Chapter 3 - Section 3.4.1Loan Outstanding of MLIs

The borrowers typically seek loans for diverse purposes—ranging from emergencies and consumption needs to small businesses, working capital, and housing. Mainstream lenders often hesitate to meet these demands due to the small loan sizes, lack of collateral, and procedural complexities. MLIs have filled this gap, playing a crucial role in serving the financially excluded. Recognizing their importance, the Government of India has partnered with MLIs, particularly NBFC- MFIs and NBFCs, in implementing flagship schemes such as the Pradhan Mantri Mudra Yojana (PMMY) and PMSVANidhi.

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3.4.1 Loan Outstanding of MLIs

The borrowers typically seek loans for diverse purposes—ranging from emergencies and consumption needs to small businesses, working capital, and housing. Mainstream lenders often hesitate to meet these demands due to the small loan sizes, lack of collateral, and procedural complexities. MLIs have filled this gap, playing a crucial role in serving the financially excluded. Recognizing their importance, the Government of India has partnered with MLIs, particularly NBFC- MFIs and NBFCs, in implementing flagship schemes such as the Pradhan Mantri Mudra Yojana (PMMY) and PMSVANidhi.

As of March 31, 2025, the total loan outstanding of MLIs stood at ₹2,38,198 Cr., reflecting a year-on-year decline of (-9%). This figure includes the microfinance portfolios of pure MFIs, NBFCs, and BC companies, and excludes the Banks and SFBs. The loan outstanding of pure MFIs (NBFC-MFIs, Societies, Section 8 Companies, Trusts, MACS, or Cooperatives) alone registered a sharper decline of (-11%).

The Assets Under Management (AUM) of MLIs comprises Off-Balance Sheet assets such as assigned and securitized loans, along with the BC portfolio, which together amounted to ₹72,930 Cr., representing 31% of the Gross Loan Portfolio. Of this, the BC portfolio alone accounted for ₹53,287 Cr. The Net Loan Portfolio, or the Own Portfolio reflected on the books of MLIs, stood at ₹1,65,268 Cr.

Figure 3.10: Gross Loan Portfolio of MLIs (in ₹ Cr.) – Yearly Trend and Category–wise Breakup as of March 2025

A further segregation of the Gross Loan Portfolio based on the legal forms of MLIs and the size of MLIs is given below:

Note: In the decadal trend graph of GLP (2015–2025) shown above, the GLP for each year is represented by blue bars, covering all Micro Lending Institutions (MLIs). For FY 2024-25, however, the total GLP of ₹2,38,198 Cr. has been further disaggregated to provide greater clarity. The breakdown highlights pure MFIs (NBFC-MFIs, Societies, Section 8 Companies, Trusts, MACS, or Cooperatives) represented by red bars, NBFCs by green bars, and Private & Public Ltd. Companies by orange bars, offering a clearer view of the growth trajectory of pure MFIs.

Table 3.4: Top 10 MLIs in terms of Gross Loan Portfolio (in ₹ Cr.) as of March 2025

Table 3.4, below, presents the top 10 micro-lending institutions ranked by Gross Loan Portfolio. Among them, CreditAccess Grameen holds the largest share, accounting for 11% of the total portfolio reported by MLIs.

Name of MLI Gross Loan Portfolio (in ₹ Cr.)
CreditAccess Grameen Ltd. (CAGL) 25,948
L&T Finance Ltd. 25,838
Muthoot Microfin Ltd. 12,357
Satin Creditcare Network Ltd. (SCNL) 11,316
IIFL Samasta Finance Ltd. 11,101
Annapurna Finance Pvt. Ltd. 11,034
Fusion Finance Ltd. 8,980
Asirvad Microfinance Ltd. 8,189
Belstar Microfinance Ltd. 7,969
Chaitanya India Fin Credit Pvt. Ltd. 7,574

The top 10 MLIs account for a loan portfolio of ₹1,30,306 Cr., representing 55% of the total reported 203 MLIs, while the remaining 193 institutions collective- ly hold the remaining 45%. SKDRDP’s Loan Portfolio (₹26,259 Cr.) may not be rel- evant to this analysis, as it is completely under the BC model.

Note: (i) The microfinance portfolio of L&T Finance, an NBFC, is also reflected under the top 10 category.

Figure 3.11: Percentage of Rural-Urban Share of MLIs Gross Loan Portfolio

Figure 3.11 shows that the rural Gross Loan Portfolio (GLP) of micro-lending institutions stood at ₹1,88,176 Cr., representing 79% of the total GLP, while the urban GLP was at ₹50,022 Cr., accounting for the remaining 21%. In FY 2024-25, the rural and urban shares were 76% and 24% respectively, indicating a sharper decline in the urban portfolio and thereby increasing the rural portfolio’s share.