Latest news with #PradhanMantriKisanSammanNidhi


India.com
3 days ago
- Business
- India.com
PM Kisan 20th installment BIG Update: 20th installment releasing in…, check who can get PM-KISAN benefits, how to apply as new farmer and other details
The 20th instalment of the PM-KISAN scheme is likely to be given to farmers in June 2025, as per some media reports. But the government has not officially confirmed the date yet. The last payment, which was the 19th instalment, was given in February this year. PM-KISAN, or Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi, is a scheme started by the central government in 2019. It gives financial help of Rs. 6,000 every year to eligible farmers. This amount is given in three parts i.e. Rs 2,000 every four months. The money is directly sent to the farmer's bank account. According to the payment schedule, the next Rs. 2,000 instalment is due between April and July 2025 and if reports are to be believed, it might be sent out in June, but the exact date and location of the official release have not been announced yet. What farmers need to do to get the next payment: Complete e-KYC (Know Your Customer) Link Aadhaar card to their bank account Make sure their land records are updated and verified How to do e-KYC: e-KYC is compulsory for all farmers who are registered in the scheme. You can do OTP-based e-KYC by visiting the official website: You can also visit your nearest CSC (Common Service Centre) for biometric e-KYC. Make sure all these steps are completed in time to receive your Rs. 2,000. Who can get PM-KISAN benefits? To receive the 20th instalment of ₹2,000 under the PM-KISAN scheme, a farmer must meet these conditions: Be a citizen of India Own cultivable (farming) land Be a small or marginal farmer (usually with up to 2 hectares of land) Must not be an income taxpayer Must not receive a monthly pension above Rs. 10,000 Must not be an institutional landholder (like a company or trust owning farmland) How to check status or apply for PM-KISAN: Go to Click on 'Know Your Status' Enter your registration number or other required details To check if your name is in the list of eligible farmers: Visit the same website Click on 'Beneficiary List' Select your state, district, sub-district, block, and village Click 'Get Report' to see the names To apply as a new farmer:


Hindustan Times
3 days ago
- Business
- Hindustan Times
PM KISAN installment no. 20 to be issued soon: Check eligibility
Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi is a central government Scheme that provides income support to all landholding farming families in the country. The 19th instalment of the PM Kisan Yojana was released on February 24, and now that the 20th instalment is approaching, beneficiaries are encouraged to complete the required formalities and check their beneficiary status. Under this scheme, all landholding farmers' families, which have cultivable landholding in their names are eligible to get benefit. Additionally those who receive a monthly pension of ₹10,000/-or more are excluded from the benefits. All persons who are professionals like doctors, engineers are also excluded from the benefits. Under the PM-KISAN scheme, all landholding farmers' famities shall be provided the financial benefit of ₹6,000 per annum per family payable in three equal installments of ₹2,000 each, every four months. To ensure that the benefit of the PM KISAN scheme reaches the intended beneficiaries it is important to ensure that the eKYC has been done. There are three modes available for eKYC. The first is OTP based on Mobile app, the second is biometric based available at State Seva Kendra and third is the face based mode available at PM KISAN mobile app. In addition to this, the beneficiaries need to also verify their land records and link their bank account with their Aadhaar card. To check the status of the benefits of the scheme farmers need to check their beneficiary status by going to the official website and clicking on 'Know your status'. Then they need to enter the registration details to see the status of their benefits. To check the name in the beneficiary list, farmers need to click the 'Beneficiary list' option and put their location. If someone has not registered for the scheme, they can do so through the 'new registration' option on the website. The responsibility of identifying the eligible farmers' families for benefit under the scheme is entirely of the State/UT Governments.


Time of India
3 days ago
- Business
- Time of India
Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi 20th instalment: When will PM Kisan beneficiaries receive the next instalment?
The PM-Kisan scheme provides Rs 6,000 annually to eligible landholding farmer families, distributed in three instalments. Farmers must complete eKYC and link their Aadhaar to their bank accounts to ensure timely receipt of the Rs 2,000 benefit. Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads When will beneficiaries receive PM Kisan 20th instalment? How to check your name in the beneficiary list in PM Kisan Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Link Aadhaar with bank account to get 20th PM Kisan instalment What is the PM Kisan scheme? Is eKYC mandatory to receive the next instalment? How much will be credited in the 20th instalment? Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads How to link my Aadhaar to my bank account? What should you do if you haven't received the previous instalment? ls an income tax payee farmer or his / her spouse eligible to get benefit under the scheme? The eagerly awaited 20th instalment of the Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi (PM-Kisan) scheme is expected to be released soon, bringing much-needed financial support to millions of farmers across India. However, the government has not yet officially announced the exact date. In the meantime, farmers are advised to complete mandatory requirements like eKYC and Aadhaar-bank account linking to ensure they receive the payment without per the PM Kisan scheme, the amount is released every four months, i.e., in three installments each year in April-July, August-November, and December-March. The funds are deposited immediately to the beneficiaries' bank the 19th instalment was released in February, the 20th instalment can be expected any time in 1: Visit PM Kisan official website - 2: Click on the 'Beneficiary list' tab in the right corner of the pageStep 3: Select details from the drop-down such as select state, district, sub-district, block, and villageStep 4: Click on the 'Get report' tabDetails of the beneficiary list will be must ensure their Aadhaar is linked to their bank account for direct benefit transfer. This can be done at the bank branch, through Aadhaar-enabled banking services, or via mobile banking apps. Linking Aadhaar helps avoid payment delays or Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi (PM-KISAN) is a Central Sector Scheme to provide income support to all landholding farmers' families in the country to supplement their financial needs for procuring various inputs related to agriculture and allied activities as well as domestic needs. Under the PM-Kisan initiative, qualifying farmers get Rs 2,000 every four months, totaling Rs 6,000 per eKYC is mandatory to receive 20th instalment. According to the PM Kisan website, 'eKYC is MANDATORY for PMKisan registered Farmers. OTP Based eKYC is available on PMKisan Portal or nearest CSC centres may be contacted for Biometric based eKYC.'Important FAQsAll landholding farmers' families, which have cultivable landholding in their names are eligible to get benefit under the farmers will receive Rs 2,000 directly into their bank accounts under the Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) can link your Aadhaar by visiting your bank branch, using mobile banking apps, or through Aadhaar-enabled banking services. This step is crucial to avoid delays or rejection of the your beneficiary status on the PM Kisan website under 'Beneficiary Status' by entering your Aadhaar or registration number. Also ensure your bank account and Aadhaar are linked and eKYC is If any member of a family is income tax payee in last assessment year, then the family is not eligible for benefit under the scheme.


Indian Express
30-05-2025
- Business
- Indian Express
Madhya Pradesh orders crackdown on duplicate PM Kisan beneficiaries
The Madhya Pradesh government has directed district officials to identify and disqualify beneficiaries in cases where both the husband and wife from the same family are availing benefits under the Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi (PM-KISAN) scheme, The Indian Express has learnt. This comes after several such cases were reported from across the state. On May 21, the Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers' Welfare issued an SOP to be followed for necessary action in such cases. On May 19, the state's Commissioner, Land Records, wrote a letter to all district collectors to crack down on cases of multiple beneficiaries from the same family. The letter was written following video conferences on May 9 and May 16 by the Centre regarding the PM-KISAN scheme. Under the scheme, eligible families are provided `6,000 per year in three equal instalments. As per clause 3 of the PM-KISAN scheme guidelines, 'A landholding farmer family is defined as a family consisting of husband, wife, and minor children who own cultivable land as per the land records of the concerned State/UT.' The Commissioner's letter said, 'During the aforementioned video conferences, it was highlighted that more than one member of the same family (both husband and wife) is availing the scheme benefits. It was directed that such cases be identified and both members be marked ineligible on the PM-KISAN portal by May 31, 2025.' 'This will allow for adjustment of the excess amount received and ensure that only the rightful amount is credited to one member of the family in future instalments,' the letter read. A government official said district officials were directed to prepare a beneficiary list, weed out those who don't qualify under the scheme through physical visits. 'In cases where both the husband and wife are availing benefits, they should be marked ineligible.' A senior official from Betul district told The Indian Express, 'We have identified 13,000 such cases… there were people from the same family taking benefits of the scheme multiple times. This is an ongoing exercise… the accounts will be adjusted.' Officials said the exercise should be carried out before the 20th instalment of PM-KISAN payments due to be released in the first week of June 2025. The SOP issued by the Centre, a de-duplication exercise is to be carried out using Aadhaar-linked KYC details of beneficiaries and PDS data. In cases with more than one beneficiary linked, the officials have to filter where the members are registered, and whether they are related. Once the total number of instalments transferred to a pair of beneficiaries identified as husband and wife is adjusted against the cumulative entitlement, 'the female beneficiary may be reinstated, subject to eligibility'. 'Their land ownership details should be re-verified, using the Farmer ID or relevant land documents,' the SOP said.


India Today
28-05-2025
- Politics
- India Today
What Modi's May 29 Bihar visit tells about BJP poll ambition, strategy
If Congress leader Rahul Gandhi has undertaken four visits already to poll-bound Bihar this year, Prime Minister Narendra Modi is not far behind. Modi is set to make his third trip to the state in 2025, arriving on May 29 to inaugurate the Jayaprakash Narayan International Airport's new integrated terminal building and do a roadshow through the streets of Patna. The following day, he will travel to Rohtas district to address a big public forthcoming excursion comes within months of the two previous trips. On February 24, Modi was in Bhagalpur to release the latest tranche of benefits under the Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi (PM-KISAN) scheme. It was here that he lauded chief minister Nitish Kumar as 'Ladla Chief Minister' (favourite CM)—a term signalling both affection and political expediency. But despite such praise, the BJP's national leadership has conspicuously refrained from declaring Nitish as the chief ministerial candidate of the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) for the assembly elections, due by second visit, on April 24, and two days after the terror attack in Kashmir's Pahalgam, saw Modi vow that the plotters and executors of that heinous crime would face retribution 'beyond their imagination', underscoring his government's strong anti-terrorism resolve ahead of the long a citadel of regional and caste-driven social justice politics rather than a bastion of Hindutva ideology, now finds itself at the epicentre of saffron ambition in the run-up to the polls. Since 1990, when Lalu Prasad Yadav's Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) wrested power from the Congress, the state has oscillated between coalition permutations: RJD hegemony until 2005, followed by Nitish's Janata Dal (United) in political dominance November 2005 for the first time, the BJP stands as the single-largest party in the Bihar legislative assembly, having more than doubled its seat count from 37 in 2005 to 80, alongside a commensurate rise in its share of the popular vote. In this context, Modi's engagement with Bihar serves a dual purpose: burnish his personal charisma and, more importantly, project the BJP as the indispensable nucleus of power in the election in 2020, in which Nitish stood unchallenged as the NDA's undisputed chief ministerial face, the BJP has yet to endorse him explicitly for the forthcoming contest. Instead, Bihar—a Hindi-heartland state that the BJP has never governed alone—has become the theatre for a daring power-play. Emboldened by its augmented legislative assembly strength, the BJP is now assertively staking claim to primacy within the NDA in the state. It is consolidating traditional vote-banks and highlighting its Hindutva credentials while simultaneously leveraging Nitish's continued partnership—all this without ceding control of the narrative BJP's calculation is both evident and pragmatic. Nitish brings to the NDA a formidable coalition of women voters and those from the Extremely Backward Classes (EBCs)—demographics in which the JD(U) has constructed a vast network of loyalty through years of meticulously-targeted social-welfare schemes. Programmes such as distribution of bicycles to girls, women self-help groups and politically empowered EBC communities have cemented his party's reputation as the architect of developmental Nitish's imprimatur, the alliance risks alienating a crucial electoral buffer. Yet, in this election, there remains conspicuous opacity regarding how the BJP intends to recompense its coalition partners once the ballots have been counted. Will the JD(U) retain its ministerial stations or will it find itself further eclipsed by the saffron surge? For the moment, that question remains optics of Modi's visits are meticulously calibrated. The unveiling of the new airport terminal is not merely an infrastructure milestone but a symbol of the BJP's development narrative—an assertion that under its stewardship, the benefits of economic growth will be palpably visible in the daily lives of citizens. Likewise, the roadshows and public rallies serve to reinforce the prime minister's status as a man of the people, and a leader who cares. These spectacles are carefully choreographed to generate media coverage, to rally the party faithful, and to signal to undecided voters that the BJP remains the party of momentum and Bihar's electoral dynamics are never straightforward. The state's politics are suffused with caste calculations, regional loyalties and identity solidarities. While the BJP has succeeded in expanding its influence among the upper and middle castes, the RJD and other regional parties continue to command loyalty among the substantial swathes of Dalits, Muslims and this crucible, the JD(U) occupies a pivotal position: perceived as a more centrist, development-oriented alternative to the RJD's somewhat aggressive social justice rhetoric, yet amenable to alliance with the BJP's Hindutva agenda. It is this balancing act that has sustained Nitish's remarkable political longevity even if his alliance partners have changed multiple election approaches, the central question will be whether Modi's personal popularity and the BJP's organisational machinery can surmount the entrenched social equations that define Bihar's polity. Can the saffron juggernaut, emboldened by its national mandate and buoyed by Modi's charismatic appeal, translate its expanded vote-share into an outright majority? Or will ally JD(U) hold onto its social justice stronghold? Also importantly, will the Opposition RJD-Congress-Left bloc, fortified by years of grassroots touch and caste coalitions, be able to punch above their weight?In the coming weeks, as campaign rallies multiply and election manifestos are unveiled, the true extent of Modi's influence in Bihar will be revealed. His third visit, culminating in the aerodrome's ribbon-cutting ceremony and the mass rally, will serve as both a capstone and a curtain-raiser—an exhibition of strength designed to energise the electorate and to underscore the BJP's determination to govern Bihar on its own terms. Yet behind the theatrics lies a more profound inquiry into the nature of coalition politics in India's largest democracy: Will the BJP's numerical ascendancy rise further or will it find its power ambitions tempered by the very allies it has sought to cultivate?advertisementThe answer remains tantalisingly out of reach, suspended in the charged air above Bihar's sprawling plains. As the assembly elections draw near, one thing is certain: the contest will not merely decide who occupies the chief minister's chair in Patna; it will also set the course for India's regional politics in the years to to India Today MagazineTune InTrending Reel