Beyond Transactions: How UPI is rewiring India’s relationship with money

For decades, India’s relationship with money was defined by touch. Notes and coins represented control, and cash meant certainty. We trusted what we could see and hold. Then, in April 2016, came a turning point. The government’s digital push and the creation of the Unified Payments Interface (UPI) by the National Payments Corporation of India changed everything.
What began as a policy experiment evolved into a habit. In January 2017, India saw about 45 lakh UPI transactions a month. Fast forward to October 2025 and according to NPCI, UPI transaction volumes have hit nearly 2,100 crore, equivalent to nearly 7,500 transactions on average every second.
In less than a decade, UPI has moved from novelty to necessity. Today, it is hard to find a phone in India without a UPI app. For many, it is as essential as the camera or browser.
Speed was the spark. People wanted to send and receive money fast, and UPI delivered that experience with astonishing simplicity. A few taps, a quick beep, and the transaction was done. But speed alone does not sustain adoption. Trust does. And that is where regulators stepped in with relentless precision.
From the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to NPCI and the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology, each institution worked consistently to balance speed with security. Daily transaction limits, two-factor authentication, and bank-grade encryption standards reassured users that their money and data were safe. New features like UPI Lite, auto-pay, and offline UPI were launched to make the system faster and more inclusive without compromising trust.
Those efforts are visible in the RBI’s Digital Payments Index, which rose nearly five-fold from its base in 2018, signalling broad adoption of digital payments including in semi-urban and rural India.
When you travel across India today, you see the change everywhere. QR codes adorn fruit carts, paan shops, and tea stalls. An auto driver in Delhi, a tailor in Indore, a coconut seller in Kochi, all transact digitally with ease. UPI has quietly bridged the country’s digital and offline divide.
For decades, Indians distrusted digital banking. Failed transactions, hidden fees, and cyber frauds had made people wary. UPI changed that narrative through reliability and transparency. Each successful payment became proof that the system worked. Every instant confirmation sound became an affirmation of faith restored.
What is fascinating is how UPI has changed not just behavior but psychology. Money, once something we held and counted, is now something we move and manage. The act of paying has become frictionless, and with that, our emotional connection to money has shifted. People spend more confidently yet monitor their accounts more closely, not out of fear, but because UPI gives them visibility in real time.
In this new rhythm, speed creates trust. The faster a transaction happens, the stronger the user’s confidence in the digital system. And this trust has turned inclusion from a policy goal to a lived reality.
The impact is enormous. India’s payment-acceptance device base – PoS machines, QR codes, and other merchant acceptance points has surged from 0.31 crore in FY 2017-18 to over 36 crore as of March 2024, according to DFS/RBI data. The chai seller in a small town and the entrepreneur in Bengaluru now operate on the same digital rail, using the same tools.
UPI did not just make transactions easier. It made them equal. It democratised dignity. It made every transaction, no matter how small, matter.
And it continues to evolve. With UPI Lite, microtransactions under ₹200 are instant and even work offline. UPI credit lines are blurring the line between payments and credit. With UPI’s growing global presence across Singapore, France, Sri Lanka, and the UAE, India is quietly exporting not just a platform but a philosophy. It proves that money can move fast, securely, and for everyone.
Regulators remain deeply engaged in ensuring this balance. New frameworks for consent-based data use, zero merchant discount rates, and interoperability are being refined to keep UPI’s foundation of speed and trust intact.
What began as a payments system is fast becoming India’s financial “OS”–a digital backbone connecting banks, businesses, and consumers.
UPI did not just make money digital. It made money human, fast, trusted, and within everyone’s reach.
(Rajiv Naresh, MD & CEO – Navi Limited (formerly Navi Technologies Limited)
(Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of YourStory.)
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