Reviewed on: 2026-06-19.
Direct answer. If your income tax refund has not arrived despite the ITR being processed, log in to the e-filing portal and use the Grievances module to raise a formal complaint. Fix the bank account pre-validation first if that is the cause. Escalate to CPGRAMS if the grievance goes unanswered for 30 days.
Your ITR is processed, the portal says “Refund Issued,” but your bank shows nothing. The helpline says “wait a few more days.” Weeks pass. At that point, a formal grievance is your right.
The Income Tax Department's e-filing portal has a built-in Grievances module. CPGRAMS is the additional escalation channel. This article tells you exactly which route to take and what to write, based on the steps the department itself publishes.
Identify the cause before filing a grievance. Each cause has a specific remedy.
For step-by-step status checking, see our Income Tax Refund Status guide. This article picks up after you have confirmed your ITR is processed but the refund remains stuck.
A refund reissue or grievance will not work if the bank account on the portal is not pre-validated. Fix this first.
If the refund was issued by the department but failed to credit your bank account (closed account, wrong IFSC, name mismatch), submit a Refund Reissue request.
After submission, note the Request Reference Number. Processing takes a few weeks; verify timelines on the portal as the department does not publish a fixed SLA for reissue.
If the refund is stuck for a reason you cannot resolve yourself (such as a processing error or a demand adjustment you dispute), file a formal grievance.
The e-filing portal has a Grievances module (previously also called e-Nivaran; the current portal labels it simply “Grievances”).
Direct link: eportal.incometax.gov.in/fo-greivance/submit.
Track progress at eportal.incometax.gov.in/fo-greivance/view. No statutory response deadline exists; if 30 days pass without a satisfactory answer, proceed to Step 4.
If the department adjusted your refund under Section 245 of the Income Tax Act, 1961, you will receive an intimation on the portal and by email. Your options:
If a disputed demand is ignored, file a grievance on the portal or approach your jurisdictional Assessing Officer in writing.
If your e-filing grievance is unanswered after 30 days or the response is inadequate, escalate to CPGRAMS.
The following helpline numbers are published on incometax.gov.in/contact-us:
Email: [email protected] (ITR processing); [email protected] (outstanding demand)
Log in to eportal.incometax.gov.in and go to Profile > My Bank Account to check whether your bank account is pre-validated. Also check Services > Response to Outstanding Demand to see if the department has adjusted your refund against a past demand under s.245. If both are clear, note the exact refund status message before raising a grievance.
A Refund Reissue is for when the department issued the refund but it failed to reach your bank (closed account, wrong IFSC, or unvalidated account). A Grievance is a complaint for when the department has not acted correctly, for example if the refund was never issued even though the ITR shows as processed, or if a demand adjustment under s.245 was made in error. In many stuck-refund cases you need both.
Link your PAN to Aadhaar under Profile > Link Aadhaar on the e-filing portal. A late-linking fee applies; verify the current amount on the portal. Once linking is confirmed, the s.139AA(2) hold is lifted. Filing a grievance before completing the link will not accelerate the refund.
Escalate to CPGRAMS against the Central Board of Direct Taxes under the Ministry of Finance. Include your ITR acknowledgement number, Assessment Year, refund amount, and the Grievance Reference Number. You may also write to your jurisdictional Assessing Officer. Check jurisdiction details at My Profile > Jurisdiction on the portal.
The Income Tax Ombudsman was a parallel grievance mechanism. The department's current official portal does not list it as an active escalation channel; this article cannot confirm its operational status. Use the e-filing Grievances module and CPGRAMS as your primary routes.
Under Section 245 of the Income Tax Act, 1961, the department must give you prior intimation before adjusting a refund against an outstanding demand. If you received no intimation, raise a grievance on the e-filing portal citing the s.245 adjustment and the absence of prior notice. Escalate to CPGRAMS if unresolved. See also Banking Ombudsman for any disputed bank credit or debit on the same refund amount.
Check TDS Refund Status to trace TDS credits and review Form 26AS on the portal. If the TDS is not reflected, ask your employer to file a revised TDS return. See EPFO Grievance if the TDS relates to EPF withdrawals.
File an RTI to: the jurisdictional Assessing Officer under the Central Board of Direct Taxes, Ministry of Finance, or to the Central Public Information Officer of the Centralised Processing Centre (CPC), Bengaluru, as applicable
Use RTI under Section 6(1) of the Right to Information Act, 2005 to ask:
→ Use our free AI RTI Drafter to generate a complete Section 6(1) application.
By Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak