Summary:
India’s stock market has shifted from T+2 to T+1 settlement, helping investors receive shares and funds faster after trades. This article explains how settlement cycles work, the difference between T+1 and T+2, how market holidays affect settlement dates, and SEBI’s ongoing push toward T+0 settlement. It also covers why faster settlement matters for liquidity, counterparty risk, and everyday retail investors.
If you have ever sold shares and wondered why the money did not land in your account the very same day, the answer lies in something called the settlement cycle. It is one of those behind-the-scenes mechanics that quietly shapes your experience as an investor, affecting when you get paid, when shares actually become yours, and how much risk sits in the system.
India has come a long way here. From T+5 settlements back when shares moved in physical form, markets shifted to T+2, then fully moved to T+1. And now, SEBI is piloting T+0, same-day settlement. Understanding where we are and how we got here matters for every investor, retail or otherwise.
Settlement is simply the process of completing a trade, the buyer officially receives the shares, and the seller receives the money. It sounds straightforward, but it involves stock exchanges, brokers, clearing corporations, and depositories all working in coordination.
The "T" in settlement terminology stands for the trade date, the day you actually buy or sell. T+1 means the trade settles one working day after execution. T+2 means two working days. Weekends and market holidays are excluded from this count, so if you buy shares on a Friday, T+1 settlement happens on Monday (assuming no holidays).
For years, T+2 was the global norm, including in India. Under this system, if you bought shares on a Monday, the shares would reflect in your demat account by Wednesday, and the seller would receive funds on the same day. The two-day window gave brokers, clearing corporations, and custodians enough breathing room to verify transactions, manage margin obligations, and handle fund transfers.
It worked well enough, but it came with costs, slower access to capital, higher counterparty risk, and delayed liquidity for investors who needed their money quickly after selling.
India completed its full transition to T+1 settlement for all listed stocks by January 2023, making it one of the first major markets in the world to achieve this. Under T+1, if you sell shares on Monday, your funds are typically available by Tuesday. Buyers see shares credited in their demat accounts the next working day.
Timeline Example For T+1 Settlement
| Trade Day | Settlement Day |
| Monday | Tuesday |
| Tuesday | Wednesday |
| Wednesday | Thursday |
| Thursday | Friday |
| Friday | Monday |
The benefits are real and tangible for retail investors, faster access to sale proceeds, quicker share delivery after purchase, lower settlement default and counterparty risk, and reduced margin obligations for brokers.
There is, however, a catch. Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs) found T+1 operationally challenging because their fund transfers and currency conversions often span multiple time zones, leaving little room within a single-day window. SEBI has been working with global custodians and industry bodies to address these frictions.
Here is a side-by-side look at how the two cycles compare across the factors that matter most to investors:
| Feature | T+1 | T+2 |
| Settlement Time | 1 working day | 2 working days |
| Fund Transfer Speed | Faster | Slower |
| Share Delivery | Faster | Delayed |
| Counterparty Risk | Lower | Higher |
| Liquidity Access | Quicker | Slower |
The difference is not just about time, it is about how much risk sits unresolved in the system and how quickly you can put your capital back to work.
A common question: if you trade on Friday and Monday is a holiday, does T+1 become T+2? Technically, no. The cycle remains T+1 on a working-day basis, the holiday simply extends the calendar duration.
| Scenario | Trade Day | Holiday | Settlement Day |
| Scenario 1 | Monday | Tuesday (holiday) | Wednesday |
| Scenario 2 | Friday | Monday (holiday) | Tuesday |
Your trade still settles one business day after the trade date, it just falls later on the calendar. The label does not change, even if the actual wait feels longer.
India is not stopping at T+1. In March 2024, SEBI introduced a beta version of T+0 rolling settlement on an optional basis, running in parallel with T+1, initially covering 25 stocks with a limited set of brokers.
In December 2024, SEBI expanded the scope of optional T+0 settlement to the top 500 stocks in a phased manner, with rollout starting January 31, 2025. The deadline for Qualified Stock Brokers to put systems in place for T+0 has been extended to November 1, 2025, following feedback from market participants.
Global Settlement Cycle Comparison
| Country / Market | Settlement Cycle |
| India | T+1 (T+0 optional, expanding) |
| United States | T+1 (since May 2024) |
| European Union | T+2 |
| United Kingdom | T+2 |
| China | T+1 |
| Japan | T+2 |
India and the US now lead major markets on settlement speed, with Europe and Japan still operating on T+2.
A few practical points worth remembering:
Settlement runs on working days. Holidays push your settlement date forward on the calendar, but the cycle count stays the same.
BTST (Buy Today, Sell Tomorrow) carries risk. Under T+1, if you sell shares the day after buying them before the shares are formally credited, there is a small risk of a short delivery situation if the original seller defaulted.
Corporate action eligibility depends on settlement. To qualify for dividends or bonuses, your purchase must settle before the record date. Knowing your settlement cycle helps you plan this accurately.
FPI concerns are being addressed. Cross-border investors still face challenges around currency conversion timelines, but regulators and custodians are actively building solutions.
India's journey from T+2 to T+1, and now the gradual push toward T+0, reflects a market that is genuinely maturing. For retail investors, faster settlement means faster money, lower risk, and better control over capital. That is a straightforward win worth understanding.

Stocks to buy for long term: HDFC Bank, HCC among 8 stocks Ventura's Vinit Bolinjkar suggests for 18-115% gains
4 min Read May 29, 2026
Why asset allocation matters more than stock picking in 2026
4 min Read May 29, 2026
Are defence funds overvalued after a 25% rally? What investors must know
4 min Read May 27, 2026
Is this the right time to enter the stock market? Or should you wait?
4 min Read May 26, 2026
Is gold beating equities? Where should you invest now
4 min Read May 25, 2026