Before 1996, buying shares in India meant receiving heavy packages of physical paper share certificates in the mail. If you lost those papers, had them stolen, or if they were damaged by moisture, your investment was effectively gone. Selling them required mailing physical certificates back to brokers in Mumbai, a process taking weeks. That all changed with the introduction of the **Demat Account**. In this guide, we explain what a Demat account is and how it forms the backbone of digital investing.
What is a Demat Account?
A **Demat Account** (short for dematerialised account) is a digital storage facility that holds your financial securities—such as equity shares, mutual funds, government bonds, ETFs, and Sovereign Gold Bonds (SGBs)—in electronic form. It operates exactly like a bank savings account. While a bank account holds cash balances, a Demat account holds share balances.
Demat Account vs. Trading Account
This is the most common confusion among beginners. When you register with a discount broker, you open a **joint account** that links both profiles. However, they serve completely different purposes:
- Trading Account: Used to place transactions. It is the active vehicle you use to buy and sell. You transfer money from your bank account to your trading account to purchase shares.
- Demat Account: Used to store assets. It is a passive locker. Once you buy a stock using your trading account, the transactions settle, and the electronic shares are deposited and locked in your Demat account. When you sell, the shares are withdrawn from here.
Who holds your Demat shares?
Your stockbroker does not actually hold your shares. Brokers are merely intermediaries (called **Depository Participants** or DPs). The actual custody of your shares lies with two national government-registered institutions called **Depositories**:
- NSDL (National Securities Depository Limited): Promoted primarily by the National Stock Exchange (NSE) and IDBI.
- CDSL (Central Depository Services Limited): Promoted primarily by the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) and State Bank of India (SBI).
Even if your stockbroker goes bankrupt or shuts down, your shares remain 100% safe in NSDL or CDSL. You can easily access them and transfer them to a different broker using your unique **BOID (Beneficial Owner Identification)** number.
Typical Demat Account Charges
While opening a Demat account is often free, keep these recurring charges in mind:
- AMC (Annual Maintenance Charges): A yearly subscription fee charged by your broker to keep the account active, typically ranging from ₹200 to ₹400 per year. Some brokers waive this for the first year.
- DP Charges: A flat transaction fee (around ₹13.5 to ₹15 + GST) charged by the depository (NSDL/CDSL) and your broker every time you sell a stock from your Demat account. Note: This is charged per company per day, not per share. There are no DP charges for buying shares.