Paytm Launches ‘Pocket Money’ for Teens to Make UPI Payments Without Bank Accounts.
The new “Pocket Money” feature allows teenagers to make digital payments while parents retain spending control and oversight.
Paytm has introduced a new feature called “Pocket Money,” designed to let teenagers make UPI payments without needing their own bank accounts.
The service operates through the National Payments Corporation of India’s UPI Circle framework, which enables delegated digital payments under parental supervision.
The feature allows parents or trusted family members to grant controlled payment access to teenagers directly through the Paytm app while maintaining real-time visibility over spending activity.
The move reflects the growing shift toward digital allowances and supervised fintech access for younger users in India’s rapidly expanding UPI ecosystem.
How the Feature Works
Under the system, teenagers can use their own smartphones to make everyday payments without depending on a parent’s device, OTP approvals, or shared QR codes.
The service is designed for routine expenses such as school and college canteen purchases, metro rides, cab fares, shopping, mobile recharges, and other small transactions.
Parents remain the primary account holders and retain full control over spending permissions.
The framework allows them to:
• Set transaction limits
• Monitor payments in real time
• Categorize expenses
• Modify limits instantly
• Revoke access whenever required
Individual transactions are capped at Rs 5,000, while the total monthly limit across the UPI network is restricted to Rs 15,000.
The feature currently supports both savings and current accounts, although international transactions and cash withdrawals are not permitted.
Built Around Supervision and Security
Paytm has integrated the feature with its “Spend Summary” system, which categorizes transactions to help families track spending patterns and manage allowances more transparently.
The company has also added several security safeguards during the activation period.
For example:
• Transactions are limited to Rs 500 during the first 30 minutes after setup
• Spending is capped at Rs 5,000 within the first 24 hours
• Device lock protection is mandatory
• Parents can instantly control access using their Paytm UPI PIN
According to the company, the feature is intended to introduce teenagers to digital financial behavior in a controlled environment while helping families build responsible spending habits earlier.
India’s UPI Ecosystem Keeps Expanding
The launch highlights how India’s UPI infrastructure is continuing to evolve beyond traditional banking use cases.
Over the past few years, UPI has transformed from a peer-to-peer payments tool into one of the world’s largest digital payment ecosystems, increasingly supporting merchant payments, subscriptions, delegated payments, and family-linked financial services.
Teen-focused digital payment access represents the next layer of that expansion.
Instead of opening independent bank accounts at an early age, teenagers can now operate within supervised financial ecosystems while gradually becoming familiar with digital money management.
The feature also reflects how fintech companies are increasingly targeting family-based financial services as competition intensifies across India’s payments market.
Digital Pocket Money Is Becoming Mainstream
The concept of “pocket money” itself is evolving rapidly.
Where earlier generations relied on physical cash allowances, today’s teenagers increasingly live inside app-based ecosystems where transportation, food, shopping, and entertainment are all digitally connected.
Paytm’s latest rollout attempts to bridge that reality with parental oversight rather than unrestricted access.
The company says the feature is now available on the latest versions of the Paytm app across both Android and iOS devices.
As UPI adoption deepens across younger demographics, services like Pocket Money may become a foundational part of how future generations first interact with digital finance.



