Interest Rates on FD in SBI: A Tax-Smart Guide for Indian Investors
Interest rates on FD in SBI are one of the most searched topics among Indian savers because State Bank of India fixed deposits are often seen as stable, familiar and easy to manage. However, choosing an SBI fixed deposit should not be based only on the highest visible rate. The tenure, payout option, tax treatment, TDS, old tax regime versus new tax regime, senior citizen benefit, liquidity need and your total financial plan all matter.
For many Indian taxpayers, a fixed deposit is not just an investment. It may be an emergency fund, retirement income source, short-term parking option, capital protection tool, loan collateral, or a way to balance market-linked investments such as mutual funds. Therefore, understanding the interest rates on FD in SBI helps you make a better decision before locking money for months or years.
As per SBI’s official retail domestic term deposit rate page, the bank’s revised retail domestic FD rates below ₹3 crore are effective from 15 December 2025, and the page was last updated on 1 May 2026. SBI lists different rates for general citizens and senior citizens, with a special note that the 5-year to 10-year senior citizen rate includes an additional premium under the SBI We-care deposit scheme. (State Bank of India)
Tax planning is equally important. FD interest is taxable, and it generally appears in AIS, TIS and Form 26AS when TDS is deducted or reported. If you ignore FD interest while filing your Income Tax Return, you may face mismatch issues, refund delays, higher tax payable later, or even a notice from the Income Tax Department. This is especially relevant for salaried taxpayers, freelancers, professionals, NRIs with Indian deposits, small business owners and senior citizens who depend on deposit income.
India’s tax filing system has become increasingly data-driven through the Income Tax eFiling portal, where taxpayers must match Form 16, AIS, TIS, Form 26AS, bank interest, capital gains and other income details carefully. If you need help reviewing FD interest, TDS, deductions or tax regime suitability, WealthSure’s expert-assisted tax filing support can help you file with better clarity and compliance.
Current Interest Rates on FD in SBI: What Investors Should Know
Before investing, you should check the current interest rates on FD in SBI directly from SBI’s official website because banks can revise deposit rates based on liquidity, RBI policy movement, market conditions and internal asset-liability decisions.
For retail domestic term deposits below ₹3 crore, SBI’s official rate table shows the following revised rates effective 15 December 2025:
| SBI FD Tenure | General Public Rate | Senior Citizen Rate |
|---|---|---|
| 7 days to 45 days | 3.05% p.a. | 3.55% p.a. |
| 46 days to 179 days | 4.90% p.a. | 5.40% p.a. |
| 180 days to 210 days | 5.65% p.a. | 6.15% p.a. |
| 211 days to less than 1 year | 5.90% p.a. | 6.40% p.a. |
| 1 year to less than 2 years | 6.25% p.a. | 6.75% p.a. |
| 2 years to less than 3 years | 6.40% p.a. | 6.90% p.a. |
| 3 years to less than 5 years | 6.30% p.a. | 6.80% p.a. |
| 5 years and up to 10 years | 6.05% p.a. | 7.05% p.a.* |
*The 7.05% senior citizen rate includes additional premium of 50 basis points under the SBI We-care deposit scheme, as stated by SBI. (State Bank of India)
SBI also states that the specific tenure “Amrit Vrishti” deposit of 444 days has been revised to 6.45% from 15 December 2025, with senior citizens and super senior citizens eligible for additional benefits where applicable. SBI further notes that super senior citizens aged 80 years and above receive an additional 10 basis points over the senior citizen rate under SBI Patrons, subject to scheme conditions. (State Bank of India)
Why Interest Rates on FD in SBI Should Not Be Judged by Rate Alone
A higher FD rate can look attractive, but your actual benefit depends on the post-tax return. For example, if you earn 6.40% on an SBI FD and fall in a higher tax slab, your effective post-tax return may be much lower. Therefore, a taxpayer in the 30% slab should not compare FD returns with market-linked or tax-efficient options only on headline rates.
You should evaluate:
- Tenure: Longer lock-in may not always mean better flexibility.
- Tax slab: FD interest is taxable as income.
- TDS: Bank TDS may reduce cash flow, but it is not your final tax liability.
- Liquidity need: Premature withdrawal can reduce returns.
- Purpose: Emergency fund, retirement income and short-term parking need different strategies.
- Tax regime: Some deductions may not be available under the new tax regime.
- Senior citizen status: Senior citizens may receive higher SBI FD rates and tax-related benefits, depending on eligibility.
For taxpayers who want to align FDs with broader tax and financial goals, WealthSure’s personal tax planning service can help assess how FD interest fits into taxable income, deduction planning and cash-flow needs.
How SBI Calculates Interest on Fixed Deposits
SBI explains that the number of days in a year for INR-denominated domestic deposits is reckoned as 365 days. For special term deposits of six months and above, interest is compounded quarterly, and for ordinary term deposits of more than three months, interest may be paid at monthly, quarterly or half-yearly intervals depending on the option chosen. (State Bank of India)
This matters because two investors may choose the same SBI FD tenure but receive different cash flows:
- A cumulative FD compounds interest and pays it at maturity.
- A non-cumulative FD pays interest periodically.
- A monthly interest payout may support retirees but may reduce compounding.
- A cumulative FD may suit people who do not need regular income.
If you are investing for a goal such as education, home down payment, emergency reserve or retirement cash flow, you should match the FD type with the purpose.
SBI FD Rates for Senior Citizens: Why the Difference Matters
Senior citizens generally receive a higher rate than the general public. In SBI’s current retail FD table, senior citizen rates are usually 0.50% higher than general rates, and the 5-year to 10-year senior citizen rate reflects SBI We-care benefits as noted by the bank. (State Bank of India)
This difference can be meaningful for retirees. For example, a senior citizen investing ₹10 lakh for 5 years may earn a noticeably higher interest amount than a non-senior investor. However, tax planning remains crucial. Even if the FD rate is higher, the interest is still taxable according to the investor’s applicable tax slab.
Senior citizens should also review whether they qualify for deductions such as Section 80TTB under the old tax regime. The Income Tax eFiling portal notes that under Section 194A, no TDS is deducted on bank, post office or co-operative bank interest payment up to ₹50,000 to a senior citizen. (Income Tax India)
Tax on SBI FD Interest: What Indian Taxpayers Often Miss
FD interest is not tax-free. It is generally taxable under “Income from Other Sources.” Even if SBI deducts TDS, you still need to include the full FD interest in your Income Tax Return and claim the TDS credit separately.
Many taxpayers wrongly assume that:
- “TDS is deducted, so no further action is needed.”
- “FD interest below TDS limit is tax-free.”
- “Interest is taxable only at maturity.”
- “If FD is in a joint name, tax can be ignored.”
- “Bank interest not shown in Form 16 need not be reported.”
These assumptions can create compliance problems.
Your Form 16 usually covers salary income and employer-related TDS. However, FD interest comes from the bank, not your employer. Therefore, you must check AIS, TIS and Form 26AS before filing your ITR. If FD interest appears in AIS but you do not report it, the Income Tax Department’s systems may flag a mismatch.
WealthSure’s Income Tax Return filing online support can help taxpayers review salary income, FD interest, TDS, deductions and tax regime selection before filing.
TDS on SBI FD Interest: TDS Is Not the Same as Final Tax
TDS is only a tax deduction mechanism. It does not decide your final tax liability. Your final liability depends on your total income, tax regime, deductions, exemptions and applicable slab rate.
The Income Tax Department’s TDS rate table includes Section 194A for income by way of interest other than interest on securities, with TDS generally listed at 10%. (Etds)
For example:
- If SBI deducts TDS at 10% but you fall in the 20% or 30% slab, you may still need to pay additional tax.
- If your income is below taxable limits and TDS has been deducted, you may claim refund while filing ITR, subject to Income Tax Department processing.
- If you are eligible and your total tax liability is nil, you may consider Form 15G or Form 15H, as applicable.
- If your PAN is not updated or reporting is incorrect, TDS credit issues may arise.
Refunds are never guaranteed. They depend on accurate filing, correct bank validation, TDS matching, Income Tax Department processing and absence of unresolved discrepancies.
Old Tax Regime vs New Tax Regime: How FD Interest Fits In
Interest rates on FD in SBI should also be reviewed with your tax regime choice. Under the old tax regime, eligible taxpayers may claim certain deductions such as Section 80C, 80D, 80CCD and, for eligible senior citizens, Section 80TTB. Under the new tax regime, many deductions are restricted or unavailable.
Therefore, FD interest can affect your tax regime decision in three ways:
- It increases your total taxable income.
- It may push you into a higher slab depending on total income.
- It may affect whether the old regime or new regime is more beneficial.
A salaried employee with Form 16, HRA, home loan interest, NPS contribution and FD interest should not choose the tax regime casually. Similarly, a retiree with pension and FD income should compare both regimes carefully.
If you are unsure, WealthSure’s tax saving suggestions service can help review eligible deductions and tax-saving options without making unrealistic promises.
Practical Example 1: Salaried Employee with SBI FD Interest
Rohan is a salaried employee earning ₹14 lakh per year. He invests ₹5 lakh in an SBI fixed deposit and earns interest during the financial year. His employer deducts TDS on salary, so he assumes his tax filing is complete.
However, his Form 16 does not include SBI FD interest. Later, when he checks AIS and Form 26AS, he notices bank interest and TDS. If he files only based on Form 16, his return may under-report income.
Correct approach:
- Add SBI FD interest under Income from Other Sources.
- Claim TDS credit shown in Form 26AS.
- Compare old tax regime and new tax regime.
- Review whether advance tax applies if total tax payable is significant.
- File the correct ITR with complete disclosures.
Expert guidance can help Rohan avoid mismatch, defective filing risk and later notice response issues.
Practical Example 2: Senior Citizen Depending on SBI FD Income
Meera is 66 and has pension income plus SBI FD interest. She chooses a 5-year SBI FD because senior citizen rates are higher. However, she does not calculate total interest across all bank branches and FDs.
Her confusion starts when TDS is deducted even though she expected no deduction. The issue may arise because her interest exceeds the applicable threshold, her Form 15H was not submitted correctly, or her total income position needs review.
Correct approach:
- Estimate total annual interest before investing.
- Check whether Section 80TTB is available under the old tax regime.
- Submit Form 15H only if eligible.
- Report interest income accurately in ITR.
- Reconcile AIS, TIS and Form 26AS.
WealthSure can help senior citizens review FD interest, pension income, deduction eligibility and ITR filing accuracy.
Practical Example 3: Freelancer Parking Business Receipts in SBI FD
A freelancer receives irregular project income and parks surplus money in SBI FDs. He thinks FD interest is separate from business income and does not include it while filing.
This can create problems because FD interest still needs to be disclosed. In addition, freelancers and professionals may have advance tax obligations if tax payable after TDS exceeds the applicable threshold.
Correct approach:
- Maintain records of professional receipts and FD interest separately.
- Report FD interest under Income from Other Sources unless facts indicate otherwise.
- Review advance tax liability.
- Choose the correct ITR form based on professional income.
- Match AIS and bank statements before filing.
Freelancers can use WealthSure’s business and professional ITR filing assistance to avoid under-reporting and tax calculation errors.
Practical Example 4: NRI with SBI NRE Fixed Deposit
An NRI has Indian income and also maintains NRE fixed deposits with SBI. SBI’s official NRE fixed deposit rate page shows NRE term deposit rates effective from 15 March 2026, including 6.25% for 1 year to less than 2 years, 6.45% for 444 days under Amrit Vrishti, 6.40% for 2 years to less than 3 years, 6.30% for 3 years to less than 5 years, and 6.05% for 5 years to 10 years for deposits below ₹3 crore. (State Bank of India)
The NRI must distinguish between NRE, NRO and domestic deposit taxation. NRE interest may have different tax treatment compared with NRO interest, subject to applicable law and residential status.
Correct approach:
- Confirm residential status.
- Separate NRE and NRO interest.
- Review India income and foreign income reporting obligations.
- Consider DTAA where relevant.
- File ITR if required based on taxable Indian income.
NRIs can use WealthSure’s NRI tax filing service for residential status review, Indian income disclosure and tax filing support.
Premature Withdrawal: Why Liquidity Planning Matters
SBI’s deposit rate page mentions premature withdrawal penalty rules. For domestic retail term deposits, the penalty is 0.50% for deposits up to ₹5 lakh and 1% for deposits above ₹5 lakh but below ₹2 crore, as stated in SBI’s deposit rate information. (State Bank of India)
This means the rate you expect may not be the rate you actually earn if you break the FD early. Therefore, do not put all your emergency money into one long-tenure FD. Instead, consider laddering.
FD Laddering Strategy
FD laddering means splitting your money across different maturities. For example:
- ₹2 lakh for 6 months
- ₹2 lakh for 1 year
- ₹2 lakh for 2 years
- ₹2 lakh for 3 years
- ₹2 lakh for 5 years
This approach improves liquidity and reduces the need for premature withdrawal. It also helps you reinvest gradually when interest rates change.
SBI FD vs Other Investment Options: Where It Fits
SBI fixed deposits offer predictability, but they may not always beat inflation after tax. Therefore, FDs should be part of a balanced plan, not the entire plan.
A practical asset mix may include:
- SBI FD for emergency funds and short-term goals
- Savings account for immediate liquidity
- Debt funds or other regulated products where suitable
- Equity mutual funds for long-term wealth creation, subject to risk
- NPS or retirement products for long-term planning
- Insurance for protection, not return chasing
Market-linked investments carry risk. Therefore, any move from FD to mutual funds or SIPs should depend on risk profile, time horizon and financial goals. SEBI regulates securities markets and publishes investor-related information through its official website, which investors can review for broader market awareness. (State Bank of India)
For goal-based planning, WealthSure’s financial advisory services can help you balance safety, liquidity, tax efficiency and long-term growth.
Checklist Before Booking an SBI Fixed Deposit
Use this checklist before selecting an FD tenure:
- Check the latest interest rates on FD in SBI from the official SBI website.
- Decide whether you need cumulative or payout interest.
- Compare general, senior citizen and super senior citizen benefits.
- Estimate annual FD interest income.
- Check expected tax slab under old and new tax regimes.
- Review TDS threshold and Form 15G/15H eligibility.
- Avoid putting emergency money in one long FD.
- Consider FD laddering for liquidity.
- Check premature withdrawal penalty.
- Confirm PAN, bank account and nominee details.
- Keep FD advice, interest certificate and bank statements.
- Reconcile AIS, TIS and Form 26AS before filing ITR.
How to Report SBI FD Interest in ITR
When filing your Income Tax Return, you should include SBI FD interest under Income from Other Sources, unless a specific situation requires different treatment. You should not rely only on Form 16 because your employer may not know your bank interest income unless you disclosed it during the year.
A proper filing process includes:
- Download Form 16 from employer.
- Download AIS and TIS from the Income Tax eFiling portal.
- Check Form 26AS for TDS credit.
- Download interest certificate from SBI.
- Match bank interest with AIS.
- Add FD interest in ITR.
- Claim TDS credit.
- Compare old tax regime and new tax regime.
- Pay self-assessment tax if needed.
- Verify the return after filing.
You can also upload your Form 16 to WealthSure for assisted review, especially if you have FD interest, capital gains, deductions, multiple employers or AIS mismatches.
Common Mistakes While Investing in SBI FDs
Many taxpayers make FD decisions emotionally because SBI is a trusted household name. While trust matters, financial decisions need calculations.
Avoid these mistakes:
Choosing the highest rate without checking tenure
A slightly higher rate may require a longer lock-in. If you need funds earlier, premature withdrawal may reduce returns.
Ignoring tax impact
The headline FD rate is pre-tax. Your post-tax return depends on your slab.
Not reporting accrued interest
Even cumulative FD interest may need annual tax reporting depending on method and reporting.
Assuming TDS means tax is settled
TDS is only part of tax compliance. Your final liability may be higher or lower.
Forgetting joint FD taxation
Taxability depends on beneficial ownership and income attribution, not just whose name appears first.
Missing AIS mismatch
If AIS shows interest and your ITR does not, you may need to respond later.
Not planning for senior citizen deductions
Eligible senior citizens should review Section 80TTB and tax regime suitability.
When Free Tax Filing May Be Enough
Free tax filing may be enough if your tax situation is simple. For example, a salaried taxpayer with one Form 16, no capital gains, limited bank interest, no foreign assets, no business income and no mismatch in AIS may be able to file without extensive support.
However, even simple taxpayers should review FD interest carefully. If interest rates on FD in SBI have helped you earn meaningful interest during the year, the income must be considered while filing.
Free filing may suit you when:
- You have one employer.
- Your Form 16 is accurate.
- FD interest is small and easy to report.
- AIS and Form 26AS match.
- There are no capital gains.
- You understand old versus new tax regime.
- You do not need advisory support.
When Expert-Assisted Filing Is Safer
Expert-assisted filing may be safer when your income has multiple moving parts. This includes salaried taxpayers with FD interest and capital gains, freelancers with professional receipts, NRIs, senior citizens, small business owners and taxpayers who received notices.
Consider expert help when:
- SBI FD interest is significant.
- TDS has been deducted but does not match Form 26AS.
- AIS shows incorrect or duplicate interest.
- You changed jobs during the year.
- You have capital gains from mutual funds or shares.
- You are unsure about old versus new tax regime.
- You have NRI income or foreign assets.
- You need revised return or ITR-U support.
- You received a notice or mismatch communication.
For corrections, WealthSure’s revised or updated return filing and ITR-U filing support can help taxpayers evaluate available options based on assessment year, eligibility and facts.
Interest Rates on FD in SBI and Loan Planning
SBI FDs can also help with financial discipline and collateral planning. Some investors use FD-backed loans instead of breaking deposits. This may help preserve the FD while accessing liquidity. However, the loan cost, margin, tenure and repayment discipline must be reviewed.
For loan approval, ITR filing also matters. Lenders often look at income stability, tax returns, bank statements and existing obligations. If your FD interest appears in bank records but not in ITR, your financial profile may look inconsistent.
Therefore, accurate Income Tax Return filing online is not just a compliance task. It can support loan readiness, financial documentation and long-term credibility.
FAQs on Interest Rates on FD in SBI
1. What are the current interest rates on FD in SBI?
The current interest rates on FD in SBI depend on tenure, deposit amount and depositor category. For retail domestic deposits below ₹3 crore, SBI’s official table effective 15 December 2025 shows general public rates ranging from 3.05% to 6.40% for common tenures, while senior citizen rates range from 3.55% to 7.05% depending on tenure and scheme conditions. The 5-year to 10-year senior citizen rate includes additional benefit under SBI We-care as stated by SBI. Since FD rates may change, investors should verify the latest rates on SBI’s official website before booking a deposit. Also, remember that the displayed FD rate is pre-tax. Your actual return depends on your income slab, TDS, tax regime and whether you choose cumulative or periodic interest payout.
2. Are SBI FD interest rates taxable in India?
Yes, SBI FD interest is taxable in India unless a specific exemption applies. For most resident individuals, FD interest is reported under Income from Other Sources and taxed according to the applicable slab rate. TDS may be deducted by the bank if interest exceeds the prescribed threshold, but TDS does not settle your final tax liability. You must still report the full interest amount in your ITR and claim TDS credit if available in Form 26AS. If your total income is below the taxable limit and TDS has been deducted, you may claim a refund through ITR filing, subject to Income Tax Department processing. Senior citizens should also check whether Section 80TTB deduction is available under the old tax regime.
3. Which SBI FD tenure gives the best rate?
The best SBI FD tenure depends on the latest rate chart, your liquidity need and tax position. Based on SBI’s official retail domestic FD table effective 15 December 2025, the 2 years to less than 3 years category offers 6.40% for general public and 6.90% for senior citizens, while the 5 years to 10 years category shows 6.05% for general public and 7.05% for senior citizens under the noted senior citizen benefit. However, the highest rate is not always the best choice. If you may need money earlier, premature withdrawal can reduce returns. Therefore, choose the tenure after considering emergency needs, tax slab, payout preference and goal timeline.
4. Is TDS deducted on SBI FD interest?
Yes, TDS may be deducted on SBI FD interest if the interest exceeds the applicable threshold under tax rules. TDS is generally deducted under Section 194A for interest other than interest on securities. However, the threshold and eligibility may differ for senior citizens and other taxpayers. TDS is not the same as final tax. If you fall in a higher slab, you may need to pay additional tax. If your total income is below taxable limits and TDS has been deducted, you may claim refund after filing ITR, subject to processing. You should always check Form 26AS, AIS and TIS before filing so that the TDS credit and interest income match correctly.
5. Do senior citizens get higher interest rates on FD in SBI?
Yes, senior citizens generally receive higher interest rates on FD in SBI compared with the general public. SBI’s official table shows senior citizen rates that are usually 0.50% higher than general rates for many retail domestic deposit tenures. For 5 years and up to 10 years, SBI shows 7.05% for senior citizens, including additional premium under the SBI We-care deposit scheme. Super senior citizens aged 80 years and above may also receive additional benefit under SBI Patrons, subject to scheme conditions. However, higher interest does not mean tax-free income. Senior citizens should estimate total income, check TDS rules, review Section 80TTB eligibility and file ITR correctly.
6. Should I choose cumulative or monthly payout SBI FD?
Choose cumulative SBI FD if you do not need regular income and want interest to compound until maturity. This may suit goal-based savings, emergency reserve building or medium-term planning. Choose monthly, quarterly or half-yearly payout if you need regular cash flow, especially during retirement. However, payout FDs may not compound in the same way as cumulative deposits, so the maturity value differs. Tax treatment also matters because FD interest is taxable according to your slab. Senior citizens using FDs for monthly expenses should compare payout options with tax impact. If you are unsure, review your cash flow, tax regime and overall portfolio before selecting the FD type.
7. What happens if I break an SBI FD before maturity?
If you break an SBI FD before maturity, the bank may apply a premature withdrawal penalty and the effective interest may be lower than the contracted rate. SBI’s deposit information mentions premature withdrawal penalties for domestic retail term deposits, including 0.50% for deposits up to ₹5 lakh and 1% for deposits above ₹5 lakh but below ₹2 crore. Because premature withdrawal can reduce returns, you should avoid putting all funds into one long-tenure FD. Instead, use FD laddering with different maturity dates. This gives you better liquidity and reduces the chance of breaking a long FD for short-term cash needs.
8. How should SBI FD interest be shown in ITR?
SBI FD interest should generally be shown under Income from Other Sources in your Income Tax Return. You should collect the SBI interest certificate, check AIS, TIS and Form 26AS, and match the figures before filing. If TDS has been deducted, claim the TDS credit shown in Form 26AS. Do not ignore FD interest just because it is not shown in Form 16. Form 16 mainly reflects salary and employer TDS, while bank interest comes from SBI. If interest is missing, duplicated or incorrectly reported in AIS, review the data carefully before filing. Expert-assisted filing can help prevent mismatch and defective return issues.
9. Are SBI FDs better than mutual funds or SIPs?
SBI FDs and mutual funds serve different purposes. SBI FDs provide predictable returns and capital stability, subject to bank terms and deposit insurance limits. Mutual funds and SIP investment India options are market-linked and carry risk, but they may support long-term wealth creation depending on asset allocation, time horizon and investor risk profile. A short-term emergency fund may be better suited to FDs or liquid options, while long-term goals may need a mix of equity, debt and retirement planning instruments. Do not compare FD rates and mutual fund returns without considering tax, risk, liquidity and goal timeline. A balanced financial plan may include both.
10. When should I take expert help for SBI FD tax planning?
You should consider expert help if your SBI FD interest is significant, TDS does not match Form 26AS, AIS shows incorrect data, you are a senior citizen, you have multiple income sources, or you are confused between old tax regime and new tax regime. Expert support is also useful for freelancers, NRIs, small business owners, taxpayers with capital gains and those who need revised return or ITR-U filing. FD interest looks simple, but mistakes in reporting can lead to mismatches, additional tax, refund delays or notices. WealthSure can help review FD interest, TDS, deductions, tax regime choice and ITR filing accuracy based on your documents.
Conclusion: Use SBI FD Rates Wisely, But Plan Taxes Carefully
Interest rates on FD in SBI help Indian investors compare tenures and choose a stable deposit option. However, the right decision goes beyond the headline rate. You should consider tenure, senior citizen benefit, tax slab, TDS, liquidity, premature withdrawal penalty and your broader financial plan.
For simple taxpayers, free filing may be enough when income is straightforward and AIS, TIS, Form 26AS and Form 16 match correctly. However, expert-assisted filing becomes safer when you have significant FD interest, multiple income sources, capital gains, NRI status, business income, AIS mismatch, old versus new tax regime confusion, or notice-related concerns.
Tax laws may change by assessment year. Final tax liability depends on income, tax regime, deductions, exemptions, disclosures, documentation and applicable law. Tax benefits depend on eligibility and documentation. Refunds are subject to Income Tax Department processing. Investment services are advisory or execution-based as applicable, and market-linked investments carry risk.
A well-planned SBI FD can support safety and stability. Still, your long-term wealth depends on accurate compliance, disciplined tax planning and a balanced investment approach. WealthSure can help you connect FD interest reporting, ITR filing, tax planning services, notice response, NRI taxation, business compliance and financial advisory services into one clearer journey.
At WealthSure, we don’t just file taxes — we simplify your financial journey and help you build long-term wealth with confidence.