Microfinance Portfolio Rebounds to Rs 331K Crore; Up 3.2% QoQ

India's microfinance sector portfolio outstanding rebounded to Rs 331,000 crore as of March 2026, marking a 3.2% quarter-on-quarter growth after eight quarters of contraction. The recovery was driven by a 25.8% QoQ surge in disbursements to Rs 77,555 crore and an increase in average ticket sizes. Delinquency indicators improved significantly, with PAR 31-180 falling to 2% and PAR 91-180 dropping to 1.2%. NBFC-MFIs emerged as key growth drivers, increasing their portfolio share to 43.7%, while banks saw a decline to 26.4%.

Key Points: Microfinance portfolio rebounds to Rs 331K crore, up 3.2% QoQ

  • Portfolio rebounds to Rs 331K crore, up 3.2% QoQ
  • Disbursements surge 25.8% QoQ to Rs 77,555 crore
  • Delinquency improves with PAR 31-180 falling to 2%
  • NBFC-MFIs lead growth with 43.7% portfolio share
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Microfinance portfolio rebounds to Rs 331K crore; Up by 3.2% QoQ: Report

India's microfinance sector rebounds to Rs 331K crore in Mar'26, up 3.2% QoQ, driven by higher originations, larger ticket sizes, and improved asset quality.

"Microfinance portfolio rebounds after eight quarters, rising 3.2% QoQ to Rs 331K crore in Mar'26, supported by higher originations, larger ticket sizes and improvement in PAR 31-180. - CRIF High Mark MicroLend report"

New Delhi, May 8

India's microfinance sector recorded a significant turnaround as the portfolio outstanding rebounded to Rs 331,000 crore as of March 2026. This recovery, marking a 3.2 per cent quarter-on-quarter growth, represents the first major uptick after nearly eight quarters of contraction since March 2024. The growth was largely supported by a surge in new loan originations and an increase in average ticket sizes across the industry.

According to the latest MicroLend report by CRIF High Mark, this recovery was accompanied by a notable moderation in delinquency indicators. The report highlighted that the PAR 31-180 bucket improved to 2 per cent by March 2026, down from 2.4 per cent in March 2024. While the portfolio outstanding declined by 13.2 per cent on a year-on-year (YoY) basis, the report attributed this partly to the reclassification of loans and a shift from microfinance to retail repositories.

"Microfinance portfolio rebounds after eight quarters, rising 3.2% QoQ to Rs 331K crore in Mar'26, supported by higher originations, larger ticket sizes and improvement in PAR 31-180," the report stated.

The data showed that while the number of active borrowers and loans continued to decline, the pace of this contraction eased. Active borrower counts fell by 3.2 per cent to 6.9 crore, a slower decline compared to the 5 to 6 per cent drops seen in previous quarters. Similarly, active loans moderated by 4.5 per cent to 10.7 crore as of March 2026.

Disbursement activity provided a strong tailwind for the sector during the final quarter of the fiscal year. The value of microfinance disbursements increased by 25.8 per cent QoQ, reaching Rs 77,555 crore in Q4FY26. In terms of volume, the industry saw 126.1 lakh loans disbursed, reflecting a 22.8 per cent increase over the preceding quarter.

On the lender side, Non-Banking Financial Company-Microfinance Institutions (NBFC-MFIs) emerged as the primary growth drivers. Their share of the total portfolio outstanding rose from 38.9 per cent to 43.7 per cent YoY.

Conversely, the market share for banks saw a decline from 32.6 per cent to 26.4 per cent, while Small Finance Banks and other NBFCs maintained relatively stable shares at 16 per cent and 12-13 per cent, respectively.

"Early-stage (PAR 1-30, PAR 31-90) delinquency buckets dropped below 1%, while PAR 91-180 declined sharply from 3.4% in Mar'25 to 1.2% in Mar'26--the best level in five quarters," the report noted.

Geographically, the recovery remained broad-based across India. Nine out of the top 10 states recorded QoQ growth in their portfolios, with Tamil Nadu being the only exception. Although some states continued to report delinquency levels above the national average, the overall trend pointed toward stabilization.

The report also emphasized a shift in risk management, noting that approximately 95 per cent of portfolio exposure is now concentrated among borrowers with three or fewer lender associations. This trend reflects the impact of stricter guardrails and tightening underwriting standards adopted by lenders.

"Overall, the MicroLend report underscores that while the industry continues to recalibrate, microfinance lending in India is showing recovery, with improving asset quality, stronger origination momentum, and a shift towards higher-ticket loans," the report stated.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
The improvement in PAR 31-180 from 2.4% to 2.0% is significant. But I worry about the concentration of 95% portfolio among 3 or fewer lenders - does this mean many borrowers are still being excluded? We need to balance risk management with financial inclusion, especially for rural women.
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Suresh O
Good to see NBFC-MFIs taking the lead with 43.7% share. But banks reducing their exposure is concerning - they have better reach in rural areas. Also, why is Tamil Nadu the only state not showing growth? Something needs to be looked at there.
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Vikram M
The 25.8% QoQ jump in disbursements is impressive, but I'm cautiously optimistic. During my work in rural UP, I saw how over-indebtedness hurt families after the 2023 crisis. Higher ticket sizes sound good for growth, but are we ensuring borrowers can actually repay? Need more focus on income generation, not just loan disbursement.
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Ananya R
The drop in early-stage delinquency below 1% is what gives me hope. And the fact that most borrowers now have only 3 or fewer lenders shows stricter norms are working. But 6.9 crore active borrowers still declining by 3.2% - where are they going? Are they moving to other credit sources or just dropping out of formal credit? 📉
J
James A
As someone who works in impact investing, this recovery is encouraging but I'd like to see more granular data. Which states are driving the growth? Are NBFC-MFIs actually reaching the poorest or just serving existing

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