Saw an ad that promised a guaranteed job, a “100% safe” investment, a “miracle” cure, or a coaching course “endorsed” by a celebrity who never actually endorsed it? You can complain, and the law in 2026 has real teeth.
Direct answer. A misleading advertisement in India can be reported to the Central Consumer Protection Authority (CCPA) via the National Consumer Helpline portal at consumerhelpline.gov.in or by calling 1915. The Advertising Standards Council of India (ASCI) at ascionline.in handles content complaints under the ASCI Code. CCPA can order corrective ads, ban endorsers for up to three years, and impose penalties up to rupees ten lakh (rupees fifty lakh on repeat). Always preserve a screenshot or recording before complaining.
A misleading ad in India is one that falsely describes a product, gives a false guarantee, hides material information, or deceives the consumer. Citizens can complain to the CCPA through consumerhelpline.gov.in or 1915, file a parallel complaint with ASCI at ascionline.in, and approach a sectoral regulator (SEBI, IRDAI, RBI, FSSAI, Ministry of Ayush) when the product touches that sector. Save proof first.
The Consumer Protection Act 2019 (CPA 2019) at Section 2(28) defines a misleading advertisement in relation to any product or service as one that:
The phrase “deliberately conceals important information” matters. Many real-world misleading ads in India are not technically false. They simply hide the fine print: the “guaranteed placement” applies only if you score 90%, the “free” course charges processing fees, the “RBI-approved” claim refers to a payment partner not the lender. A complaint can succeed on concealment alone.
Three layers act in parallel.
Central Consumer Protection Authority (CCPA). Created under Sections 10 to 27 of the CPA 2019, the CCPA is a statutory regulator under the Department of Consumer Affairs. It can investigate misleading ads on its own motion or on a complaint, order the advertiser to discontinue or modify the ad, order a corrective advertisement at the advertiser's cost, prohibit an endorser from endorsing any product for up to one year (and up to three years on a repeat violation), and impose penalties.
Advertising Standards Council of India (ASCI). A self-regulatory industry body. Its Code for Self-Regulation in Advertising covers truthfulness, decency, harm and fair competition. ASCI cannot impose statutory fines, but its Consumer Complaints Council (CCC) decisions are widely respected, and ASCI has a formal Memorandum of Understanding with the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting and with several sectoral regulators. Many violators withdraw the ad once an ASCI complaint is upheld.
Sectoral regulators. Where the product is regulated, the sectoral regulator is often the fastest route:
Section 18 lists the CCPA's powers and functions. In a citizen-friendly summary:
ASCI's Code rests on four chapters:
Beyond the four chapters, ASCI has built specific guidelines on celebrity endorsements, disclaimers, comparative advertising, ads targeting children, education ads, real-estate ads, online gaming, virtual digital assets (crypto and similar), influencer marketing, and gender stereotypes. Most of these are aligned with CCPA's own 2022 Guidelines for Prevention of Misleading Advertisements and Endorsements.
Surrogate ads sell something forbidden under the cover of something allowed. The classic example is a liquor brand placing an ad for a music CD or “playing cards” that uses identical branding, packaging and visual language as its alcohol product. The Cable Television Networks (Regulation) Act 1995 and the Cable Television Networks Rules 1994 prohibit ads of products whose advertising is otherwise restricted. The 2022 CCPA guidelines explicitly outlaw surrogate ads.
If a citizen sees an ad where:
a CCPA complaint and an ASCI complaint together are the right route.
Until 2019, an endorser could often plead “I just acted in the ad.” That defence is now narrow. Section 21(5) of CPA 2019, read with the 2022 Guidelines, requires:
Failure can lead to a Section 22 endorsement ban and a Section 21 penalty. Several high-profile pan-masala, fantasy-gaming and edtech cases since 2022 have moved on these provisions.
| Forum | Statutory Force | Typical Outcome | Use When |
|---|---|---|---|
| CCPA via consumerhelpline.gov.in or NCH 1915 | Yes, under CPA 2019 | Withdrawal, corrective ad, fine up to rupees fifty lakh, endorsement ban | The ad misleads or omits material info |
| ASCI at ascionline.in | Self-regulatory, but widely respected and tied to MIB MoU | Ad pulled / modified, public listing of upheld complaints | Code violation, faster industry response |
| SEBI / IRDAI / RBI / FSSAI / Ayush | Yes, sector-specific | Sector penalty, licence action | Product is regulated by that sector |
| Consumer Commission (District / State / NCDRC) | Yes, under CPA 2019 | Refund, compensation, damages | You suffered loss as a buyer |
Open the ad and capture:
Save the file under a clear name like `2026-05-10_Brand_AdScreenshot.png`. Don't only rely on a “share” link, since pulled posts vanish.
You can also call 1915, the National Consumer Helpline, in 17 languages.
If you actually paid money based on the ad and suffered loss, file before a District / State Consumer Commission or the National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission. Step-by-step instructions are at Consumer Court: How to File in India and File a Consumer Complaint at NCDRC 2026.
Critical: Do NOT delete your chats with the advertiser, the screenshots, or the original ad URL after filing. Many complaints are dismissed for want of evidence months later when the brand denies the claim. Keep a folder, both on your phone and on a cloud backup.
Subject: Complaint against misleading advertisement of [Brand / Product Name]
Sir / Madam,
I, [Name], a citizen of India residing at [city], am filing a complaint under the Consumer Protection Act 2019 against a misleading advertisement of [Brand / Product Name], published on [date and platform], at the URL / channel: [URL or programme].
The advertisement claims [exact claim, in quotes from the ad]. This claim is misleading because:
I attach the screenshots / recording.
I request the Central Consumer Protection Authority to:
Yours faithfully,
[Name]
[Mobile, Email, Address, Date]
Subject: ASCI complaint against misleading ad of [Brand]
Dear ASCI,
I am filing a complaint under the ASCI Code for Self-Regulation in Advertising against [Brand / Product] for an advertisement [where it was seen, date, and URL or recording].
The ad in my view violates:
The specific claims I am questioning are:
I attach evidence and request that the matter be placed before the Consumer Complaints Council.
Yours faithfully,
[Name, Mobile, Email]
The ASCI guideline on influencer advertising in digital media requires every paid post, story or reel to carry a clear and upfront disclosure such as `#ad`, `#sponsored`, `#partnership` or “Paid promotion by [Brand]”. The disclosure must be in a place where it cannot be missed. A `#ad` buried at the end of 30 hashtags is not compliant.
CCPA's 2022 Guidelines require disclosure of any material connection between the endorser and the advertiser, including monetary payment, free product, family relationship and equity stake. A celebrity who owns the brand must say so.
A celebrity endorsing a product must, before endorsing, satisfy themselves that the claim is truthful. They cannot, after the fact, plead they were “only acting.” The endorsement-ban power under Section 22 turns on this.
Evidence checklist before filing
A common 2026 fact pattern: an edtech promises a “guaranteed placement at a Fortune 500 company” for a fee of rupees one lakh and twenty thousand. The student joins, finishes the course, and is told the guarantee triggers only after a 90% test, a 95% attendance, and a one-year non-compete with other coaching brands. The student didn't see those terms upfront because they were inside a 14-page T&C.
A clean complaint:
For the refund half of the dispute, see Coaching Institute Refund Rights in India.
The DMR Act 1954 prohibits ads that suggest:
A “permanent cure for diabetes in 30 days” ad is on its face illegal. The right complaint route is the District Drugs Controller and the State FDA, with a parallel CCPA complaint, and an FIR under Sections 318 and 319 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita 2024 (cheating and personation) where the seller fraudulently induced payment.
The 2022 ASCI guidelines on online gaming for real money require:
For Virtual Digital Assets, the ASCI guideline requires:
Section 11(2) of the Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Act 2016 (RERA) makes it mandatory for any advertisement of a project to display the RERA registration number and the website address of the State RERA. Any project ad without those is a per-se RERA violation, and consumers can complain to the State RERA in addition to CCPA / ASCI.
A “ready to move in” claim is misleading if no Occupation Certificate has been issued. Always cross-check at the State RERA portal before paying.
Even if a misleading ad originates outside India, if it targets Indian consumers (Indian language ad copy, INR pricing, India-specific offers, geo-targeted display), CCPA can act. Section 19(1) read with Section 2(28) does not turn on the advertiser's location. Indian platforms hosting the ad have a take-down obligation under the Information Technology (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules 2021.
Some misleading ads pretend to be “executive courses” or “international fellowships” that are really front-funnels for selling expensive certificates with no employer recognition. If you paid because of such an ad, see Fake Job and Executive Course Scams in India and Fake University Degree Scam in India. If a “recruiter” reached out from a fake LinkedIn handle promising a job after a paid course, see Fake LinkedIn Recruiter Scam in India.
If the ad was a finance / loan ad and you ended up trapped, see Loan App Harassment in India and the partner article RBI EMI and Loan Complaint Guide.
Yes. Filing a complaint at consumerhelpline.gov.in, calling 1915, or filing with ASCI at ascionline.in is free of cost for the consumer. There is no fee to lodge a CCPA grievance. A consumer commission case under the CPA 2019 has a small statutory fee that depends on the claim value, with very low slabs for District Commission claims. The system is designed to be accessible to ordinary citizens, not litigants only. Always note your docket number after filing, since you will need it for any follow-up or escalation.
Timelines vary. Many CCPA-led actions follow an internal investigation that can run from a few weeks to several months, especially when expert opinion (medical, financial, technical) is needed. CCPA has a track record of public action against high-profile misleading ads since 2022, including pan-masala, fantasy gaming and edtech sector ads. ASCI's Consumer Complaints Council typically decides within 5 to 6 weeks. A consumer commission case can take longer, but you can simultaneously seek an interim direction.
ASCI accepts complaints from a named complainant. CCPA filings on the NCH portal require an account with mobile OTP. You can request that your identity not be disclosed to the advertiser, but you cannot fully hide it from the regulator. If you fear retaliation (especially in real-estate, lending, or gaming ad complaints), keep a written request to the regulator that they use your details only internally and route their notice to the advertiser without naming you.
This is exactly why evidence-first matters. Save the screenshot, screen recording and URL on the day you saw the ad. Mirror the page to archive.org and archive.today. Many brands silently update their landing page after a complaint and then deny the original wording. With timestamped, archived copies, the regulator is on solid ground. Without them, the file is often closed for want of evidence.
Under Section 21(5) and Section 22 of the CPA 2019, an endorser who fails to do reasonable due diligence before endorsing can face a penalty under Section 21 and a ban from endorsing any product under Section 22 for one year, extendable to three years on repeat. Several enforcement actions since 2022 have been on record. The cleanest cases involve financial products, health products, and pan-masala surrogates where the celebrity is the centre of the ad.
The ASCI Guideline on Influencer Advertising in Digital Media applies to any paid promotion. The disclosure (`#ad`, `#sponsored`, `#partnership`) must be at the very top of the post or at the start of the video, in a way the average viewer cannot miss. CCPA's 2022 Guidelines also require disclosure of any material connection. Failure exposes both the brand and the influencer to CCPA action, and exposes the influencer to ASCI Code action separately.
Almost never. Disclaimers must be clear, prominent, and material to the audience that sees the ad. A 1-pixel disclaimer at the bottom of a Reel, a disclaimer that flashes for one frame in a 30-second TV spot, or a disclaimer hidden inside a click-through T&C, all fail the ASCI Code and CCPA's 2022 Guidelines. The ad is judged by what an ordinary consumer would understand, not by what a lawyer can find.
Yes, where the ad caused you to part with money based on a deliberate falsehood. Sections 318 (cheating) and 319 (cheating by personation) of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita 2024 are usable. Where the ad violates the DMR Act 1954, an offence under that Act is also made out. An FIR is a parallel route to CCPA, ASCI and consumer commission action; you can pursue all three.
ASCI's Consumer Complaints Council decisions are typically published in summary form at ascionline.in. CCPA orders against advertisers are also commonly published in the public domain on consumeraffairs.nic.in. Your personal contact details are not disclosed; the brand and the substance of the complaint are. This public record is a strong deterrent.
It can. A polite public post, with the screenshot and the regulator docket number, often results in a quicker brand response. But never use abusive language, never attribute fraud without evidence, and never name individual employees. Stick to the ad text, your evidence, and the regulator references. Many citizens have got refunds and corrective posts within days of a calm public escalation alongside the formal complaint.
A misleading ad is not just an annoyance. It is a statutory wrong with three real enforcement routes (CCPA, ASCI, sectoral regulator) and one personal-loss route (consumer commission), and the law in 2026 punishes both the advertiser and the celebrity who lent their face. Capture the evidence, file on the NCH portal at consumerhelpline.gov.in or call 1915, mirror the complaint to ASCI at ascionline.in, and add the sectoral regulator if the product is regulated. Most advertisers fold the moment a regulator writes to them. Use this guide, file calmly, and keep the receipts.