Your fixed deposit was broken before maturity and you never asked for it. Here is how to demand it back, recover the lost interest, and escalate this weekend.
Reviewed on: 2026-05-29.
When a bank breaks your fixed deposit before maturity without your request, you can demand reinstatement and the lost interest.
Quick answer
If a bank closed your fixed deposit before maturity without your written request, ask for it in writing first: demand a full reinstatement of the deposit, refund of any premature-closure penalty, and the interest you lost. Get the bank to show the instruction, voucher, or authorisation it acted on. Most unauthorised closures are reversed once you escalate above the branch and quote the missing consent.
RTI helps only when the bank is a public-sector or cooperative bank, which counts as a public authority. There you can ask for the closure voucher, the authorising officer, and the file notings. For a private bank, RTI does not apply to the product dispute; use the bank's grievance and nodal officer, then the RBI Ombudsman through the RBI complaint portal, and the consumer forum for your loss.
This guide is for you if:
Friday evening: pin down the facts. Find your FD receipt or advice and note the deposit number, amount, start date, and original maturity date. Pull your account statement and passbook to see when the FD amount hit your savings account and what narration the bank used. Check your SMS and email for any closure alert. Write down, in one line, that you never gave a written request to close it. Save your net-banking and bank-app logins so you can download the deposit and statement records.
Saturday: confront it in writing. Go to the branch or write to the branch manager. Do not settle for a verbal explanation. Ask three things in writing: on whose instruction the FD was closed, a copy of the closure voucher or authorisation, and the calculation of interest and penalty applied. State clearly that you gave no consent and that you want the deposit reinstated with the lost interest. Get a dated acknowledgement or a complaint reference. Photograph every slip and the FD receipt.
Sunday: line up the escalation. Draft a formal grievance to the bank's nodal or grievance officer using the template below. If it is a public-sector or cooperative bank, also draft an RTI to the bank's Public Information Officer for the closure voucher, the authorising officer, and the notings. Note the RBI complaint portal and the consumer helpline so you can escalate on Monday if the branch stalls. Keep one folder with the FD proof, statement, your no-consent note, and every reference number.
| Document or evidence | Why it matters / where to get it |
|---|---|
| Fixed deposit receipt or advice | Shows the deposit number, amount, start date, and the maturity date you were promised |
| Savings account statement and passbook | Shows when the closed FD amount was credited and the narration the bank used |
| Closure SMS, email, or alert | Any message about the closure; note the date and time, even if it came late |
| Your written no-consent note | A one-line dated record that you never instructed the bank to close the FD |
| Loan or overdraft statement (if any) | Needed if the bank says it set off the FD against a loan or charge you owed |
| Premature-closure and interest working | Ask the bank for the penalty and interest calculation it applied to your deposit |
| Branch acknowledgement or complaint reference | Proof you raised the issue and the date the clock started for escalation |
| Nomination or joint-holder details | Confirms who could authorise a closure, useful when the bank blames a co-holder |
| Identity and KYC documents | Aadhaar, PAN, and signature proof to confirm your authorship on every representation |
| Step | Who to approach | How to reach them | Typical timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| Branch manager | Your home or holding branch | Written letter demanding the voucher, reason, and reinstatement | A few days to acknowledge |
| Nodal or grievance officer | The bank's grievance redressal cell | Formal grievance quoting the branch reference and no-consent point | As per the bank's grievance policy |
| RTI to the bank's PIO | Public Information Officer (PSU or cooperative bank only) | RTI for the closure voucher, authorising officer, and notings | Reply within the RTI Act timeline |
| RBI Ombudsman | Reserve Bank of India | Complaint on the RBI complaint portal after the bank's reply or once its time lapses | As per the ombudsman scheme |
| Consumer forum | National Consumer Helpline or e-Daakhil | Claim the lost interest, penalty refund, and compensation for deficiency | A few weeks to register |
| First appeal (RTI) | First Appellate Authority of the bank | Appeal if the RTI reply is missing or evasive | After the RTI reply period lapses |
Adapt the bracketed parts. Keep a copy of everything you send.
Subject: Fixed deposit closed before maturity without my consent - request reinstatement and lost interest (Deposit No. [FD NUMBER])
To, The Branch Manager / Nodal Grievance Officer [BANK NAME] [BRANCH NAME / ADDRESS] Subject: Premature closure of my fixed deposit [FD NUMBER] without my written instruction Sir/Madam, I hold fixed deposit no. [FD NUMBER] for an amount of [AMOUNT], opened on [START DATE], with a maturity date of [MATURITY DATE], at your branch. On [CLOSURE DATE], this deposit was closed before maturity and the proceeds were credited to my account ending [LAST DIGITS] / adjusted as [DETAILS, IF KNOWN]. I did not give any written or verbal instruction to close this deposit. I came to know of the closure only from [HOW YOU FOUND OUT]. I request you to: 1. State on whose instruction and under what authority this deposit was closed. 2. Provide me a copy of the closure voucher / authorisation acted upon. 3. Share the calculation of the interest paid and any premature-closure penalty applied. 4. Reinstate the deposit on its original terms, refund any penalty deducted, and pay the interest I have lost due to this closure. I am attaching a copy of the deposit receipt and my account statement. Please treat this as a formal grievance and provide me a complaint reference. I request a written reply within a reasonable time, failing which I will escalate to the RBI Ombudsman and the consumer forum. Thank you. Name: [YOUR NAME] Deposit No.: [FD NUMBER] Account No.: [ACCOUNT NUMBER] Contact: [EMAIL / PHONE] Date: [DATE]
RTI applies when your bank is a public-sector bank, a regional rural bank, or a cooperative bank that comes under the RTI Act as a public authority. There an RTI to the bank's Public Information Officer can ask for the closure voucher, the name and designation of the officer who authorised the premature closure, the exact instruction the bank relied on, and the file notings on your deposit. You can also ask what action was taken on your earlier grievance. This creates a written, accountable trail that a phone call never gives you. If the reply is missing or evasive, file a first appeal. See how to file an RTI online and read The RTI Playbook for the appeal flow.
RTI will not directly reverse the closure or order the bank to pay you. It only gets you records. For a private-sector bank, RTI does not apply to the product dispute at all, because a private bank is not a public authority. So the correct first route is always the bank's grievance and nodal officer, then the RBI Ombudsman through the RBI complaint portal for any bank, public or private. For the money you lost, the consumer e-Daakhil route or the National Consumer Helpline can award compensation. Use RTI only at a public-sector or cooperative bank, and only to pin down the voucher and authorisation behind the closure.
Generally no, not for a normal deposit. A bank may break an FD only with your instruction or under a clause you agreed to, such as a lien or set-off against an unpaid loan. If none of that applies and you gave no consent, ask the bank in writing to show the voucher and authorisation, and demand reinstatement with the lost interest.
A bank can set off a deposit against your dues only if you signed a lien or the loan terms allow it, and usually after notice. Ask for the lien document and the notice it sent you. If there was no such right or no notice, treat it as an unauthorised closure and escalate to the nodal officer and the RBI Ombudsman.
Ask the bank, in writing, to reinstate the deposit on its original terms and pay the interest you lost plus any penalty it deducted. If the bank refuses, escalate to its nodal officer, then the RBI Ombudsman. For compensation for the loss and harassment, you can also file on the consumer e-Daakhil portal.
No. A private-sector bank is not a public authority, so RTI does not apply to its product dispute. Use the bank's grievance channel and nodal officer, then the RBI Ombudsman through the RBI complaint portal. RTI is useful only when your bank is a public-sector, regional rural, or cooperative bank.
You can ask for the premature-closure voucher, the name and designation of the officer who authorised it, the exact instruction the bank acted on, the interest and penalty calculation, and the file notings on your deposit. You can also ask what was done on your earlier grievance. File a first appeal if the reply is missing or evasive.
Migrations and mergers sometimes move or close deposits in error. Take your original FD receipt and statement to the branch and ask them to trace the deposit and restore it. Get the trace reference in writing. If the branch cannot locate or reinstate it, escalate to the nodal officer and, for a public-sector bank, file an RTI for the migration record.
Start with the bank's own grievance officer, because the ombudsman expects you to have approached the bank first. If the bank does not resolve it or you are unhappy with the reply, go to the RBI Ombudsman for the banking service issue. Use the consumer forum mainly to claim financial compensation for your loss.
Act quickly, because escalation routes have their own time windows and your evidence is freshest now. Raise it with the bank in writing without delay, note the date you complained, and keep every reference. If the bank does not respond within the time it commits to, move to the RBI Ombudsman and, if needed, the consumer forum.