Reviewed on: 2026-06-12.
It is 9 am on a Tuesday. A customer calls to say your website shows an “account suspended” page. The site is down, your business email is bouncing, and the hosting dashboard wants you to “contact billing”. This happens to thousands of Indian small businesses every month, and the most expensive mistake is the first instinct: spending the whole day arguing with support. The correct first move is different. Secure a copy of your files, databases and mailboxes before anything else, because suspended data is held for a limited period and can be purged. Then fix the cause, and escalate in writing if the provider stalls.
Hosting, the domain name and email are three separate services, even when bought from one company, and each can be suspended for its own reason. Wasting a day fixing the wrong layer is the most common error.
| What you see | What is suspended | First contact |
|---|---|---|
| Site shows a provider “suspended” page, domain still opens that page | Hosting account | Host's billing or abuse desk |
| Domain does not open anywhere, email also fails | Domain name (expired, locked or on hold) | Registrar; check WHOIS for status and expiry |
| Site works, only mail bounces or login fails | Email or workspace service | Email provider's support |
| Abuse email mentions malware, spam or a complaint | Hosting, possibly with email | Abuse desk, reply to the exact ticket |
Read the suspension notice and the registered email inbox before calling anyone. Note the stated reason, the clause cited, the date and the ticket number. If no reason is visible, your first written question is: which clause, and what evidence.
Treat data export as more urgent than reinstatement. A suspension usually freezes access rather than deleting files, but every provider has a retention window and it shortens when the suspension is for abuse or chargeback.
With a backup in hand, you can restore the site on another host within hours and keep trading while the dispute runs. Put up a holding page with a phone number meanwhile so customers are not guessing.
The domain name is harder to replace than any hosting plan, so protect it independently of the hosting fight. Keep its renewal paid and the registrant details in your business's name, not your web designer's. If trust in the provider is gone, you generally have the right to transfer the domain to another registrar: unlock it in the panel, obtain the authorisation (EPP) code, and start the transfer at the new registrar. A standard lock of around 60 days applies after a fresh registration, transfer or registrant change, and a registrar may hold a transfer where dues are genuinely unpaid. For .in domains, the registry policies are published by NIXI at registry.in. Once you control the DNS, route mail through a separate provider so one vendor can never take your site, name and inbox down together again.
Hosting companies, registrars and email providers serving users in India are required, as intermediaries under the Information Technology (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules, 2021, to publish a grievance officer's contact. The rules expect the grievance to be acknowledged within 24 hours and disposed of within 15 days. Use this after the normal ticket route fails:
Be honest about strength of case. If the suspension was for genuine non-payment or real malware you had ignored, the practical win is your data and an orderly exit, not compensation.
A private hosting company, registrar or email provider is not a public authority, so RTI cannot make it restore your account, hand over data or refund money. The exceptions are narrow: hosting with a government or public sector provider such as NIC or a state IT agency, where RTI reaches the suspension decision and the policy applied, and complaints you filed with a cyber cell or a government portal, where RTI can ask for the action taken. For everything else, the levers are the grievance officer, the consumer commission and your contract. See why RTI applications get rejected before spending Rs 10 on a dead end.
Usually not. Suspension blocks access while data sits on the server for a retention period that varies by provider and cause. Treat the window as short. Request an export in writing on day one.
Ask in writing for the specific clause breached and the evidence, quoting your ticket number. A provider that cannot state a reason to its grievance officer is weak before a consumer forum, and your written question creates that record.
Often yes, if renewals are paid and no registrar lock applies. Get the EPP code and transfer. Locks run for about 60 days after registration, transfer or registrant change, and unpaid dues can block a transfer.
Only as a last step, after your data is exported. Most terms of service let the provider terminate the account over a chargeback, which can cost you the data and the domain mid-dispute.
Bad, and common. Move the account, the domain registrant record and the billing contact to an email your business controls as soon as you regain access.
You can claim for deficiency in service before a consumer commission. The contract and your evidence decide the outcome, and providers' terms usually cap liability, so take advice on whether the claim justifies the effort.
Download the hosting suspension response checklist (PDF) to work through data export, cause, grievance and transfer steps in order.