However, the bank has not lowered the monthly minimum balance requirement which has been retained at Rs 3,000 for metro customers, at Rs 2,000 for semi-urban accounts and at Rs 1,000 for rural accounts.
The move will eat into the fee income of the bank, which had reported first quarterly loss in 20 years, as it had to make huge provisions for bad loans.
Last April, the nation's largest lender had re-introduced the penal charges on non-maintenance of average monthly balance, after a gap of five years. Later in October, the bank had revised down the charges to some extent.
Between April and November 2017, the bank netted a windfall of Rs 1,771.67 crore, more than its second quarter profit, from customers for non-maintenance of minimum balance, according to the finance ministry data.
For semi-urban and rural centres, the charges have been reduced from Rs 40 to Rs 12, and Rs 10 per, respectively.
The bank has strong deposit franchise having 41 crore savings accounts and the above revision will benefit around 25 crore customers, he said.
The bank offers its customers the option to shift from regular savings accounts to basic savings bank deposit (BSBD) accounts on which no charges are levied, he added.
The country's largest lender's penalty on customers for non-maintaining minimum balance is much less than its private sector peers, though.
For instance, ICICI Bank and HDFC Bank have a minimum monthly average balance requirement of Rs 10,000 for a regular savings accounts in the metros and urban locations. While ICICI charges Rs 100 plus 5 per cent of the shortfall in required MAB, HDFC Bank charges up to Rs 600 for not maintaining the balance.
Last month, Kumar had said savings accounts are a product in which it is expected that some money would be available and transactions will take place.
There are huge transactions costs associated with savings bank accounts, he had said.
"When an SBI customer uses debit card at some other bank ATM, then SBI has to pay Rs 17 to the bank. My outgo on the ATM card itself is Rs 1,500 crore annually. Somewhere the bank also needs to recover its cost," he had said.
"We all, including myself, want a first class service, but want everything free...I also like it. But it can't work this way that everything comes free," Kumar said.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
