Image Credit: AI
The Indian rupee has had a tough run this year. It opened in 2025 at around 85 against the US dollar and held steady for a while. That calm didn’t last. By early December, the rupee crossed 90 for the first time, and on December 17, it slipped to a record low of 91.07. As the year wraps up, it’s still hovering close to 90.
Overall, the rupee is down about 5% in 2025, making it the weakest performer among major Asian currencies. For most people, exchange rates feel distant. But this slide affects travel plans, education costs, household spending, and business decisions more than many realise.
There isn’t one single reason. Several pressures hit the rupee at the same time.
A major factor is foreign investors pulling money out of Indian markets. In 2025, overseas investors sold roughly $18 billion worth of Indian stocks. When they exit, they convert rupees into dollars and move funds abroad. That steady demand for dollars pushes the rupee lower.
India’s import bill has added to the strain. In October alone, imports touched a record $76.1 billion. Gold imports surged to nearly $15 billion as people bought heavily during the festive season and looked for safe options during uncertain times. More imports mean more dollars leaving the country, which weakens the currency further.
The global backdrop hasn’t helped either. The US dollar has been unusually strong this year. High interest rates in the US have made dollar assets attractive worldwide. As investors pile into the dollar, other currencies lose ground. The dollar index rose sharply in late 2025, and emerging market currencies like the rupee took the hit.
Trade tensions with the US have also played a role. The Trump administration imposed heavy tariffs on some Indian exports, with duties going as high as 50% in certain sectors. That hurt exporters and unsettled investors. India is still without a bilateral trade agreement with the US, and repeated delays in talks have kept markets on edge.
Meanwhile, the Reserve Bank of India has chosen not to fight the slide aggressively. Instead of defending a specific exchange rate, the RBI has allowed a gradual fall, stepping in only to prevent sudden swings. India still holds over $650 billion in foreign exchange reserves, but the central bank appears keen to conserve them for more serious disruptions.
For students planning to study abroad, the timing couldn’t be worse. Tuition fees and living costs in dollars or pounds now translate into much higher rupee amounts. Compared to last year, overseas education can cost 5–10% more. For many families, that means larger loans or postponed plans.
Travel abroad has also become more expensive. A foreign holiday or business trip now comes with a bigger price tag. A package that cost ₹2 lakh last year could now cost ₹2.1–2.2 lakh without any upgrades.
Imported products are feeling the impact too. Smartphones, laptops, cars, and electronics with foreign components have become costlier. Even everyday essentials like edible oils and pulses, which India imports in large quantities, tend to get pricier when the rupee weakens.
There is some good news, though. Families receiving money from abroad are benefiting. NRIs sending remittances get more rupees for the same amount of dollars. A $1,000 transfer now brings in about ₹90,000 instead of ₹85,000 earlier this year.
Exporters are also seeing gains. IT firms, pharma companies, and freelancers earning in dollars receive more rupees when they convert their earnings. For example, a company billing $1 million now earns ₹90 million instead of ₹85 million. That can help improve margins or fund expansion.
A falling currency often leads to higher inflation, but that hasn’t fully played out yet. Inflation in India stayed low through late 2025, helped by good harvests and softer global commodity prices, especially crude oil. Since most food consumed in India is grown domestically, grocery prices haven’t surged the way they might have.
That said, this balance is fragile. If oil prices rise sharply or the rupee weakens further for a long stretch, price pressures could return quickly.
Most forecasts suggest the rupee will remain under pressure in the near term. Some analysts see it slipping to 92 by March 2026 if foreign outflows continue and trade talks with the US go nowhere. Others expect a recovery toward 88 if global conditions ease and investor confidence improves.
Much depends on factors beyond India’s control. A cut in US interest rates would likely weaken the dollar. Progress on a trade deal could calm markets. Renewed foreign investment in Indian equities would also ease pressure on the rupee.
Domestically, India’s economy remains on a steady footing. Growth is strong, inflation is manageable, and government finances are relatively stable. But currency markets often respond more to global moves than local strength.
The RBI is expected to stick to its current approach—limiting sharp volatility without trying to reverse the overall trend. Tools like dollar-rupee swaps will continue to be used to keep markets orderly, but a full defence of past levels seems unlikely.
For most households, there’s no reason to panic. A 5% fall over a year is uncomfortable, but it’s not a crisis. If you’re planning a major foreign expense, locking in exchange rates sooner rather than later may help. If you earn in dollars, this phase works in your favour.
For businesses, the picture varies. Import-heavy sectors face tighter margins and may need better hedging. Export-driven companies are in a stronger position for now.
The rupee’s slide doesn’t mean the Indian economy is in trouble. It reflects a strong dollar, shifting global capital, and short-term trade pressures. As these factors change, the currency could stabilise again.
For now, the message is simple: even when things are steady at home, global forces still shape what happens to the rupee—and that affects all of us in small but real ways.
During the 2024 Lok Sabha elections, a video of Ranveer Singh asking people to vote…
Over the last decade, the UAE has quietly become a serious study destination. What was…
If you are trying to gain work exposure before graduating, internships are usually the first…
Spend a few minutes on TikTok or LinkedIn, and you’ll notice something has shifted. Young…
Christmas is all about spreading joy and laughter and mainly celebrating the birth of Jesus…
If your parents kept telling you to “stop playing games and do something useful,” you're…