Reviewed on: 2026-06-12.
Imran runs a two-person design studio in Hyderabad. On a Tuesday morning his current account showed a lien of Rs 48,000, his card stopped working, and a client's NEFT bounced back. The branch told him only this: “cyber cell instructions, we cannot share anything.” No order shown, no reference number, no name of the authority. He did not know whether all his money was blocked or only Rs 48,000, who to approach, or what he was even accused of receiving.
Imran's position is the standard one, and so is the fix. The bank may be barred from handing you the investigation file, but it can and should give you the basic facts of the hold: how much, since when, what type, on whose instruction, and under what reference. With those five facts you stop arguing with the messenger and go to the office that actually controls your money.
Open net banking and look at the exact wording, because your situation differs by type.
Screenshot the status, note the figure, and pull the statement covering the date the hold appeared. That date usually points to the credit the complaint is about.
Hand this at the branch and take a stamped copy, or email it to the branch and the bank's grievance address for a timestamp.
To: The Branch Manager, [Bank], [Branch] Subject: Request for particulars of lien/freeze on A/c [number] My account was [lien-marked/frozen] on or around [date]. I have received no information about the basis. As the account holder, please provide in writing: 1. The amount under lien and the type of hold. 2. The date the hold was applied. 3. Whether it was applied on the bank's own decision or on an external authority's instruction. 4. The name of that authority (cyber cell/police station) and its reference: NCRP acknowledgement number, FIR number, or letter reference and date. 5. The portion of my balance, if any, that remains free to use. If investigation details are restricted, please at least confirm the existence and date of the instruction and the authority I should approach. I request a written reply; failing a satisfactory response I will escalate to your Principal Nodal Officer and the RBI Ombudsman. [Name, account number, mobile, date]
The bank holding a lien on your account while refusing to state even the lien amount and source is a service deficiency. The investigation is the police's domain; the bank's own ledger entry is not a secret from the account holder.
Once the bank names the cyber cell or police station and gives the reference, write to that office. Quote the NCRP acknowledgement or FIR number, state which credit is yours and from whom, and attach the source proof: the invoice, the rent agreement, the client contract, the sale deed. Ask what the office requires to release the hold on funds you can show are legitimate. Many NCRP-triggered lien marks cover an amount that passed through dozens of accounts, and investigating officers do release holds where the account holder documents a clean source. For the wider strategy of getting such a hold lifted, including approaching the magistrate where the officer does not act, see debit freeze after a cybercrime complaint: lien removal and, where the trigger was an incoming payment, account frozen over a fraud-linked payment.
No. An investigating agency can restrict case details, but the bank's own record of the lien amount, date, hold type, and the fact that an external instruction exists is information about your account, owed to you. Total stonewalling is what you escalate.
Approaching the freezing authority with source documents is the normal release route, and account holders do it every day. Go with paper: who paid you, why, and proof. For high amounts or if you receive a notice naming you, take a lawyer along.
Yes. Where the instruction covers a specific disputed amount, ask the bank in writing why the hold exceeds the instructed figure, and ask for the instruction's exact scope. Banks sometimes over-freeze by default, and putting the question in writing often narrows the hold.
The cyber cell that logged the NCRP complaint controls it, even if it sits in another state. Most state cyber cells accept email representations with documents; the 1930 helpline and the cybercrime.gov.in portal can confirm the unit holding your reference.
There is no automatic expiry, which is exactly why you should not wait passively. Build the written trail with the bank, put your source proof before the investigating officer, and if the hold continues without progress, a lawyer can seek release through the jurisdictional magistrate or the High Court.
No. A KYC freeze is the bank's own action with a different fix; see KYC freeze after submitting documents.
Download the lien details request checklist (PDF).