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POS Transaction Failed But Account Debited? Refund Action Plan

Reviewed on: 2026-06-12.

POS Transaction Failed But Account Debited? Refund Action Plan

A failed POS swipe that still debits your account almost always comes back on its own. The money was not lost; it sits in a settlement account because the merchant was never finally paid. Under RBI's September 2019 harmonised turn-around-time (TAT) framework, a failed card transaction at a point of sale must be auto-reversed by T+5 working days, and if the bank misses that, it owes you ₹100 for each day of delay. First, save the charge slip, the debit SMS and a statement screenshot. Watch your account daily. If the reversal does not land within the window, raise a written dispute quoting the date, amount, merchant and POS reference, then escalate to the RBI Ombudsman at cms.rbi.org.in if needed.

Reviewed on: 2026-06-12.

A quick picture of the problem. Lakshmi in Coimbatore swiped her debit card for ₹2,640 at a supermarket till. The machine printed “transaction declined”, so she paid again by UPI. Minutes later a debit SMS for ₹2,640 arrived anyway. She had paid once but been debited twice. She saved the declined slip, the two payment proofs and the statement entry, waited for the auto-reversal, and when it had not landed by the sixth working day, raised a dispute citing the TAT rule and the ₹100-a-day compensation.

Why you were debited on a failed payment

A POS card payment is not one event. Your card is authorised, the request travels through a card-network switch, and only later is the merchant actually settled. If the link broke after your account was debited but before the merchant was credited, you see a debit while the shop sees nothing. The amount is not lost; it rests in a settlement or suspense account and is reversed once the bank's reconciliation finds no matching merchant credit. That is why failed POS debits usually self-correct within a few working days.

The TAT rule and your compensation

RBI's harmonisation of turn-around-time for failed transactions sets clear timelines. For a card transaction at a point of sale where the account is debited but the confirmation is not received at the merchant location, the auto-reversal must happen within T+5 working days. Beyond that, the bank pays ₹100 per day of delay to your account. The count runs from the transaction date, so note exactly when you first saw the debit. Confirm the current TAT on the RBI site or with your bank, since the framework can be revised.

Save these before they disappear

Confirm with the merchant

Ask the shopkeeper to check the terminal's settlement or batch report for your card at that time. Many merchants can tell quickly whether a payment landed. If they confirm nothing was received, request a one-line written or WhatsApp confirmation. This removes the most common reason banks stall a dispute, the suspicion that the merchant was paid. If the merchant insists they did receive the money, the issue may be a genuine successful charge, not a failure, and it becomes a refund-from-merchant matter instead.

Wait only for the window, then dispute

Check your account daily and watch for a credit matching the debit. The moment the T+5 window passes without a reversal, stop waiting and raise a formal dispute. Waiting longer does not help and lets the daily-compensation clock run against you. Use an official channel: the in-app dispute button, the net banking complaint form, a branch visit, or the bank's published customer-care email. State that a POS transaction failed but your account was debited and not reversed, quote the date, amount, merchant, card last four digits and any RRN, and ask for both the auto-reversal and the TAT compensation. Note the complaint reference number.

Escalation ladder

Stage Action Forum
1 Wait for the auto-reversal of the failed POS debit Your bank's automated reconciliation (within T+5 working days)
2 Raise a written dispute with details and evidence Bank app dispute / net banking / branch / customer-care email
3 Escalate to the nodal / grievance redressal officer Grievance officer contact on the bank's website
4 File a complaint with the RBI Ombudsman cms.rbi.org.in, Integrated Ombudsman Scheme
5 RTI for policy records held by a public authority CPIO of the RBI or a public-sector bank
6 Consumer commission for deficiency and loss District / State Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission

Copy-paste complaint to your bank

To: Branch Manager / Customer Service Cell, [Your Bank]
Subject: Account debited for a FAILED POS card transaction, request for
reversal and turn-around-time compensation

Account holder: [Name] | Account number: [number]
Debit card last four: [XXXX] | Registered mobile: [number]

Respected Sir/Madam,

1. On [date] at about [time] I attempted to pay Rs [amount] by debit
   card at the POS terminal of [merchant, outlet/location].
2. The terminal showed the transaction as [declined / timed out /
   failed / no approval] and issued no successful charge slip. However,
   my account was debited by Rs [amount], as shown by the alert and
   statement entry attached.
3. [If applicable: As the swipe failed, I paid Rs [amount] again by
   [cash / another card / UPI] to complete the purchase, so I was
   charged twice for one purchase. Proof attached.]
4. [If applicable: The transaction reference (RRN / POS) is
   [reference].]
5. The amount has not been reversed despite the lapse of the T+5
   working-day window prescribed by RBI for failed card transactions.

I request you to:
(a) reverse the debit of Rs [amount]; and
(b) pay the compensation of Rs 100 per day of delay due under the RBI
    turn-around-time framework for failed transactions.

Please register this complaint and give me a complaint reference
number.

Yours faithfully,
[Name] | [Account number] | [Mobile] | [Email]
Enclosures: A statement screenshot; B debit SMS/email; C POS slip if
any; D merchant confirmation if any; E proof of second payment if any.

When RTI can help

The RTI Act applies only to public authorities. In a failed POS debit your relationship is mainly with your bank and the card networks on a commercial transaction, so RTI is rarely the direct route to the refund. It can help in narrow ways: the RBI is a public authority, so you can RTI its CPIO for the published TAT framework and compensation norms; and if your account is with a public-sector bank, RTI can seek that bank's general policy or grievance-handling procedure for failed transactions, not your individual account dispute.

When RTI will not help

Common mistakes to avoid

Frequently asked questions

The POS machine showed declined but my account was debited. Will the money come back on its own?

In most cases, yes. When a card payment fails at the POS but the amount is debited, banking systems usually auto-reverse it within the T+5 working-day window because the merchant never received a confirmed settlement. If the reversal does not happen within that window, raise a written dispute quoting the date, amount, and POS or RRN reference.

How long does my bank get to refund a failed POS debit?

Under RBI's harmonised turn-around-time framework, a failed card transaction at a point of sale must be auto-reversed within T+5 working days, with ₹100 per day of delay payable beyond that. The day-count runs from the transaction date. Confirm the current figures on the RBI site or with your bank, as the framework can be revised.

What documents should I keep to prove a failed POS transaction?

Keep the POS charge slip if one printed, the SMS or email debit alert, a screenshot of the debit entry, the merchant name and outlet, and the date and time. If you paid again successfully, keep proof of that second payment too, so you can show you were charged twice for one purchase.

The shopkeeper says he never received the money, so why is it debited?

This is common and usually genuine. A POS transaction has several legs: authorisation, network switching, and final settlement to the merchant. If the link broke after your bank debited you but before the merchant was credited, you are debited while the shop shows nothing. The amount sits in a suspense or settlement account and is reversed once reconciliation completes.

My bank did not resolve the failed POS debit. Where do I escalate?

First send a written complaint and note the reference number. If the bank does not resolve it within the period it commits to, or you are unhappy with the reply, escalate to the RBI Ombudsman through cms.rbi.org.in. The Ombudsman handles deficiency-in-service complaints, including failed transactions not reversed within the TAT.

Can I file an RTI to get my failed POS transaction refunded?

No. RTI accesses information from public authorities, not a refund. Even a public-sector bank routes a refund through its grievance process, not RTI. RTI can help to obtain the RBI's published TAT framework or a public-sector bank's general policy, but not to compel your individual reversal.

Should I dispute the charge or wait for the auto-reversal?

Wait only up to the T+5 window your bank publishes. The moment it passes without a credit, raise a written dispute. Waiting indefinitely weakens your case and lets the daily-compensation deadline slip. Note the date you first saw the debit so you can count the days accurately.

Download the failed-POS-debit refund checklist (PDF) and note your transaction date before the TAT clock matters.