Reviewed on: 2026-06-12.
Your hostel caution deposit and your unused mess advance remain your money after you move out. Do these five things this week, in this order:
The rest of this guide shows how to do each step well, with a worked Kota calculation you can copy.
A coaching hostel is a paid service under the Consumer Protection Act, 2019. Keeping a refundable deposit without proving an actual loss, or holding a mess advance for months you never ate there, is a deficiency in service. The Ministry of Education's model guidelines for coaching centres, issued in January 2024, say more. When a student leaves midway, the balance must be returned pro rata within ten days, and the guidelines state in plain words that hostel fee and mess fee are to be refunded the same way. States are adopting these guidelines through their registration rules. Quote them in your demand even if your state has not notified them yet. They show a consumer forum what fair practice looks like.
Ritika joined a NEET hostel near Landmark City, Kota, in April. She paid Rs 15,000 as a refundable caution deposit and Rs 36,000 as a twelve month mess advance, which works out to Rs 3,000 a month. Her batch moved online in October, so she vacated after six months of mess use.
Her claim looked like this:
| Item | Calculation | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Caution deposit | Fully refundable, no damage recorded at handover | Rs 15,000 |
| Unused mess advance | 6 unused months x Rs 3,000 | Rs 18,000 |
| Total demand | Rs 33,000 |
The warden offered Rs 10,000 as “full and final”. Ritika refused, sent a dated demand letter, and registered a helpline complaint with her receipts attached. A line by line number like this is hard to argue with. A vague demand for “my full deposit” is easy to stall.
Three documents decide most hostel deposit disputes:
Also ask the mess in charge for a month by month account of how your advance was adjusted. A hostel that cannot produce this account has no basis to keep the balance.
Send this by email and speed post, and keep the tracking slip.
To: The Manager / Warden, [Hostel name and address] Date: [DD/MM/YYYY] Subject: Refund of caution deposit and unused mess advance, Room [No.] 1. I stayed in Room [No.] from [date] to [date] and vacated after proper checkout. No damage was recorded at handover. 2. I paid a refundable caution deposit of Rs [amount] on [date] and a mess advance of Rs [amount] on [date]. Receipts are attached. 3. I used the mess for [number] months. The unused balance is Rs [amount]. The total refundable amount is Rs [amount]. 4. The Ministry of Education's January 2024 coaching centre guidelines require pro rata refund of hostel and mess fees within ten days when a student leaves midway. 5. Please credit Rs [amount] to [account details] within 15 days. If any deduction is claimed, send me an itemised note with bills and photographs. Failing refund, I will file a consumer complaint and claim compensation and costs. [Name, mobile, email]
Register the complaint on the National Consumer Helpline first. It is free, you get a docket number, and many hostels pay once an official record exists. If nothing moves, file on e-Daakhil before the District Consumer Commission for your area. You can claim the deposit, the unused mess balance, interest for the delay, and a modest compensation amount. For sums of this size you do not need a lawyer, and the filing fee is small.
One caution on RTI. A private coaching hostel or PG is not a public authority, so an RTI to the hostel will fail. RTI helps only when the hostel is run by a government college or welfare board. If you are unsure why RTIs fail on private bodies, read why RTI gets rejected.
If your real dispute is with the coaching course rather than the hostel, see refunds when a batch is cancelled or service is poor. If the whole centre shut down, the angle is different, covered in what to do when a coaching centre closes without refund. Students in degree colleges face related fights, see college refusing to return original certificates and college closure, transfer and refund. More guides are on the practical guides hub.
Yes, unless the hostel proves a specific loss such as damage or unpaid dues, with bills and photos. A clause saying the deposit is “non refundable” in all cases is an unfair term and consumer forums regularly refuse to enforce such clauses.
A standard deduction applied to everyone, regardless of room condition, is not a genuine loss. It is a disguised charge. Dispute it in writing and ask for the bill and the photographs of your specific room.
Ask the mess in charge, in writing, for your usage account. Keep your unused coupon books, your batch attendance record, and your hostel exit date. The burden of showing how your advance was consumed sits on the mess, not on you.
Claim against the entity named on your hostel receipt. If the coaching institute collected the hostel money on a single receipt, name both in the demand and the complaint. Let them sort out who pays.
They directly cover hostels run by or tied to coaching centres. A fully independent hostel falls back on the Consumer Protection Act, which still requires refund of deposits and unused advances. Cite the guidelines where the hostel markets itself to coaching students.
You can ask for reasonable interest from the date you vacated in your consumer complaint. Forums often grant it when the hostel had no written basis to hold the money.
Download the coaching hostel deposit refund checklist (PDF).