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Chirag Singhal's blog
Finance & Investment · 4 min read

What Is P2P Lending & How Does It Work in India?

A comprehensive guide explaining the mechanics of Peer-to-Peer lending in India, how money flows through escrow accounts, and how lenders earn returns.

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

Financial Disclaimer: P2P lending involves significant risk, including the total loss of your principal. This is educational content, not investment advice.


The Core Concept

Peer-to-Peer (P2P) lending is a model where individual lenders directly fund loans to individual borrowers through a technology platform, cutting out the traditional bank as an intermediary. The platform acts as a marketplace — it connects the two parties, facilitates the transaction, and handles documentation, but it does NOT lend its own money.

The Traditional Bank Model

  1. You deposit money in a bank → Bank pays you 6-7% FD interest.
  2. Bank lends your money to a borrower → Bank charges 14-24% interest.
  3. The bank keeps the spread (the difference) as profit.

The P2P Lending Model

  1. You lend money directly to a borrower via a platform → Borrower pays you 10-16% interest.
  2. The platform charges a small fee (1-2%) for facilitating the match.
  3. You earn the spread — but you also bear all the risk if the borrower defaults.

How the Money Flows

Under RBI regulations, the flow of funds in a P2P transaction is strictly controlled:

  1. Lender deposits funds into a bank-managed Escrow Account maintained by the P2P platform.
  2. The platform’s algorithm matches the lender with a borrower based on risk appetite, loan tenure, and interest rate preferences.
  3. Funds are released from the escrow account to the borrower’s bank account.
  4. The borrower repays in Equated Monthly Installments (EMIs), which flow back into the escrow account.
  5. The platform distributes the EMI (principal + interest) to the lender’s linked bank account.
  6. T+1 Settlement: Per the August 2024 RBI rules, all fund transfers must be settled within one working day. Idle funds in escrow must be returned to the lender.

Key Participants

RoleWhoResponsibility
LenderYou (the investor)Provides capital, bears all credit risk
BorrowerIndividual seeking a personal loanRepays principal + interest in EMIs
Platform (NBFC-P2P)LenDenClub, Lendbox, Faircent, etc.Matches lender and borrower, credit assessment, documentation, collections
Escrow BankA scheduled commercial bankHolds and releases funds securely

How You Earn Returns

Your returns come from the interest charged to the borrower, minus the platform’s fee. Here’s a simplified example:

  • You lend: ₹10,000 to a borrower at 18% annual interest for 12 months.
  • Borrower pays: ₹10,000 (principal) + ₹1,800 (interest) = ₹11,800 total over 12 EMIs.
  • Platform fee: 1-2% of the transaction (~₹100-200).
  • Your net return: Approximately ₹1,600-1,700 (or ~16-17% gross, before tax and defaults).

The Catch

If the borrower defaults (stops paying), you lose part or all of your ₹10,000. The platform will attempt recovery through legal means and collection agencies, but there is no guarantee of recovering your money.


Micro-Diversification: The Key Strategy

To mitigate default risk, platforms encourage (and some enforce) micro-diversification:

  • Instead of lending ₹10,000 to one borrower, you lend ₹250 each to 40 different borrowers.
  • If 2 out of 40 default (5% NPA), you lose ₹500 but earn interest on the remaining 38 — potentially still achieving a positive net return.
  • This is why the RBI caps exposure to a single borrower at ₹50,000.

Who Are the Borrowers?

P2P borrowers in India are typically:

  • Salaried professionals needing short-term personal loans (medical bills, travel, gadgets).
  • Self-employed individuals who don’t qualify for traditional bank credit.
  • People consolidating high-interest credit card debt.
  • Small business owners needing working capital.

Loan tenures typically range from 3 to 36 months, with interest rates from 12% to 30% depending on the borrower’s creditworthiness.


Next: Part 2: NBFC-P2P Regulations & the August 2024 RBI Crackdown

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