Indian Markets & Banking

BSE vs NSE 2026 — India's Two Stock Exchanges Explained (T+1, T+0, FII)

BSE (Bombay Stock Exchange) and NSE (National Stock Exchange) are the two main stock exchanges in India where equity, debt, and derivative instruments are traded.

Lily, Richify's Financial Teacher
By Lily, Richify's Financial Teacher
2 min read · Updated June 2026

BSE: established in 1875 — Asia's oldest stock exchange. Located in Mumbai (PJ Towers, Dalal Street). Lists ~5,000+ companies. Benchmark index: Sensex (30 stocks). Sectors traded: equity (cash and derivatives), debt, currency derivatives, mutual funds (BSE StAR MF platform), commodities (via BSE Commodity Derivatives Segment). Smaller daily turnover compared to NSE.

NSE: established in 1992, started equity trading 1994. Located in Mumbai (Bandra Kurla Complex). Lists ~2,200+ companies. Benchmark index: Nifty 50. Pioneered electronic order-driven trading in India. Largest exchange globally by number of trades for many years (2020-2024 indicative). Sectors: equity, derivatives (heavily dominant in India), currency, debt, commodities (via NSE-IFSC).

Trading hours: 9:00-9:15 (pre-open auction), 9:15-15:30 (continuous trading), 15:30-15:40 (closing session), 15:40-16:00 (post-close session — ad-hoc orders). Settlement cycle moved to T+1 in January 2023 for all equity. Select large-cap stocks on T+0 (same-day) from March 2024 — SEBI's optional fast-settlement window, currently for 500 scrips. Most listed companies are dual-listed on both exchanges; investors choose either by routing orders through the broker. Arbitrage exists but is typically razor-thin (under 0.1%).

How to start trading — step-by-step: (1) Open a demat + trading account at a SEBI-registered broker (Zerodha, Groww, Upstox, Angel One, ICICI Direct, HDFC Securities, Kotak Securities). KYC takes 10-30 minutes online with PAN + Aadhaar + bank. (2) Fund the trading account via UPI or net banking. (3) Buy a Nifty 50 ETF (NIFTYBEES) or Sensex ETF for diversified exposure as your first trade — single transaction, hundreds of underlying companies. (4) For mutual fund index funds (auto-SIP route), you don't need a demat — direct-plan AMC apps suffice. (5) For active stock picking, study the company before buying — most retail investors underperform indices.

Brokerage charges (June 2026, indicative): Zerodha — ₹0 on equity delivery, ₹20 per F&O / intraday order (whichever lower). Groww — ₹0 on MF + small equity orders, ₹20 per equity order otherwise. Upstox — ₹20 per trade. Angel One — ₹20 per trade. Full-service brokers (HDFC Securities, ICICI Direct, Kotak) charge 0.20-0.50% of trade value — significantly more, but bundled with research and advisory. Plus statutory charges: STT (Securities Transaction Tax) 0.1% on equity delivery sell-side, GST 18% on brokerage, SEBI turnover fee, stamp duty (state-wise). Total round-trip cost for delivery: ~0.20-0.25% with discount brokers vs 0.5-1% with full-service.

FII / FPI participation: Foreign Institutional Investors (now Foreign Portfolio Investors / FPI under post-2014 framework) own ~18-22% of total NSE market cap collectively. FPI flows are a major driver of short-term Nifty / Sensex moves — large outflows trigger sharp corrections, large inflows trigger rallies. Track daily FPI flows on NSE and BSE websites or via brokerage platforms. Domestic Institutional Investors (DIIs — mutual funds, insurance, EPFO) have become a meaningful counterweight to FPI flows since 2020, often net-buying when FPIs net-sell.

Recent regulatory changes worth knowing: (1) T+1 settlement (Jan 2023) — money credited next trading day, much faster than the prior T+2 cycle. (2) T+0 settlement for 500 stocks (Mar 2024) — same-day money for those scrips, optional. (3) Increased STT on F&O (Oct 2024) — discouraged speculative trading. (4) STCG / LTCG hikes (Jul 2024) — STCG 15% → 20%, LTCG 10% → 12.5% with ₹1.25L exemption. (5) New Beneficial Ownership rules for FPIs (2024-25) — stricter disclosure for entities holding > ₹25,000 cr or > 50% concentration in a single corporate group.

Richify Tip

Brokers like Zerodha, Groww, Upstox, Angel One, ICICI Direct, HDFC Securities allow trading on both BSE and NSE through a single account. The exchange chosen for a trade depends on liquidity (NSE typically more liquid for active stocks). Buying on one exchange and selling on another is allowed (T+1 settlement), often used in arbitrage and BTST (buy today, sell tomorrow) strategies.

Related terms

Sensex (BSE Sensex)Nifty 50 (NSE Nifty)SEBI (Securities and Exchange Board of India)Demat Account
Ready to act on it?

Track every account and put bse & nse to work — in one app.

Start your 7-day free trialGet the app
Free to download. For educational purposes only — not financial advice.
Back to Indian Glossary
Felix
Track all of this in the Richify app
Free to download — 7-day free trial.
Get the app →