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Updated May 25, 2026 · 18:46
India News Updated May 25, 2026

RBI Mandates 3-Year Cooling-Off for Co-op Bank Directors After 10-Year Tenure

The Reserve Bank of India has mandated a minimum three-year cooling-off period for directors of urban and rural co-operative banks after completing a continuous tenure of ten years. This move, effective immediately, aims to prevent directors from circumventing statutory tenure limits by resigning briefly and getting re-elected. The Banking Laws (Amendment) Act, 2025 raised the maximum tenure from eight to ten years, but RBI found instances of loophole exploitation. During the cooling-off period, directors cannot be associated with the bank except as a member or customer, though they may serve on other banks' boards.

RBI mandates 3-year cooling-off period for Co-operative bank directors after 10-year tenure to curb circumvention

New Delhi, May 25

The Reserve Bank of India has tightened governance norms for both urban and rural co-operative banks, mandating a minimum three-year cooling-off period for directors who complete a continuous tenure of ten years on the board of the same bank.

The move, effective immediately under the RBI (Urban Co-operative Banks - Governance) Amendment Directions, 2026 and RBI (Rural Co-operative Banks - Governance) Amendment Directions, 2026, aims to stop directors from skirting statutory tenure limits by resigning briefly and getting re-elected or co-opted.

The Banking Laws (Amendment) Act, 2025, had raised the maximum continuous tenure of directors of UCBs, State Co-operative Banks and Central Co-operative Banks from eight years to ten years, with the amended provision coming into effect on August 1, 2025.

"The provision had come into force for UCBs with effect from June 29, 2020," the RBI said in the UCB release. For StCBs and CCBs, it applied "with effect from April 1, 2021."

RBI flagged instances where the intent of the law was being defeated. "In a few cases, directors have been found to be resorting to certain methods to circumvent the provisions of the Act, such as resigning briefly from office and being reelected/co-opted to the Board within a short period of time, thereby continuing to be on the Board of a UCB for an extended period beyond the legally permissible tenure, which defeats the intent and spirit of the statutory provision," the UCB directions state. Identical language appears in the RCB directions for StCBs and CCBs.

To close the loophole, RBI has inserted a new paragraph 7A in both the 2025 governance directions. "A director on the Board of a UCB, after completing a continuous tenure of ten years in office, shall be eligible to be re-appointed, whether by election or co-option or in any other manner, as a director on the Board of the same UCB only after undergoing a minimum cooling-off period of three years," the amendment reads. The same rule now applies to RCBs.

During the cooling-off period, the director's link with the bank will be limited. "During the cooling-off period, the said director shall not be associated with the UCB in any capacity/manner other than as a member/customer," the directions specify.

However, the RBI clarified: "This, however, shall not preclude him/her from being appointed as a director on the Board of another bank, if otherwise eligible."

For computing tenure, RBI has defined continuity. "For calculating the period of continuous tenure, the total time served on the Board of the UCB, including the period of directorship preceding an interruption of less than three years but excluding the period of directorship preceding at least a three-year interruption, shall be reckoned," the explanation states. The same calculation applies to StCBs and CCBs.

The amendments, issued under Section 35A read with Section 10A(2A)(i) and Section 56 of the Banking Regulation Act, "shall come into force with immediate effect," RBI said.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Priya S

Finally! Some action to stop the 'resign and come back' tactic. 👏 But I hope RBI also monitors during the cooling-off period how these ex-directors influence decisions indirectly. Often the real control stays with the same people through relatives or proxies. Need stricter implementation.

James A

As someone who has worked with cooperative banks in Karnataka, I see both sides. Some of these directors have decades of experience and local knowledge. But the same people running the show for 20+ years without fresh ideas is problematic. This rule balances experience with need for new perspectives. Good governance move.

Vikram M

Ek number decision by RBI! 🎯 In Maharashtra, many cooperative banks have been run like personal fiefdoms. Directors would just resign for a month, attend some function, and come back. This 3-year gap means real change. But what about the countless cases where they manage through family members on the board? Need to close that loophole too.

Sarah B

Interesting timing ahead of the state cooperative bank elections in many states. The provision allowing them to serve on other bank boards during cooling-off is pragmatic - doesn't waste their experience completely. But 3 years is quite long. Could have been 2 years as a compromise. Still, any reform is better than the status quo.

Ananya R

This is excellent news for depositors like my grandmother who trust cooperative banks with their life savings. Too many scandals in UCBs and RCBs due to long-tenured directors creating cozy relationships with management. Fresh blood every decade with a proper break is necessary. Kudos to RBI for closing this loophole!

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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