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🔔 CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBEGoogle Pay vs. NPCI vs. Your Bank: Who Does What?
Every time you scan a QR code and pay, three main "players" work together behind the scenes: Google Pay, NPCI, and Your Bank. Most people think Google Pay "is" the bank, but that's not true! Let's clear up the confusion.
1. Google Pay: The "Postman" (TPAP)
Think of Google Pay as a very smart postman. It doesn't hold your money. Its job is to provide a beautiful interface, scan QR codes, and safely carry your payment "request" to the system. It is called a Third-Party Application Provider (TPAP).
2. NPCI: The "Traffic Police"
The National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) is the backbone. It runs the UPI network. Think of it as the traffic police that routes your payment request from Google Pay to the correct bank. It makes sure everything follows the rules.
3. Your Bank: The "Vault" (PSP)
Your bank (like SBI, HDFC, or ICICI) is where the money actually lives. When the NPCI brings the request, your bank checks if you have enough balance and if your PIN is correct. They are the ones who actually move the money out of your account.
Why This Matters to You
✅ When a payment fails: It's usually the Bank's server or NPCI traffic that is busy, not Google Pay itself.
✅ Security: Because your bank handles the "Vault," Google Pay never sees your actual bank login passwords—only your UPI PIN for that specific transfer.
Watch the full video above to see the breakdown table and become a UPI expert!
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