You resigned, served your notice period, and now your old company will not hand over your relieving or experience letter — and your new employer's background check is stuck. The good news is that the letter is not the only proof of your employment. This guide shows you how to build solid alternate evidence, keep your new offer safe, escalate inside the company, and send a legal notice if it comes to that.
Reviewed on: 2026-05-29.
Quick answer
If your employer refuses your relieving or experience letter, do not panic and do not let your new job's background verification (BGV) stall. First, save your exit proof — resignation acceptance, notice-period record, and full and final settlement. Then build alternate employment proof: appointment letter, payslips, bank salary credits, Form 16, and your EPFO passbook. Tell your new HR honestly and share these substitutes. Send HR a written, dated request, escalate inside the company, and, if all that fails, get a labour lawyer to send a legal notice. For a government or PSU employer, RTI can also get you your service and EPFO records.
This guide is for employees in India who have left a job and cannot get the documents they need to move on. It is especially useful if:
This guide is about being refused the letter. If your background check is stuck because your old university or employer is simply not replying to the verifier, the companion guide on a background verification stuck because no one replies is a better fit. If a BGV report already exists but contains a wrong or adverse finding, see how to challenge a wrong background verification report.
One honest caveat up front: India does not have a single, simple statute that forces every private employer to print a relieving letter on demand. What you usually have instead is a contractual promise, an HR policy, and a strong practical position once you can prove a clean exit. This guide works with that reality rather than against it.
Open one folder on your laptop and start saving every exit document you can find. Pull your resignation email and, most importantly, the resignation acceptance — the reply from HR or your manager accepting the resignation and confirming your last working day. If you resigned through an HR portal, take dated screenshots of the approval status.
Write down the key dates clearly: the date you resigned, your notice-period length, and your last working day. These three facts decide whether you exited cleanly, which is the heart of your case for the letter.
Also save your full and final settlement (FnF) statement or any email about it. If the FnF is also stuck, treat it as part of the same problem — you will demand both together. For a deeper FnF playbook, see our guide on a delayed full and final settlement after resignation.
Now build your alternate employment proof. This is the evidence that quietly proves you really worked there, even without the letter. Collect, in this order of strength:
The last two matter a lot. Form 16 and EPFO contributions are third-party trails created with the Income Tax Department and EPFO — they are independent of your employer's goodwill and very hard to dispute. If your UAN details do not match cleanly, fix them early using our guide on an EPFO UAN name or date mismatch. If you have more than one UAN from past jobs, also see how to merge multiple UANs so your record is clean.
Download your EPFO passbook from the member portal and your Form 16 copies from your email or the income-tax portal. Save bank statements as PDF directly from net banking. This single bundle answers most BGV questions on its own.
Draft two short, calm emails. The first is to your former employer's HR, formally requesting the relieving and experience letters, with your employee ID and dates. The second is to your new employer's HR, telling them honestly that the previous company is delaying the document and offering your alternate proof so the BGV can continue.
Honesty with the new employer is your strongest move. Most companies have seen this exact situation before. A candidate who proactively shares payslips, Form 16, and an EPFO passbook looks far better than one who goes quiet and lets the check fail silently.
Use the template later in this guide as a starting point. Keep both emails factual and polite. You are building a paper trail, not picking a fight — that trail is what makes any later escalation or legal notice effective.
| Document | What it proves | Where to get it |
|---|---|---|
| Resignation email and acceptance | You resigned and the company accepted it; your last working day | Your email / HR portal screenshots |
| Appointment or offer letter | Date of joining, designation, and terms of employment | Your records / original onboarding email |
| Monthly payslips | Employee ID, salary, and that you were on the payroll each month | HR/payroll portal or your saved copies |
| Bank statements (salary account) | Regular salary credits from the employer's name | Your bank's net banking or branch |
| Form 16 | Employer deducted TDS and reported your salary to the tax department | Employer email / income-tax e-filing portal |
| EPFO passbook / UAN account | Employer's monthly PF deposits against your name and dates | EPFO member portal (passbook download) |
| Full and final settlement statement | Dues cleared on exit, or what is still pending | HR / payroll email |
| Notice-period proof / buyout receipt | You served notice or paid any agreed recovery | HR communication / payment proof |
| HR email trail and follow-ups | You requested the letters in writing and gave reasonable time | Your email sent folder |
| ID card / access-card return acknowledgement | You completed handover and exit formalities | Admin / IT exit checklist email |
Before you ask anyone for anything, get your own file in order. Save the resignation email, the acceptance, your notice-period dates, your last working day record, and the FnF statement. If your exit was on good terms, you may also have an exit-interview email or a handover sign-off — keep those too. A complete exit file is what turns a polite request into an undeniable one.
Assemble the appointment letter, payslips, bank salary credits, Form 16, and EPFO passbook into one bundle. Think of this as your “employment proof kit” that stands on its own. The EPFO passbook and Form 16 are especially powerful because they come from government systems, not from your former boss. A BGV agency can verify employment from these even if the company never sends a single letter.
Email your former employer's HR a short, dated request for the relieving and experience letters. State your employee ID, designation, joining date, and last working day. Mark a copy to your reporting manager. Keep the tone professional and ask for the documents within a reasonable period, such as seven to ten working days. A written request creates the record you will rely on if you escalate later.
Do not let the new company's BGV fail in silence. Write to your new HR, explain that the previous employer is delaying the letter, and attach your alternate proof. Most verification partners accept payslips, Form 16, and EPFO records as evidence of genuine employment. Being upfront protects your offer far more than hoping the problem solves itself.
If HR does not respond within the time you gave, escalate in writing. Send a firm but polite follow-up to the HR head, the business unit head, or the company's grievance, ombudsperson, or ethics channel if one exists. Reference your earlier email and date, restate the request, and note that you have completed your exit formalities. Companies often act once the request reaches a level above the person ignoring you.
Sometimes the letter is held because the company says you owe a notice-period recovery, a training bond amount, or have not returned an asset. Deal with this head-on. If you genuinely owe a notice-period buyout, settle it and ask for the letter against proof of payment. If you believe the demand is wrong or excessive, say so in writing, keep records, and get advice before paying under protest. Document every asset you have returned.
If your former employer is a government department or a public-sector undertaking (PSU), you have an extra tool. File an RTI for your service records and exit documents, and a separate RTI to your regional EPFO office for your PF account details. This does not apply to private companies. For private employers, your EPFO records are still available directly through the member portal without RTI.
If polite follow-ups and internal escalation do not work and you can prove a clean exit, a legal notice is a reasonable next step. A labour lawyer can send a notice demanding the documents within a stated period. The cost is modest and a formal notice often prompts the company to release the letter rather than risk a dispute. Where salary or FnF dues are also withheld, a complaint to the labour department or labour commissioner can cover both, depending on your role and state — so get advice on the right forum first.
| Stage | Action | Forum / Destination | Target timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Written request for relieving and experience letters with exit proof | Former employer's HR (copy reporting manager) | Ask for 7–10 working days |
| 2 | Inform new employer and submit alternate proof to continue BGV | New employer's HR / BGV coordinator | Immediately, do not wait |
| 3 | Escalation follow-up referencing the earlier email and dates | HR head / unit head / grievance or ethics channel | After Stage 1 deadline lapses |
| 4 | RTI for service and exit records (public employer only) | CPIO of the government department / PSU; and regional EPFO office | 30 days (RTI Act response window) |
| 5 | Complaint where salary, dues or FnF are also withheld | Labour department / labour commissioner (route varies by role and state) | As per local labour office process |
| 6 | Legal notice demanding the documents within a stated period | Through a labour lawyer / advocate | Notice usually gives 15 days to comply |
Replace the text in square brackets with your own details. Send this first to HR; use a stronger, lawyer-drafted version only if it is ignored.
To, The Human Resources Department [Name of Former Employer] [Office Address]
Date: [DD/MM/YYYY]
Subject: Request for issue of relieving letter and experience letter
— Employee [Your Name], Employee ID [Your ID]
Respected Sir / Madam,
1. I, [Your Full Name], was employed with [Company Name] as
[Designation] from [Date of Joining] to [Last Working Day], under Employee ID [Your ID].
2. I tendered my resignation on [Date of Resignation], which was
accepted by [Name / Department] on [Date of Acceptance]. I served my notice period in full / settled the agreed notice-period amount [delete whichever does not apply], and completed all exit and handover formalities, including return of company assets.
3. Despite the above, I have not yet received my relieving letter and
experience letter. These documents are required for the background verification process of my new employment.
4. I therefore request you to kindly issue my relieving letter and
experience letter within [7–10] working days from the date of this email. If any formality on my side is still pending, please let me know in writing so that I can complete it promptly.
5. I have attached, for your reference, copies of my resignation
acceptance and last payslip.
I would be grateful for your prompt assistance in this matter.
Yours faithfully,
[Your Full Name] [Designation] [Employee ID] [Personal Mobile Number] [Personal Email Address]
Enclosures: - Resignation acceptance email - Last payslip - Asset-return / handover acknowledgement [if available]
The Right to Information Act, 2005 applies only to public authorities — central and state government departments and public-sector undertakings (PSUs). If your former employer is a government body or a PSU, RTI can be a genuine help in these situations:
To file an RTI online with a central authority, use our step-by-step RTI filing guide. The PIO must usually respond within 30 days. If you get no reply or an unhelpful one, see how to file a first appeal under Section 19. You can also escalate service delays through CPGRAMS together with RTI. For advanced strategies, The RTI Playbook covers using RTI in workplace and records disputes.
RTI has clear limits in this situation, and it is important to be honest about them:
If your dispute is really about money owed on exit, read our companion guide on a delayed full and final settlement. If the problem is a BGV report that already exists and is wrong, see how to challenge an adverse background verification report.
There is no single central law that forces every private employer to issue a relieving or experience letter on demand. However, if you served your notice period and completed your dues, withholding the letter without a genuine reason is unfair. Many employment contracts and HR policies promise these documents on exit, and a written promise can be enforced through HR escalation or a legal notice.
Tell your new employer's HR honestly that the previous company is delaying the document, and offer alternate proof in the meantime. Strong substitutes include your offer or appointment letter, payslips, bank statements showing salary credits, Form 16, and your EPFO passbook showing the employer's PF contributions. Most background verification agencies accept these as evidence of genuine employment.
Use your appointment letter, monthly payslips, bank statements showing salary credits from the employer, Form 16 issued by the employer, and your EPFO passbook or UAN account showing the company's PF deposits against your name. Income-tax and EPFO records are independent third-party trails that are hard to dispute, so they carry strong weight in any background check.
Only if your former employer is a government department or a public-sector undertaking covered by the Right to Information Act. For a private company, RTI does not apply, so it cannot compel a private employer to issue the letter. RTI can still help you obtain your own service records from a government or PSU employer, and your EPFO records from the regional EPFO office.
A legal notice is a reasonable step once polite written follow-ups have failed and you have proof that you served your notice period and cleared dues. A notice from an advocate often prompts the company to release the documents to avoid a dispute. Keep your own evidence ready and consult a labour lawyer before sending it, because the right forum and wording depend on your role and state.
Many companies link the relieving letter to a clean exit, including notice-period buyout or recovery. If you genuinely owe a notice-period amount, settle it or negotiate in writing, then ask for the letter against proof of payment. If you believe the recovery is wrong or excessive, raise it in writing, keep records, and get advice before paying under protest.
Treat the two together. Document your last working day, resignation acceptance, and any pending salary, leave encashment or bonus. Escalate both the settlement and the letter in the same written trail to HR and management. If the money is also withheld, a labour department complaint or a legal notice can cover both demands at once.