If you paid an Indian edtech or online course platform and now want your money back, the law is on your side far more than the sales agent told you. Most learners get stuck because they argue inside the company portal instead of escalating to the consumer protection machinery. This 2026 guide walks you through the exact refund sequence that works.
Direct answer. Send a written refund-demand email within 7 days quoting Section 2(47) of the Consumer Protection Act 2019 (unfair trade practice) and Section 2(11) (deficiency in service). If the platform refuses or stalls beyond 30 days, file on consumerhelpline.gov.in (NCH 1915) and e-Daakhil in parallel. For loan-funded courses, separately ask the NBFC for EMI cancellation under the original loan-cancellation clause and escalate to RBI Ombudsman after 30 days. Save every screenshot, brochure, recording, and email; that is your case.
Indian edtech refunds are governed by the Consumer Protection Act 2019, the Central Consumer Protection Authority (CCPA) guidelines on misleading advertisements 2022, and the platform's own published refund policy (which becomes a contract once you pay). Send a written demand within 7 days, give the platform 30 days, then escalate to NCH 1915, e-Daakhil district commission, and ASCI for the ad. If a loan funded the course, fight the EMI separately with the NBFC and RBI Ombudsman.
Most platforms have a clean-looking refund policy on their website. The trouble starts when you actually try to use it. You may get told the cooling-off window expired the moment you watched a single video, that the recorded sessions you paid for “consumed” the course, or that your refund is conditional on a counsellor call where they will simply re-pitch you. Sometimes the company portal silently revokes course access the moment you ask for a refund, then claims you “completed” the programme. None of those tactics survive a written paper trail and a Section 35 consumer complaint.
The legal position in India is stronger than most learners realise. A pre-paid course is a “service” under Section 2(42) of the Consumer Protection Act 2019. Promising career outcomes, placement support, or “industry mentorship” that does not materialise is a “deficiency” under Section 2(11) and an “unfair trade practice” under Section 2(47). The CCPA can suo motu act on misleading edtech advertisements under Section 18, and has done so multiple times since 2022.
The first day after you decide you want a refund decides 80 percent of how the case goes. Do these in order, on the same day:
Warning: course-access denial trick. Several platforms revoke dashboard access within hours of a refund request, then argue you “consumed” the entire programme. Take your screen recording BEFORE you send the demand email, not after.
India does not yet have a statutory cooling-off period for online courses the way the EU has 14 days under the Consumer Rights Directive. Refund timelines are set by the platform's own published policy, which becomes a binding contract under Section 10 of the Indian Contract Act 1872 the moment you pay.
That cuts both ways. If the brochure said “7-day money-back guarantee” or “100 percent refund within 15 days, no questions asked”, you can hold the platform to that exact text. If you can show that the policy was changed AFTER you paid, that is a unilateral contract variation and unenforceable. Pull the policy from the Wayback Machine for the date you paid; this is gold-standard evidence.
The Consumer Protection (E-Commerce) Rules 2020 (issued under the CPA 2019) require every e-commerce entity to display its return and refund policy clearly and to provide a grievance officer who responds within 48 hours and resolves complaints within one month. An edtech platform is an e-commerce entity for these rules. If their grievance officer is missing, unreachable, or silent beyond 48 hours, that itself is a violation and goes into your complaint.
To: support@[platform].com; grievance@[platform].com CC: legal@[platform].com (if listed); your own backup email Subject: Refund demand under CPA 2019 Sections 2(11), 2(47) and E-Commerce Rules 2020 - Order [your order ID]
Dear Sir/Madam,
I, [Name], purchased the course “[exact course name]” on [date of payment] for ₹[amount] vide order ID [order ID] / transaction ID [UTR or txn ref]. I am writing to invoke a full refund under the following grounds:
1. The course content and outcomes do not match what was represented to me by your counsellor [counsellor name] on [date] over [phone/WhatsApp/Zoom]. Specifically, [one or two concrete mismatches: missing modules, missing mentors, no placement support, recorded vs live sessions, certificate not from the advertised university, etc.]. 2. Per your published refund policy as of [date paid] (archived copy attached), I am entitled to a full refund within [X] days. 3. Under the Consumer Protection (E-Commerce) Rules 2020, your grievance officer is required to acknowledge within 48 hours and resolve within one month.
I hereby request a 100 percent refund of ₹[amount] to the original payment instrument within 15 working days. If the course was funded through a loan via [NBFC name], please simultaneously raise a loan-cancellation request with the NBFC and confirm in writing.
Failing satisfactory resolution, I will file a complaint with the National Consumer Helpline (1915), the Central Consumer Protection Authority, the District Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission via e-Daakhil, and the Advertising Standards Council of India for misleading representation. I reserve all rights under the Consumer Protection Act 2019, the IT Act 2000, and the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita 2024.
This email is sent without prejudice.
Regards, [Name] [Phone] | [Email] | [City] Attachments: payment receipt, brochure PDF, counsellor chat transcript, archived refund policy
Send this from the email address registered on your platform account. CC yourself. Use a return-receipt extension if your email supports one. Most importantly, save the sent copy in a “Refund case” folder.
Once a platform agrees to refund, they will almost never offer 100 percent. They will quote a “pro-rata” formula based on how much of the course you “accessed”. Watch for these tricks:
If the deduction sheet looks invented, demand the refund-policy clause that authorises each line item. Quote the original brochure. If they refuse, that refusal becomes a fresh deficiency under Section 2(11) and feeds your e-Daakhil complaint.
Most edtech sales pitches push you toward “no-cost EMI” through a partner NBFC such as a small consumer-finance company. The moment you sign that loan agreement, two contracts exist: the course contract with the edtech, and the loan contract with the NBFC. They are legally independent.
This is critical. If you cancel the course but do nothing about the loan, the NBFC keeps debiting your account, reports you to credit bureaus, and your CIBIL score drops. Conversely, if you stop the auto-debit without writing to the NBFC, you become a wilful defaulter.
The correct sequence is:
| Forum | Best for | Cost | Typical timeline | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Platform grievance officer | First demand, paper trail | Free | 30 days | Company response |
| NCH 1915 (consumerhelpline.gov.in) | Quick mediation, partner companies | Free | 14-30 days | Convergence resolution |
| CCPA | Misleading ads, class issues | Free | Variable | Class-action style order |
| e-Daakhil District Commission | Formal complaint up to ₹50 lakh | ₹100-₹500 | 3-9 months | Refund + compensation |
| State Commission | ₹50 lakh to ₹2 crore | Higher | 6-12 months | Same |
| National Commission | Above ₹2 crore | Higher | 12+ months | Same |
| ASCI | Advertisement misrepresentation | Free | 30-60 days | Ad withdrawal |
| RBI CMS Ombudsman | Loan / EMI side | Free | 30-90 days | Refund + CIBIL correction |
| Cybercrime portal | Suspected fraud / fake university | Free | Varies | FIR + investigation |
Refund evidence pack - save before you escalate:
A consumer complaint that includes any of the following almost always succeeds:
Many edtechs sell the course at a high price by promising “career services”: resume reviews, mock interviews, recruiter introductions, and placement support. These promises are part of the contract under Section 2(7) of the CPA 2019 (consumer) and Section 2(42) (service). If they are not delivered, that is a deficiency in service.
To prove non-delivery, document:
A District Commission can order a partial refund proportional to undelivered career services even if you finished the course content. This is settled in multiple District Commission orders since 2023.
If you paid an offshore platform in USD via your card, the refund-and-chargeback path runs through your card-issuing bank, not e-Daakhil (jurisdiction is harder for foreign entities). The strongest tool here is a card chargeback under the Visa / Mastercard / Rupay dispute rules:
ISAs are agreements where you “pay” by giving the platform a share of your future salary for some years. Several Indian platforms used these from 2020 to 2023. Most of those ISAs are unenforceable as drafted, because they conflict with the Indian Contract Act 1872 (uncertainty), the Bonded Labour System (Abolition) Act 1976, and the RBI's stand on unregulated lending. If a platform invokes an ISA against you, refuse to pay, send a written cease-and-desist, and proactively file with the RBI under “unauthorised lending activity”.
For amounts up to ₹50 lakh, the District Commission via e-Daakhil is perfectly handleable without a lawyer. The form is plain-English, the filing fee is nominal, and you appear in person or via video. Hire a lawyer if:
For everything else, your written paper trail wins the case more than the lawyer's oratory.
A small but real risk in 2026 is that the edtech itself has gone insolvent before refunding you. In that case:
A blanket “no refund under any circumstances” clause does not survive the Consumer Protection Act 2019. Under Section 2(46) read with Section 49 of the CPA, contractual terms that exclude liability for deficiency in service or misrepresentation are “unfair contract” terms and unenforceable. The platform can have a structured, time-bound refund policy (for example, “100 percent within 15 days, 50 percent within 30 days”), and that is binding both ways. But “no refund whatsoever” is not enforceable, especially when the platform itself misrepresented outcomes, mentor names, or the issuing university. Courts and District Commissions have repeatedly read down such clauses since 2020.
The platform's own published policy decides the cooling-off window: typically 7 to 15 days for “no questions asked” refunds, and longer for deficiency-based refunds. Even after the cooling-off period, you can demand a refund on the basis of deficiency in service (Section 2(11) CPA 2019) or unfair trade practice (Section 2(47)). The general limitation period under Section 69 of the CPA 2019 is 2 years from the date the cause of action arose. So you have up to 24 months to file at e-Daakhil, but evidence quality drops fast - file within 6 months for the cleanest outcome.
Only if you stop paying without writing to the NBFC. The correct sequence is: send a written loan-cancellation letter to the NBFC the same day you send the refund demand to the edtech, citing the original loan-cancellation clause. Continue auto-debits until the NBFC acknowledges. If the NBFC wrongly reports you, file an RBI CMS complaint - they will order CIBIL correction. CIBIL itself has a dispute mechanism on cibil.com that takes 30 days. Going dark on the EMI without writing first is the single biggest mistake learners make and the one that does the most damage.
Yes, on a pro-rata basis, and sometimes fully. The District Commission looks at three things: (1) what the brochure promised, (2) what was actually delivered, and (3) whether the deficiency was structural (missing mentor, downgraded certificate, no placement support) or content-quality based. Structural deficiencies allow a full refund regardless of how much you accessed. Pure quality complaints get pro-rata. If the platform offered a downgraded certificate (for example, an “industry partner” certificate instead of the promised university certificate), that is structural.
If you have the call recording or a follow-up WhatsApp message confirming the promise, those are admissible under Section 65B of the Indian Evidence Act (now folded into the Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam 2024). Even without a recording, your contemporaneous notes plus the counsellor's email signature plus call timing from your phone bill build a strong circumstantial case. The CPA 2019 specifically catches “false representation” under Section 2(47)(i)-(iv). Always confirm any verbal promise via email the same day - one line is enough: “Confirming our call - course includes X, Y, Z. Please reply if any of this is inaccurate.” Their non-reply is itself an admission.
e-Daakhil is the official online filing system for the consumer commissions (District, State, and National). The actual case is heard at the appropriate Commission - usually the District Commission of the district where you reside, work, or where the platform's office is located. You can attend in person or by video. The filing fee is ₹100 to ₹500 for District Commission complaints up to ₹5 lakh; slightly more above. The flow is: register on edaakhil.nic.in, file your complaint with evidence, pay fee online, get a diary number, and wait for hearing notice. See our step-by-step guide to filing a consumer complaint at NCDRC and lower commissions.
NCH 1915 is the National Consumer Helpline. It is a complaint-mediation service, not a court. You file at consumerhelpline.gov.in or call 1915, and they forward your complaint to the company through the “Convergence” mechanism. It is fast, free, and useful for first contact. But if the company refuses, NCH cannot order a refund - only a Commission can. The District Commission via e-Daakhil is the actual judicial forum. Best practice: file NCH first for pressure, and e-Daakhil 15 days later if NCH does not resolve. The two work in parallel; nothing stops you from doing both.
It is harder but not impossible. If the platform has any India-incorporated subsidiary, marketing entity, or “India operations” team, name that entity. Indian courts have repeatedly accepted jurisdiction where any part of the cause of action (payment, delivery, online access) happened in India - that is Section 34 of the CPA 2019. For pure offshore platforms, your best lever is a card chargeback through your bank within the network's dispute window (typically 120 days for “service not rendered”). RBI's Liberalised Remittance Scheme paperwork also creates a record useful in any future dispute.
Almost never for individual learners. Edtech platforms are extremely sensitive to negative orders from CCPA and District Commissions, because those orders are public, search-indexed, and used by future learners to file similar complaints. A counter-suit by the platform creates more public record. The risk is real only when an NBFC is involved and you have stopped paying without writing - the NBFC, not the platform, may file a recovery suit. That is why the EMI separation step in this guide is non-negotiable.
No. e-Daakhil is designed for consumers to file directly. The form is plain-English, you can attach evidence, and District Commissions routinely hear consumers in person without lawyers. You only need a lawyer if (a) the amount in dispute is above ₹50 lakh and the case moves to the State or National Commission, or (b) the company files a counter-suit, or © you want to pursue damages well beyond the refund itself. For a typical ₹50,000 to ₹5 lakh edtech refund, file yourself.
A refund battle with an edtech platform is rarely about the law - it is about your paper trail. Send the demand email today, archive the brochure today, take the screen recording today. Treat the platform's grievance officer as a 30-day clock, not a partner. After day 30, the escalation ladder above is fast, free, and works. If you found this useful, share it with one learner who is silently writing off ₹50,000. They probably don't know they have 24 months and a strong statute on their side.