What Was SBI mCASH and Why Is SBI Shutting It Down on December 1? What Users Need to Know
The State Bank of India (SBI) has announced that it will discontinue its mCASH service after November 30, 2025. From December 1st customers will no longer be able to send or claim money using mCASH on the OnlineSBI or YONO Lite platforms.

What Was SBI mCASH?
SBI mCASH was a feature that allowed customers to transfer money without adding a beneficiary. Users could simply enter the recipient's mobile number or email ID, after which the receiver received a secure link and an 8-digit passcode to claim the funds instantly into any bank account.
The SBI mCASH allowed fast transfers and was especially useful for occasional payments, but the bank is now withdrawing it due to increased security requirements, the rise of UPI payments.
Why SBI Is Discontinuing mCASH?
According to SBI, the mCASH facility is being phased out to strengthen digital payment security, remove outdated or less secure transfer modes. The bank is also promoting UPI, IMPS, NEFT, and RTGS, to simplify digital banking experience for millions of users.
The bank said that digital security standards have now evolved and the new systems offer better encryption and fraud protection.
How Did mCASH Work?
For users still unfamiliar with the old service, mCASH had a simple process:
- First customers selected mCASH under the Fund Transfer menu on YONO Lite or OnlineSBI
- Next they entered the recipient's mobile number or email.
- mCASH required a nominal fee of Rs. 2.50 per transaction
- The recipient received a link + 8-digit passcode via SMS/email
- In order to receive the money the receiver entered their account number, IFSC, mobile/email and the 8-digit passcode. Only then the Money was transferred in real time via IMPS
- The State Bank mCASH app on Android even allowed users to store up to five favourite accounts for quicker claims.
Changes From December 1st
From December 1, the mCASH option will be permanently disabled. Customers cannot send money using mobile number/email, cannot claim mCASH transfers, must switch to UPI, IMPS, NEFT, or RTGS for fund transfers SBI has requested customers to transition to alternative digital payment methods before the deadline to avoid any inconvenience.
What Are the Alternatives for mCASH Users?
SBI suggests several secure digital banking options like UPI (BHIM SBI Pay) which is the easiest and fastest method for customers to send money: other options include IMPS, NEFT RTGS for large-value transfers above Rs. 2 lakh.


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