KCC
Kisan Credit Card
6.3/10The Kisan Credit Card (KCC) scheme was introduced in 1998 for issue of Kisan Credit Cards to farmers on the basis of their holdings for uniform adoption by the banks so that farmers may use them to readily purchase agriculture inputs and draw cash for their production needs.
States / UT: All India
Ministry / nodal: Ministry Of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare
Scheme for: Individual
Scheme profile
Scheme open date: 1998-08-01
Categories: Agriculture,Rural & Environment
Sub-categories: Financial assistance
Target beneficiaries: Individual
Tags: Kisan, Credit Card
Details
The KCC Scheme was introduced with the objective of providing adequate and timely credit to the farmers for their agricultural operations. The Government of India provides interest subvention of 2% and Prompt Repayment Incentive of 3% to the farmers, thus making the credit available at a very subsidized rate of 4% per annum.
The scheme was further extended for the investment credit requirement of farmers viz. allied and non-farm activities in the year 2004 and further revisited in 2012 by a working Group under the Chairmanship of Shri T. M. Bhasin, CMD, Indian Bank with a view to simplify the scheme and facilitate issue of Electronic Kisan Credit Cards. The scheme provides broad guidelines to banks for operationalizing the KCC scheme. Implementing banks will have the discretion to adopt the same to suit institution/location-specific requirements.
Objective / Purpose
The Kisan Credit Card scheme aims at providing adequate and timely credit support from the banking system under a single window with the flexible and simplified procedures to the farmers for their cultivation and other needs as indicated below :
- To meet the short term credit requirements for the cultivation of crops;
- Post-harvest expenses;
- Produce marketing loan;
- Consumption requirements of farmer household;
- Working capital for maintenance of farm assets and activities allied to agriculture;
- Investment credit requirement for agriculture and allied activities
Type of Card
- A magnetic stripe card with PIN (Personal Identification Number) with an ISO IIN (International Standards Organization International Identification Number) to enable access to all banks ATMs and micro ATMs
- In cases where the Banks would want to utilize the centralized biometric authentication infrastructure of the UIDAI (Aadhaar authentication), debit cards with magnetic stripe and PIN with ISO IIN with biometric authentication of UIDAI can be provided.
- Debit Cards with magnetic stripes and only biometric authentication can also be provided depending on the customer base of the bank. Till such time, UIDAI becomes widespread, if the banks want to get started without inter-operability using their existing centralized bio metric infrastructure, banks may do so.
- Banks may choose to issue EMV (Europay, MasterCard and VISA, a global standard for the interoperation of integrated circuit cards) and RUPAY compliant chip cards with magnetic stripe and pin with ISO IIN.
- Further, biometric authentication and smart cards may follow the common open standards prescribed by IDRBT and IBA. This will enable them to transact seamlessly with input dealers and also enable them to have the sales proceeds credited to their accounts when they sell their output at mandies, procurement centres, etc
Delivery Channels :
The following delivery channels shall be put in place to start with so that the Kisan Credit Card is used by the farmers to effectively transact their operations in their KCC account.
- Withdrawal through ATMs / Micro ATM
- Withdrawal through BCs using smart cards.
- PoS machine through input dealers
- Mobile Banking with IMPS capabilities / IVR
- Aadhaar enabled Cards
Benefits
- [ { "children": [ { "text": "Fixation of credit limit/Loan amount"
- "bold": true } ]
- "align": "justify" }
- [ { "children": [ { "text": "The short-term limit to arrive for the first year: For farmers raising a single crop in a year:"
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- { "text": " Scale of finance for the crop (as decided by District Level Technical Committee) x Extent of area cultivated + 10% of limit towards post-harvest / household/consumption requirements + 20% of limit towards repairs and maintenance expenses of farm assets + crop insurance
- PAIS & asset insurance." } ]
- "align": "justify" }
- { "children": [ { "text": "Limit for second & subsequent year"
- "bold": true }
- { "text": ": First-year limit for crop cultivation purposes arrived at as above plus 10% of the limit towards cost escalation/increase in the scale of finance for every successive year ( 2nd 3rd 4th and 5th year) and estimated Term loan component for the tenure of Kisan Credit Card i.e
Fixation of credit limit/Loan amount
The short-term limit to arrive for the first year: For farmers raising a single crop in a year: Scale of finance for the crop (as decided by District Level Technical Committee) x Extent of area cultivated + 10% of limit towards post-harvest / household/consumption requirements + 20% of limit towards repairs and maintenance expenses of farm assets + crop insurance, PAIS & asset insurance.
Limit for second & subsequent year: First-year limit for crop cultivation purposes arrived at as above plus 10% of the limit towards cost escalation/increase in the scale of finance for every successive year ( 2nd, 3rd, 4th and 5th year) and estimated Term loan component for the tenure of Kisan Credit Card, i.e., five years.
For farmers raising more than one crop in a year, the limit is to be fixed as above depending upon the crops cultivated as per the proposed cropping pattern for the first year and an additional 10% of the limit towards cost escalation/increase in the scale of finance for every successive year (2nd, 3rd, 4th and 5th year). It is assumed that the farmer adopts the same cropping pattern for the remaining four years also. In case the cropping pattern adopted by the farmer is changed in the subsequent year, the limit may be reworked.
Term loans for investments towards land development, minor irrigation, purchase of farm equipment and allied agricultural activities. The banks may fix the quantum of credit for the term and working capital limit for agricultural and allied activities, etc., based on the unit cost of the asset/s proposed to be acquired by the farmer, the allied activities already being undertaken on the farm, the bank’s judgment on repayment capacity vis-a-vis total loan burden devolving on the farmer, including existing loan obligations.
The long-term loan limit is based on the proposed investments during the five-year period and the bank’s perception of the repaying capacity of the farmer
Maximum Permissible Limit: The short-term loan limit arrived for the 5th year plus the estimated long-term loan requirement will be the Maximum Permissible Limit (MPL) and treated as the Kisan Credit Card Limit.
Fixation of Sub-limits for other than Marginal Farmers:
Short-term loans and term loans are governed by different interest rates. Besides, at present, short-term crop loans are covered under Interest Subvention Scheme/ Prompt Repayment Incentive scheme. Further, repayment schedules and norms are different for short-term and term loans. Hence, in order to have operational and accounting convenience, the card limit is to be bifurcated into separate sub-limits for short-term cash credit limit cum savings account and term loans.
The drawing limit for short-term cash credit should be fixed based on the cropping pattern and the amounts for crop production, repairs and maintenance of farm assets and consumption may be allowed to be drawn at the convenience of the farmer. In case the revision of the scale of finance for any year by the district-level committee exceeds the notional hike of 10% contemplated while fixing the five-year limit, a revised drawable limit may be fixed and the farmer is advised about the same. In case such revisions require the card limit itself to be enhanced (4th or 5th year), the same may be done and the farmer be so advised. For term loans, instalments may be allowed to be withdrawn based on the nature of the investment and the repayment schedule drawn as per the economic life of the proposed investments. It is to be ensured that at any point in time, the total liability should be within the drawing limit of the concerned year.
Wherever the card limit/liability so arrived warrants additional security, the banks may take suitable collateral as per their policy.
Eligibility
Eligibility
- Farmers - individual/joint borrowers who are owner cultivators;
- Tenant farmers, oral lessees & share croppers;
- Self Help Groups (SHGs) or Joint Liability Groups (JLGs) of farmers including tenant farmers, share croppers etc
How useful is this scheme?
A practical look at this scheme for citizens
AI-generated insights showing how useful, accessible, and practical this scheme may be — combining deterministic scoring rules with a public-policy LLM analyst.
- Accessibility7.0
- Financial impact6.0
- Rural utility5.0
- Awareness7.0
- Simplicity5.5
- Inclusivity7.0
What problem does this scheme solve?
The Kisan Credit Card scheme provides essential financial support to farmers, facilitating access to credit for agricultural activities.
Key challenges addressed
- Access to timely credit for agricultural operations
- Financial support for post-harvest expenses and consumption needs
Most beneficial for
- Individual farmers
- Tenant farmers
- Self Help Groups
Likely challenges
- Complex application process for semi-literate individuals
- Digital dependency may exclude some rural farmers
Practical insights for citizens
Practical for farmers but may require assistance for first-time applicants
Rural challenges
- Limited digital literacy
- Access to banking infrastructure
Digital challenges
- Dependence on online application may hinder some applicants
Implementation bottlenecks
- Bank discretion in processing applications
Awareness challenges
- Limited outreach in remote areas
Application analysis
- Application mode
- Online + Offline
- Documents burden
- Minimal, specific documents may be required
- Verification complexity
- Moderate, requires bank verification
- Office dependency
- Moderate, can apply offline at bank branches
- CSC support
- Available through local CSCs
- Estimated citizen effort
- Moderate, requires filling out forms and possible follow-up
Estimated beneficiary reach
Benefit analysis
- Benefit type
- Cash
- Benefit frequency
- As needed for agricultural operations
- Benefit practicality
- High, provides necessary funds for farming
- Financial meaningfulness
- Moderate, depends on individual financial needs
- Long-term impact
- Positive, supports sustainable agricultural practices
Plain-language guidance
The Kisan Credit Card helps farmers get loans for their farming needs. You can apply online or at your local bank. It's designed to make farming easier by providing quick access to cash.
- Who should apply
- Individual farmers, tenant farmers, and self-help groups.
- Who may struggle
- Semi-literate individuals and those unfamiliar with digital processes.
- Best application route
- Apply via local bank branch or online through the bank's website.
This intelligence section is generated by an AI policy analyst combined with rule-based scoring. Scores and narrative are estimates derived from the publicly available scheme information shown on this page; actual experience may vary by state, district, and department. Always confirm details on the official portal before you apply.
Application Process
Online
Visit the website of the bank you wish to apply for the kisan credit card scheme.
From the list of options, choose the Kisan Credit Card.
On clicking the option of ‘Apply’, the website will redirect you to the application page.
Fill the form with the required details and click on ‘Submit’.
On doing so, an application reference number will be sent. If you are eligible, the bank will get back to you for the further process within 3-4 working days.
Offline
Offline applications can be done by visiting the branch of the bank of your choice or by downloading the application form from the website of the bank as well.
The applicant can visit the branch and begin the application process with the help of the bank representative.
Clarifications
Additional points from the scheme information published on myScheme (not legal advice).
- What is the validity period of the Kisan Credit Card?
This validity period is 5 years. The tenure you do get depends on the type of activity you plan to use the money for
- What is the age requirement in order to apply for a Kisan Credit Card ?
You should me a minimum of 18 years of age and be a maximum age of 75 years. If you are a senior citizen, then it is mandatory to have a co-borrower who is a legal heir.
- What is the interest rate applicable on the KCC ?
The interest rate will be left to the discretion of the bank. However, according to the KCC circular dated 20 April 2012, the interest rate is 7% p.a. on short-term credit with a Rs.3 lakh upper limit on the principal amount.
- What are the type of facilities available for finance under the scheme
Kisan Credit Card & Term loan
- What are the Security norms for financing under Kisan credit card
For limits upto Rs.1.60 lakh & limts up to Rs.3 lakh (in case of tie up), security is the hypothecation of crops. For limits above the specified norms, mortgage of land/ or third party guarantee in addition to hypothecated crops / asset
- What are benefits provided by Govt of India to improve finance under KCC
The interest subvention @2% and prompt repayment incentive benefit @3% on KCC loan (i.e. crop loan+ working capital loan for animal husbandry and fisheries) will be available on an overall limit of Rs. 3 lakh per annum and subject to a maximum limit of Rs. 2 lakh per farmer involved in activities only related to animal husbandry and / or fisheries.
Official links
References
- Details-1
- https://pib.gov.in/FactsheetDetails.aspx?Id=148600
- Details-2
- https://sbi.co.in/web/agri-rural/agriculture-banking/crop-loan/kisan-credit-card
- Notification
- https://rbidocs.rbi.org.in/rdocs/notification/PDFs/04MCKCC030720171E79A08735884C429CF26F5414AB36D9.PDF
Apply
Apply nowOpens the official application or programme portal in a new tab. If in doubt, confirm details on the ministry site.
Frequently asked questions
- What is the purpose of Kisan Credit Card?
- Kisan Credit Card is a government welfare initiative designed to support Individual, Individual through benefits related to Agriculture,Rural & Environment, financial assistance, subsidies, social welfare, healthcare, education, or livelihood support.
- Who can apply for Kisan Credit Card?
- Eligibility for Kisan Credit Card may depend on factors such as income category, age, gender, occupation, state of residence, social category, and government-defined beneficiary criteria.
- What benefits are offered under Kisan Credit Card?
- Benefits under Kisan Credit Card may include financial assistance, subsidies, scholarships, insurance support, healthcare benefits, pension support, training assistance, or welfare services depending on the scheme guidelines.
- Which department manages Kisan Credit Card?
- Kisan Credit Card is managed by Ministry Of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare and may be implemented through district offices, online portals, CSC centres, banks, or authorised government agencies.
- Can users apply online for Kisan Credit Card?
- Yes, eligible applicants may be able to apply online for Kisan Credit Card through official government portals, authorised service centres, or digital application systems depending on the implementation process.
- Is Aadhaar mandatory for Kisan Credit Card?
- Many government schemes may require Aadhaar verification, identity proof, or linked bank account details for beneficiary validation and direct benefit transfer processing.
- Where can users apply for Kisan Credit Card?
- Applications for Kisan Credit Card may be submitted through government departments, official scheme portals, CSC centres, district offices, welfare departments, or authorised service centres.
- What documents may be required for Kisan Credit Card?
- Applicants may need Aadhaar card, income certificate, residence proof, bank account details, caste certificate, photographs, educational records, or occupation-related documents depending on scheme eligibility requirements.
- Is income certificate required for Kisan Credit Card?
- Income certificate requirements may vary depending on beneficiary category, subsidy eligibility, and financial assistance criteria defined under Kisan Credit Card.
- Is Kisan Credit Card a central government scheme?
- Yes, Kisan Credit Card is a central government welfare initiative that may be implemented across multiple states through authorised departments and agencies.
- Can small and marginal farmers apply for Kisan Credit Card?
- Eligible small and marginal farmers may apply for Kisan Credit Card subject to land ownership records, income eligibility, and agricultural beneficiary criteria.
- Does Kisan Credit Card provide subsidy support for farmers?
- Kisan Credit Card may provide agricultural subsidies, financial assistance, crop support, irrigation benefits, insurance coverage, or farming-related welfare assistance depending on the scheme structure.
- Can CSC centres help users apply for Kisan Credit Card?
- Many government schemes may be accessible through nearby CSC centres, authorised digital service centres, or welfare facilitation offices.
- How can users check the latest updates for Kisan Credit Card?
- Users should verify official notifications, department announcements, application deadlines, and eligibility updates through authorised government portals or implementing agencies.
- Are there deadlines for applying to Kisan Credit Card?
- Some schemes may operate through fixed application windows, annual registration cycles, or department-specific deadlines depending on scheme implementation policies.
- Can beneficiaries track application status for Kisan Credit Card?
- Certain schemes may provide online application tracking, beneficiary verification systems, or status-check facilities through official portals.
- Where can users get help for Kisan Credit Card in All India?
- Users in All India may seek assistance through CSC centres, district welfare offices, government departments, agriculture offices, social welfare departments, or authorised facilitation centres.
- Which nearby public services may help with Kisan Credit Card applications?
- Depending on the scheme, users may require support from Aadhaar centres, CSC centres, banks, hospitals, post offices, or government welfare offices for document verification and application assistance.