When a third-party seller on Amazon, Flipkart or Meesho takes your money and never delivers, or ships a defective product, the marketplace itself can be held liable. This is called “fall-back liability” under the Consumer Protection (E-Commerce) Rules, 2020, and it means the platform cannot simply hide behind the excuse that it was only a middleman.
For years, online marketplaces argued that they merely connected buyers with independent sellers and bore no responsibility when a seller cheated. The 2020 Rules changed that. A marketplace e-commerce entity now carries a backstop duty to the consumer when its registered seller fails to deliver and that failure causes you loss.
Fall-back liability is the liability of a marketplace e-commerce entity where a seller registered with it fails to deliver the goods or services ordered by a consumer due to negligent conduct or any act or omission in fulfilling the duties laid down by the marketplace, which causes loss to the consumer. In plain terms, if the seller drops the ball and you lose money, the platform can be made to answer for it.
This protection applies to you if you bought from a marketplace e-commerce entity, that is, a platform that hosts independent third-party sellers. Amazon, Flipkart and Meesho operate primarily as marketplaces, listing goods from thousands of separate sellers rather than selling everything themselves.
It covers two common situations:
The Rules were issued by the Department of Consumer Affairs under the Consumer Protection Act, 2019, so they have the force of law, not merely a platform policy.
The same Rules impose baseline duties that help you build your case before you ever reach a consumer court.
If the platform misses the 48-hour or one-month deadline, that delay itself becomes strong evidence of negligent grievance handling.
Under the Consumer Protection Act, 2019, the consumer commissions are tiered by the value of the claim.
| Commission | Claim value it can hear |
|---|---|
| District Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission (DCDRC) | Up to ₹50 lakh |
| State Commission (SCDRC) | Above ₹50 lakh up to ₹2 crore |
| National Commission (NCDRC) | Above ₹2 crore |
Most marketplace disputes over a single non-delivered or defective product fall well within the District Commission's ₹50 lakh limit, and can be e-filed on e-Jagriti without travelling to the court.
For a full walkthrough of preparing and filing the complaint itself, see the companion guide on filing a consumer forum complaint on e-Jagriti. To draft any related government information request cleanly, the AI RTI Drafter can help, and the broader procedure is explained in The RTI Playbook.
Yes, where the seller fails to deliver due to negligent conduct or a failure to perform the duties the platform sets, and that causes you loss, the marketplace can be subject to fall-back liability under the Consumer Protection (E-Commerce) Rules, 2020. The platform cannot simply say it was only an intermediary. You can name it as an opposite party alongside the seller.
The platform's grievance officer must acknowledge your complaint within forty-eight hours and redress it within one month from the date it was received, under Rule 4(5) of the Rules. If the platform misses these deadlines, that delay strengthens your case before the consumer commission.
File on the e-Jagriti platform at e-jagriti.gov.in. Since 1 January 2025 the earlier e-Daakhil portal was merged into e-Jagriti, which is the unified official e-filing system for the District, State and National Consumer Commissions. You can also call the National Consumer Helpline on 1915 for pre-litigation help.
You can claim a refund of the price paid plus compensation for your loss, mental agony and litigation costs. File in the District Commission if your claim is up to ₹50 lakh, the State Commission above ₹50 lakh up to ₹2 crore, and the National Commission above ₹2 crore. Most single-product disputes belong in the District Commission.
The Rules frame fall-back liability mainly around a seller's failure to deliver due to negligent conduct or non-performance of duties. A defective, counterfeit or not-as-described item that the seller refuses to refund or replace can form part of that claim, and the broader product-liability and deficiency-of-service provisions of the Consumer Protection Act, 2019 also let you proceed against the seller and the platform.
Start with the in-app complaint and a written email to the platform's grievance officer, citing the 48-hour and one-month deadlines. If the platform stalls past one month, escalate to the National Consumer Helpline on 1915, then file on e-Jagriti naming both the seller and the marketplace as opposite parties. Keep every screenshot, invoice and chat from the moment something goes wrong, because in a fall-back claim your evidence is what holds the platform to account.