Table of Contents

Nominee Claim on a Deceased Account Delayed? Run This 15-Day Calculation

Reviewed on: 2026-06-12.

Bank Nominee or Deceased-Account Claim Delayed? Do This

Sunita, a school teacher in Indore, was the registered nominee on her late father's savings account holding Rs 4,20,000. She submitted the bank's claim form, the death certificate, and her PAN and Aadhaar on 3 February and took a dated acknowledgement. The branch settled the claim on 30 March, which is 55 days later. Under RBI's deceased customers' claims directions, the bank had 15 calendar days, so it was 40 days late. Sunita wrote one letter claiming compensation at Bank Rate plus 4 per cent per annum on Rs 4,20,000 for 40 days, roughly Rs 4,800 at a Bank Rate of 6.5 per cent, and the bank credited it. The maths, not the anger, moved the file.

That is the whole method of this guide: know the 15-day norm, fix the date your documents became complete, and put the delay in days and rupees in front of the bank.

The rules that govern your claim

The RBI (Settlement of Claims in respect of Deceased Customers of Banks) Directions, 2025 apply to deposit accounts, lockers and safe custody articles across commercial and cooperative banks. The points that decide most cases:

Make the 15-day clock start cleanly

The clock starts when the bank holds your complete set, so the acknowledgement is your most valuable paper. Submit everything together, ask the counter to confirm nothing is missing, and get the acknowledgement with the date and a reference. If staff refuse to acknowledge, send the set by registered post with acknowledgement due. If the bank later says a document was missing, ask it to state in writing which document and under which requirement; the 2025 directions and the bank's published policy are the only valid sources. Shifting demands, one paper per visit, is the classic delay pattern, and a written demand list ends it.

The follow-up letter that quotes money

To: The Branch Manager, [Bank], [Branch]
Subject: Deceased claim - A/c [number] of late [name] -
settlement overdue under RBI Directions 2025

1. I submitted the complete claim documents on [date],
   acknowledgement [reference]. As nominee, the required set was
   the claim form, death certificate and my ID, all submitted.
2. [X] calendar days have passed against the 15-day norm in the
   RBI (Settlement of Claims in respect of Deceased Customers of
   Banks) Directions, 2025.
3. Please settle the claim to my account [details] immediately and
   pay compensation at Bank Rate plus 4 per cent per annum on
   Rs [amount] for [X minus 15] days of delay.
4. If unresolved in 30 days I will file with the RBI Ombudsman
   at cms.rbi.org.in.

[Name, relationship, mobile, date]

Escalation path

  1. Day 16: the letter above to the branch manager.
  2. No movement: the bank's grievance redressal officer, then the principal nodal officer, quoting the same acknowledgement.
  3. After 30 days or a rejection: the RBI Integrated Ombudsman at cms.rbi.org.in, free, covering public and private banks alike. Helpline 14448.
  4. Public sector bank: add an RTI to the bank's Public Information Officer for the nomination record, the date your claim was marked complete in the system, and the file noting explaining the delay. Public sector banks are public authorities; private banks are not. See how to file an RTI online and why RTI applications get rejected before drafting.

One distinction that prevents family disputes

The nominee receives the money from the bank; the nominee does not automatically own it. The funds belong to the legal heirs under the applicable succession law or the will, and the nominee holds them as trustee. Settle the bank claim fast, then handle distribution as a separate, calmer question. Banks are not allowed to push that second question back onto the nominee, which is exactly why the three-document rule exists.

Frequently asked questions

The branch wants an indemnity bond from me even though I am the nominee. Can it?

No. The 2025 directions bar banks from demanding indemnity, succession papers, or heirs' consent from a registered nominee. Ask the officer to cite the rule they rely on in writing; the demand usually evaporates.

How do I find out whether my parent registered a nomination?

Ask the branch in writing to confirm from the account opening records whether a nomination exists and in whose favour. Banks must check and answer. The passbook often carries a “Nomination Registered” remark with a nomination ID.

The account holder died abroad. Which death certificate works?

A certificate apostilled or consularised, or certified by the Indian Mission in that country, is acceptable. The same 15-day norm applies once your set is complete.

There are several heirs and one will not sign the no-objection. What now?

The simplified no-nominee route needs the non-claiming heirs' disclaimer. If one heir refuses, the family is in dispute territory and the bank will wait for a succession certificate or a court direction. Resolve the disagreement first; the bank cannot arbitrate it.

Do pension or PPF balances follow the same 15-day rule?

No. Government small savings schemes such as PPF and SCSS follow their own scheme rules through the post office or the operating bank, with separate forms. This guide covers bank deposit accounts.

Can I claim the compensation after the claim is already settled?

Yes. The compensation attaches to the delay, not to the pending status. Write with the dates and the calculation, as Sunita did, even after the principal is received.

The deceased-claims series

Money in accounts is one of three tracks. For the locker, see locker access delayed after the holder's death. For a joint account where you are the surviving holder, the faster survivorship route is in bank refuses a survivorship claim.

Download the deceased account claim checklist (PDF).