Demand Draft (DD): What It Is & How to Make One

Last verified: June 2026, against RBI/NPCI rules and official procedures. Charges, limits and processes can vary by bank and change over time — confirm with your bank. General information, not financial advice.

A demand draft (DD) is a prepaid, guaranteed payment instrument — useful when the payee wants assured funds (admissions, tenders, some registrations). Here is how it works and how it differs from a cheque.

What a DD is

A demand draft is issued by a bank after you pay the amount upfront, so it can’t bounce — the funds are guaranteed by the bank. The payee deposits it like a cheque.

DD vs cheque

Cheque Demand draft
Funds From your account when cleared (can bounce) Prepaid & guaranteed (cannot bounce)
Issued by You (account holder) The bank
Cost Cheque leaf only Issuance charge applies

How to make a DD

  1. Visit the bank (or use net banking where offered).
  2. Fill the DD form with the payee name, amount and city of payment.
  3. Pay the amount + the bank’s DD charge (by debit to your account or, within limits, cash).
  4. Collect the DD; hand or send it to the payee.

Charges and cancellation

Banks levy a small issuance charge (often a percentage with a minimum). A DD can be cancelled by surrendering it to the issuing bank, which refunds the amount after a cancellation fee. A DD doesn’t “expire” but is typically valid for 3 months for clearing; revalidate if older.

When to use a DD

When the recipient insists on guaranteed funds — college admissions, government fees, tenders, or paying a stranger who won’t accept a personal cheque. For most other cases, NEFT/IMPS/UPI is faster and cheaper — see NEFT vs RTGS vs IMPS.

FAQs

Can a demand draft bounce?

No — it is prepaid and guaranteed by the bank, so it cannot bounce for insufficient funds.

How is a DD different from a cheque?

A cheque draws from your account when cleared and can bounce; a DD is paid for upfront and guaranteed.

Can I cancel a DD?

Yes — surrender it to the issuing bank for a refund, minus a cancellation charge.

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