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Home › Blog › Banking

What Is a Current Account? The Engine of Business

By MoneyExplain • 7 min read • Updated Feb 2026
Business ledger and calculator representing current account

Key Takeaways

  • Purpose: Built for high-frequency business transactions, not for saving.
  • Interest Rate: You earn 0% interest. (Yes, Zero).
  • Benefit: No limit on daily transactions. Unlimited withdrawals and deposits.
  • Overdraft (OD): Acts as a safety net. You can withdraw more than what is in your account (for a fee).
  • Who needs it? Shopkeepers, Traders, Freelancers, Companies, LLPs.

If a Savings Account is a "Parking Lot" where money rests and earns interest, a Current Account is a "Highway" where money moves fast.

It is the backbone of every business in India. But why would anyone open an account that pays Zero Interest? The answer is simple: Liquid Speed.

1. Savings vs Current Account

Understand the difference before you walk into a bank.

Feature Savings Account Current Account
Primary Goal Save Money Move Money (Business)
Interest Earned 3% - 7% 0% (Zilch)
Transaction Limit Limited (e.g., 5 free ATM uses) Unlimited
Minimum Balance Low (₹1,000 - ₹10,000) High (₹10,000 - ₹50,000+)
Overdraft Facility No Yes

2. The "Zero Interest" Logic

You might think it is unfair that the bank pays nothing on your Current Account balance. But consider the cost to the bank.

A shopkeeper might deposit ₹5 Lakhs in the morning and withdraw ₹4 Lakhs by evening to pay suppliers. The money is constantly moving. The bank cannot "invest" this unstable money anywhere. Hence, they cannot pay you interest. instead, they offer you Operations Support.

3. The Superpower: Overdraft (OD)

This is the biggest reason businesses open Current Accounts.

Imagine you have only ₹50,000 in your account, but you need to write a check for ₹80,000 to a supplier urgently.

  • In Savings Account: The check bounces. You pay a penalty. Reputation loss.
  • In Current Account (with OD): The bank honors the ₹80,000 check. Your balance shows -₹30,000. You pay interest only on this negative amount until you deposit money back.

It acts like a pre-approved emergency loan.

4. Common Mistakes Small Business Owners Make

Mistake 1: Using Personal Savings Account for Business
If you have many transactions in your personal account, the Income Tax Department will notice. It complicates your tax filing. Always separate business and personal finances.

Mistake 2: Ignoring MAB Charges
Current Accounts have high "Minimum Average Balance" penalties. If your limit is ₹25,000 and you drop to ₹24,000, banks can charge hefty fines (e.g., ₹1,000+). Monitor your balance daily.

Final Takeaway

If you are a salaried employee, stay away from Current Accounts. They are useless for you.
But if you are a freelancer, consultant, or shop owner, opening a Current Account is the first step to legally separating "You" from "Your Business".

Are you mixing Business and Personal expenses?
Learn why keeping them separate is crucial for wealth.
→ Read Savings Account Basics

In This Article

  • Savings vs Current Table
  • Why Zero Interest?
  • Overdraft Power
  • Common Mistakes

Banking Basics

  • Savings Account
  • Loan Basics
  • CIBIL Score
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