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Chirag Singhal's blog
Finance & Investment · 3 min read

P2P Lending in India: The Complete Investor's Guide (2026)

An exhaustive, research-backed guide to Peer-to-Peer lending platforms in India covering RBI regulations, NPA rates, platform reviews, tax implications, and risk analysis.

P2P Lending in India: The Complete Investor’s Guide (2026)

Financial Disclaimer: This guide is for educational purposes only. P2P lending is a high-risk investment where you can lose your entire principal. Consult a SEBI-registered investment advisor before investing.

Peer-to-Peer (P2P) lending has emerged as one of India’s most controversial alternative investment classes. Promising returns of 10-16% — far above bank FDs — it attracted lakhs of retail investors. But the August 2024 RBI crackdown fundamentally changed the game, stripping away guaranteed returns, liquidity features, and credit enhancements.

This 7-part series is the most comprehensive guide available on P2P lending in India, covering everything from the regulatory framework to platform-specific NPA data to tax filing.


📑 The Series

Part 1: What Is P2P Lending & How Does It Work?

Part 2: The RBI Regulatory Framework

Part 3: Platform Reviews & NPA Data

Part 4: Risk Analysis — NPA, Defaults, and Capital Erosion

Part 5: Tax Implications

Part 6: P2P vs FD vs Mutual Funds

Part 7: Strategy & Best Practices


Quick Reference: Key Numbers

MetricValue
Max Lender Exposure (All Platforms)₹50,00,000
Max Loan Tenure36 months
Max Exposure to Single Borrower₹50,000
Typical Advertised Returns10-16% p.a.
Reported NPA Ranges3.5% — 10% (varies by platform)
Tax TreatmentIncome from Other Sources (slab rate)
Insurance/DICGC Cover❌ None
Guaranteed Returns❌ Prohibited by RBI since Aug 2024

🛡️ Important Warning

Unlike bank Fixed Deposits (insured up to ₹5 lakh under DICGC), P2P lending has zero insurance or government backing. If a borrower defaults, you lose your money — and the platform has no obligation to compensate you.


Last Reviewed: May 2026. Sources: RBI Master Directions (NBFC-P2P), Economic Times, LiveMint, 1Finance, Lendbox, LenDenClub, Faircent.

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