UPI Cashback Isn’t Always ‘Free Money’: Here’s What Users Miss

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Key points generated by AI, verified by newsroom

  • UPI cashback exceeding ₹50,000 is taxable as a gift.

Every time a UPI cashback scratch card pops up on your screen after a payment, it feels like a win. But there is more to that “free money” than you see. 

Here is what the fine print actually says.

Cashback Is Often Not A Direct Bank Credit

You might think that cashback means money deposited into your bank account, but apps have shifted to vouchers, coins, points, and merchant rewards. These can only be used with specific partners and expire if you do not redeem them in time. And even if an offer involves real cash, you have to activate it manually before making the payment. Miss that step, and the reward simply does not apply.

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Monthly Caps Quietly Limit the Value

High cashback rates are attractive, but once you hit the monthly ceiling, cashback rates drop sharply. In several cases, that ceiling is as low as Rs 500 a month, meaning the headline rate applies only to your first few hundred rupees of spending.

The Tax Angle Most UPI Cashback Users Ignore

Under Section 56(2) of the Income Tax Act, cashback from UPI apps is treated as a “gift” and is taxable if the total amount received in a financial year exceeds Rs 50,000. For most everyday users, this threshold is unlikely to be breached. But for heavy users stacking rewards across multiple platforms, it is a compliance detail worth tracking.

Real Currency Is Your Data

The bigger cost may not be financial. Cashback is also how fintech platforms build behavioural profiles on users. Each transaction feeds into a dataset that platforms use for targeted financial products, lending decisions, and advertising.

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Spending More to Earn More

Scratch cards, limited-time offers, and streak rewards are designed to increase transaction frequency, not just reward it. Chasing a cashback offer can quietly make you spend more than you originally planned.

What Should Consumers Do?

Cashback is not a scam. It is real value when redeemed correctly. Cashback is a marketing tool, not a financial strategy. Before chasing a reward, read the offer terms, check the expiry date, and ask yourself one question: am I spending more than I need to just to earn a small coupon?

Disclaimer : This story is auto aggregated by a computer programme and has not been created or edited by DOWNTHENEWS. Publisher: abplive.com