description="FASTag charged twice at the same toll plaza in 2026 keywords="FASTag double deduction, FASTag refund, NHAI 1033 complaint, IHMCL toll dispute, UPI FASTag chargeback, Banking Ombudsman 14448, NPCI UDIR, toll plaza overcharge India 2026"
If your FASTag was deducted twice at the same toll plaza on the same lane crossing, you do not need to write off the extra ₹80 or ₹160. The duplicate deduction is a recognised reversal category under NHAI rules and your bank can credit it back within 7 working days once you raise a properly worded dispute. This guide shows you exactly how, in the order that actually works in 2026.
🟡 Tip: The single most important number to capture is the TID (Transaction ID) printed in the debit SMS. Without two distinct TIDs for the same crossing, the bank will treat your complaint as a normal toll deduction and reject it. Write both TIDs down before you do anything else.
A FASTag double deduction usually falls into one of three patterns and the fix depends on which one happened to you.
Pattern 1: Same plaza, same lane, two debits within 60 seconds. This is the most common 2026 scenario, almost always caused by the lane reader scanning the tag twice before the boom barrier closed. Under National Highways Fee Rules 2008 and the NHAI standard operating procedure for electronic toll collection, the second debit must be auto reversed by the acquirer bank within T plus 24 hours. If it is not, you raise a manual dispute.
Pattern 2: Same plaza, two debits more than 5 minutes apart. This happens when the plaza system marks your vehicle as a re entry. Carry the FASTag debit SMS with you, the plaza manager has discretion to reverse on the spot under the NHAI plaza grievance protocol, and you should insist on a written acknowledgement.
Pattern 3: Plaza shows debit but boom did not lift, you paid cash, then FASTag also debited later. This is a payment reconciliation failure. You are entitled to a full refund of either the cash or the FASTag charge, your choice, and you must claim within 30 days under the NHAI user fee plaza norms.
For all three patterns the escalation ladder is the same. Step one is the issuer bank FASTag dispute window inside its own app, which is mandated by the Reserve Bank of India Master Directions on Prepaid Payment Instruments 2021 (as amended 2024). Step two is NHAI 1033 plus the IHMCL portal at https://ihmcl.com. Step three is the Banking Ombudsman under the Reserve Bank Integrated Ombudsman Scheme 2021 if the bank does not resolve in 30 days. Step four is the District Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission under the Consumer Protection Act 2019 if the cumulative loss including mental harassment justifies a formal complaint.
The Supreme Court has held in Bharti Knitting Co. v DHL Worldwide Express (1996) 4 SCC 704 that a service provider cannot rely on a contract clause to avoid liability where the deficiency is on its own systems, a principle consistently extended to electronic payment failures by the National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission.
Build your evidence pack before you call anyone. The bank will ask for it within the first reply, and having it ready cuts the resolution time in half.
🟡 Tip: Do not crop the SMS screenshots. The bank dispute team needs to see the sender ID line (usually VK NETC or AD NHAI) to confirm authenticity. A cropped image without the sender often gets rejected as “evidence not verifiable”.
The correct first stop is your FASTag issuer bank, not NHAI. NHAI runs the highway, but the money was debited by the bank that issued your tag, and only the bank can credit it back. Open the issuer app, find “Manage FASTag” or “NETC FASTag”, select the disputed transaction, and raise a dispute with reason code 5 (Duplicate Charge) or the equivalent label your bank uses.
Run NHAI 1033 in parallel, not afterwards. The 1033 docket creates an independent record that the plaza accepts liability, which becomes your strongest piece of evidence if the bank stalls. Push the IHMCL email next, because the Indian Highways Management Company Limited operates the central NETC settlement system and can force the acquirer bank to release the credit if it goes past the 7 day deadline.
If your FASTag is linked to a UPI auto debit through a wallet (Paytm, PhonePe, Cred, etc.), also raise an NPCI UDIR complaint at https://www.npci.org.in for the second debit. NPCI UDIR (Unified Dispute and Issue Resolution) is the national chargeback rail for UPI based recurring charges.
🟡 Tip: Write the docket number from 1033 directly into the bank dispute box. Banks treat a 1033 docketed claim very differently from a bare claim, the FASTag operations team is trained to expedite anything with a NHAI docket attached.
Use this draft as the body of your bank dispute, your IHMCL email, and your Banking Ombudsman complaint, adjusting only the dates and amounts.
To: FASTag Grievance Cell, [Issuer Bank name] CC: [email protected] Subject: Duplicate FASTag deduction at [plaza name], [date], vehicle [registration number] Sir or Madam, On [date] at approximately [time] my vehicle bearing registration number [number] crossed [plaza name] toll plaza on [highway / lane direction]. My FASTag (Tag ID: [tag id]) was debited twice for the same crossing. Transaction 1: TID [number], amount ₹[amount], time [hh:mm:ss] Transaction 2: TID [number], amount ₹[amount], time [hh:mm:ss] Only one crossing took place. The applicable single journey toll for my vehicle class at this plaza is ₹[amount]. I have raised NHAI helpline 1033 docket number [docket]. I am attaching both SMS screenshots, my FASTag mini statement, and the vehicle RC. I request reversal of the duplicate amount of ₹[amount] to my linked account within 7 working days as required under the NETC operational guidelines and the Reserve Bank Master Directions on Prepaid Payment Instruments 2021. If the amount is not credited within 7 working days I will escalate to the Banking Ombudsman under the Reserve Bank Integrated Ombudsman Scheme 2021 and to the District Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission under the Consumer Protection Act 2019. Sincerely, [Name] [Mobile, registered with FASTag] [Date]
If the plaza is operated directly by NHAI or by a state agency and you suspect a systemic billing error rather than a one off glitch, you can file a Right to Information Act 2005 application to the relevant public authority. The Public Information Officers sit at:
NHAI / Ministry of Road Transport and Highways / state Public Works Department
Sample RTI body:
Under the Right to Information Act 2005, please provide: 1. Total number of duplicate FASTag deduction complaints received at [plaza name] between [date] and [date]. 2. Total amount refunded against such complaints during this period. 3. Average resolution time for FASTag duplicate deduction complaints during this period. 4. Standard operating procedure (SOP) followed by the plaza for detection and reversal of duplicate deductions. 5. Number of lane reader recalibration events at this plaza during the last 12 months. Fee of ₹10 enclosed by [IPO / DD / cash receipt]. I am a citizen of India.
The PIO must reply within 30 days under section 7(1) of the Act. If the answer is denied or evasive, escalate first appeal under section 19(1) within 30 days, then second appeal to the Central Information Commission under section 19(3).
If 30 days have passed and the bank still has not credited you, file a complaint at https://edaakhil.nic.in. e Daakhil is the official online filing portal of the National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission, and the District Commission has jurisdiction up to ₹50 lakh in claim value, which comfortably covers any FASTag dispute and damages.
Plead three things in the complaint: deficiency in service under section 2(11) of the Consumer Protection Act 2019, unfair trade practice under section 2(47), and claim damages for mental agony plus costs. Attach the entire paper trail: bank dispute, NHAI docket, IHMCL email, ombudsman reply if any. The court fee for claims up to ₹5 lakh is ₹0 in most states.
🟡 Tip: Do not file in consumer court before the 30 day Banking Ombudsman window has lapsed. The Commission will accept the case but the bank's first defence will be that you bypassed an available statutory remedy, and you will lose two months arguing about it.
Always verify a phone number on the gov.in domain before calling. The Information Technology (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules 2021 obligate platforms to take down impersonating customer care numbers, but new ones surface every week, so the official site is the only safe source.
Print or copy this list into your phone notes the moment you suspect a double deduction.
Yes, when the duplicate is documented with two distinct TIDs from the same plaza within a short window. The Reserve Bank Master Direction on Prepaid Payment Instruments 2021 places the burden of system reliability on the issuer, not the customer, and the standard chargeback timeline is 7 working days.
Plaza staff have no role in the bank reversal process. Note their name and badge number, then escalate to NHAI 1033 and the issuer bank in parallel. The plaza cannot legally block your refund claim.
For NHAI plazas the 1033 helpline is the right channel. For state highway plazas operated by the state Public Works Department, complain to the state PWD grievance cell instead, and use the same RTI template addressed to the state authority.
Yes, under the Consumer Protection Act 2019. District Commissions routinely award between ₹2,000 and ₹25,000 in cases of repeated banking system failures plus the actual amount lost. Document every phone call and email exchange because the size of the award scales with documented effort.
That is not a duplicate, that is most likely a “blacklist clearance” auto charge or a fitness charge from a separate crossing. Pull the full FASTag statement for the month before assuming it was a double deduction, the issuer app shows lane and plaza for every entry.
Yes. Refusing to pay future tolls because of a past dispute will get your tag blacklisted. Pay normally and pursue the refund in writing.
Send an SMS “BAL <space> <Tag ID>” to your issuer FASTag SMS short code, or check the NETC mobile app. If blacklisted in error, the bank must restore service within 24 hours and credit any inconvenience charge.
The bank's own dispute window is 30 days from the transaction date. The Banking Ombudsman accepts complaints within 1 year from the date of the bank's reply or the deadline by which the bank should have replied. The consumer commission accepts complaints within 2 years of the cause of action under section 69 of the Consumer Protection Act 2019.
Toll plaza overcharges look small individually, ₹80 or ₹160 a time, and that is exactly why they go unchallenged across millions of crossings every day. They add up to crores in the aggregate and the system only fixes itself when enough citizens push back through documented dispute channels. If you raise the four step ladder above the way it is meant to work, you will get your money back, and the plaza level data captured by NHAI 1033 plus IHMCL feeds directly into the operational reviews that prevent the same lane reader from doing it to the next driver.
If the official channels stall, the Citizen Crisis Response Network on RTI Wiki keeps a curated list of escalation contacts and serving officers across NHAI, IHMCL, RBI, and the consumer commissions. You are not alone with this, the moment you put it in writing it stops being your private problem and becomes part of the public record that holds the system accountable.