, 2023, as part of its currency management exercise.

At that time, the total value of such notes in circulation stood at Rs 3.56 lakh crore. According to the latest data, this figure has now sharply declined to Rs 5,451 crore as of April 30, 2026.

"The total value of Rs 2000 banknotes in circulation, which was Rs 3.56 lakh crore at the close of business on May 19, 2023, when the withdrawal of Rs 2000 banknotes was announced, has declined to Rs 5,451 crore at the close of business on April 30, 2026," the central bank said.

"Thus, 98.47 per cent of the Rs 2,000 banknotes in circulation as on May 19, 2023, have since been returned," the RBI said in a statement.

The facility to exchange Rs 2,000 banknotes has been available at 19 RBI issue offices since the withdrawal announcement.

Since October 9, 2023, these offices have also been accepting the notes for deposit into bank accounts.

The central bank added that members of the public can continue to send Rs 2,000 banknotes through India Post from any post office across the country to RBI issue offices for credit into their bank accounts.

"From October 9, 2023, RBI Issue Offices are also accepting Rs 2,000 banknotes from individuals/entities for deposit into their bank accounts," RBI stated.

"Further, members of the public are sending Rs 2000 banknotes through India Post from any post office within the country, to any of the RBI Issue Offices for credit to their bank accounts," the central bank added.

The RBI also clarified that despite their withdrawal and return, the Rs 2,000 banknotes continue to remain legal tender.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
I still remember the chaos in 2016 with demonetisation. This time they handled it much better — no long queues, no panic. Just a smooth withdrawal over 3 years. Kudos to RBI for the patient approach. Also, it's still legal tender so no stress for those who haven't exchanged yet. 😊
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Vikram M
Okay, but where did all those notes go? Returned to banks means they're now sitting in RBI vaults or destroyed. But the money itself (value) hasn't vanished — it's just been swapped for other denominations. Inflation concerns? ₹3.56 lakh crore of purchasing power just got redistributed into the system. Acha hua ki orderly tha.
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Ananya R
My grandmother was so worried when they announced it — she had some old Rs 2,000 notes saved. But the post office facility worked perfectly! She sent them via India Post to RBI and got the amount credited in her account within 10 days. Very citizen-friendly move. 🏛️📮
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James A
Impressive compliance rate — 98.47% is close to full return. That's a lot better than many countries manage when demonetising notes. The extended timeline and multiple channels (bank branches, RBI offices, post office) clearly helped. Smart policy implementation. 👍
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Rohit P
Respectfully, one thing bothers me — if 98.47% was returned, that means about 1.5% was NOT returned. That's roughly ₹5,500 crore still "out there". Could be in the parallel economy or just lost

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