Reviewed on: 2026-06-12.
Do these first, in this order, the moment you spot a “written off” tag on a card you have actually paid.
Quick answer. A credit card shown as “written off” when you have actually paid is almost always a reporting error, not a real loss. “Written off” tells lenders the issuer gave up recovering the money, so it badly hurts your score. Prove payment with a nil-balance statement, a closure letter or NOC, and your payment references, then dispute with the bureau and the issuer at the same time. The bureau corrects the entry only after the issuer confirms. For a public-sector bank card you also have an RTI route to pull the payment and write-off records. For a private issuer or the bureau itself, use the free bureau dispute, the issuer's grievance officer and then the RBI Ombudsman.
Reviewed on: 2026-06-12.
A real-world shape of the problem. Faisal in Jaipur cleared the last ₹9,700 on an SBI Card and got a closure SMS. Two months later a loan was declined; his report showed that card “written off”. The dues were paid; the write-off was a stale entry never updated after his payment posted. He fixed it by sending the nil-balance statement and closure SMS to both the bureau and the issuer, and for the public-sector angle, filed an RTI for the payment-posting record.
Both are negative, but they are different. “Written off” means the issuer booked your dues as a loss it expected not to recover. “Settled” means you paid a reduced one-time amount and the rest was waived. If you paid in full, neither should appear; insist the report reads “Closed” with a nil balance. If your real grievance is a “settled” tag on a full payment, see the separate guide linked below.
| Step | Who | How |
|---|---|---|
| Raise a dispute | Credit bureau (CIBIL / Experian / Equifax / CRIF High Mark) | Online dispute facility (free) |
| Push the issuer | Card issuer's grievance / nodal officer | Email or grievance portal, with the nil-balance statement and NOC |
| Internal Ombudsman | The issuer's Internal Ombudsman | Escalation route on the issuer's website |
| RBI Ombudsman (RB-IOS) | RBI, Integrated Ombudsman Scheme | cms.rbi.org.in, after the issuer/bureau fails or about 30 days pass |
| RTI (PSU issuer only) | Public-sector bank's Public Information Officer | rtionline.gov.in or a written application |
| Consumer forum (last resort) | District Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission | e-Daakhil (edaakhil.nic.in) |
To: Grievance / Nodal Officer, [Card issuer] Subject: Card wrongly reported as "written off" despite full payment, request to correct status Dear Sir/Madam, My credit card account [number, masked] with you was fully paid and nothing is outstanding. My final statement shows a nil balance (attached), I cleared all dues on [date] vide [payment reference], and the card was closed on [closure date]; I hold your closure / NOC letter (attached). However, my credit report from [bureau] dated [report date] still shows this account as WRITTEN OFF. This is incorrect and is damaging my credit score and new applications. I request you to: 1. Confirm in writing that the account is paid in full, nil balance, and not written off. 2. Report the corrected status to all bureaus you reported to. 3. Tell me the date you will submit the correction. I have also raised a bureau dispute (reference [dispute reference]). Please resolve within the RBI-prescribed period, failing which I will escalate to your Internal Ombudsman and the RBI Ombudsman. Name: [name] | PAN: [PAN] | Mobile/email: [contact] | Card: [masked] Thank you, [Name] | [Date]
RTI helps only when the record sits with a public authority, here a public-sector bank that issued the card, such as a nationalised bank or a regional rural bank. You can RTI its Public Information Officer for the record showing your payments were received and posted, the internal note or order under which the account was written off and on what date, and the date the bank reported the “written off” status to the bureau. These are strong evidence for your bureau dispute or RBI complaint.
RTI does not apply to the credit bureau itself; CIBIL, Experian, Equifax and CRIF High Mark are private companies. RTI also does not apply to a private bank, foreign bank or private card issuer. For those, raise the free bureau dispute, complain to the issuer's grievance officer, and if unresolved file with the RBI Ombudsman, which covers banks, NBFCs and credit information companies.
It is almost always a reporting error. “Written off” means the issuer treated the dues as a loss, so it should not appear once you have paid in full. The likely cause is a payment that was not posted, a delayed update or a clerical miss. Prove payment with a nil-balance statement and your references, then dispute with both the bureau and the issuer.
Yes. Correcting an error in your credit information is a free service from the bureaus. You do not need any agent. Raise it yourself on the official site of CIBIL, Experian, Equifax or CRIF High Mark and attach your payment and closure documents.
A final card statement showing a nil or zero outstanding balance. It is the clearest proof there is nothing to write off. Pair it with your payment references and any closure letter or NOC. If you cannot find a zero-balance statement, ask the issuer for a fresh one before you dispute.
A lot. It is one of the most damaging remarks because it tells lenders the issuer gave up recovering the money. It can lower your score sharply and make new loans, cards or limit increases hard to get, which is why it is worth correcting quickly when the dues were actually paid.
Issuers and bureaus are expected to resolve such disputes within the RBI-prescribed period, commonly cited as about 30 days, and the bureau shows the account “under dispute” while it checks. If it drags on, RBI's framework allows ₹100 per day of delay for unresolved credit-information complaints. Keep your dispute reference number.
Do not pay before checking. Match the demand against your own statements and references. If you already cleared the dues, reply in writing that the amount is paid, attach your proof, and ask the issuer to correct its records and the bureau report. Keep the demand letter as evidence for your dispute and any RBI complaint.
Only partly. RTI works against a public-sector bank that issued the card; you can ask its Public Information Officer for the payment record, the write-off note and the date it reported the status, which is useful evidence. RTI does not apply to the bureaus or to private banks, as they are not public authorities. For those, use the bureau dispute and the RBI Ombudsman.
Download the “written off” correction checklist (PDF) and keep your nil-balance statement and NOC ready before you dispute.