Bank Provisioning Hits 3-Year Low Amid Improving Asset Quality

The Indian banking sector has hit a significant milestone as aggregate loan loss provisioning dropped to a 12-quarter low in the March 2026 quarter. Driven by robust recoveries and a marked improvement in asset quality, this trend signals a healthier balance sheet across both private and public sector lenders.

Significant Drop in Aggregate Provisioning

According to recent data from a sample of 29 banks, total loan loss provisioning fell by 17.4% sequentially and 23.5% year-on-year to ₹19,314.3 crore. This is a notable decrease from the previous low of ₹18,169.5 crore recorded in the March 2023 quarter. In fact, bad loan provisioning has remained under the ₹20,000 crore threshold on three separate occasions over the last 13 quarters, highlighting a period of sustained stability.

The widespread nature of this trend is evident in the numbers: 23 out of the 29 sampled banks reported lower year-on-year provisioning. This includes 15 out of 17 private sector banks and eight out of 12 public sector banks (PSBs).

Private Sector Banks Lead the Recovery

Private sector lenders have been the primary drivers of this contraction. Their provisioning nearly halved to ₹7,236.6 crore compared to the previous quarter, representing a 28% year-on-year decline.

Individual bank performance highlights the scale of this shift. ICICI Bank reported a dramatic reduction, with total provisioning nearly halving both sequentially and year-on-year to just ₹96 crore. Similarly, South Indian Bank and Yes Bank both reported a massive year-on-year decline in provisioning exceeding 90%.

While the overall trend is downward, the landscape for Public Sector Banks (PSBs) is more complex. PSB provisioning fell by 20.4% year-on-year to ₹12,078 crore, but saw a 27% increase sequentially. Consequently, PSBs now account for 62.5% of the sample's total provisioning, an eight-quarter high.

This increase is largely attributed to specific lenders facing higher requirements. For instance, Bank of Baroda’s loan loss provisioning nearly doubled year-on-year to ₹2,566 crore, while Punjab National Bank saw a 54% rise, reaching ₹906 crore.

Improving Asset Quality and GNPA Ratios

The underlying driver for these reduced provisions is the steady strengthening of bank balance sheets. CARE Ratings reported that the Gross Non-Performing Asset (GNPA) ratio dropped to a multi-year low of 1.8% in the March 2026 quarter.

This improvement in asset quality is being fueled by four critical factors:

As banks manage to clean up their books more effectively, the need to set aside large capital buffers for bad loans continues to diminish, freeing up capital for credit growth.

Key Takeaways