You live abroad, your annual life certificate was rejected, and your Indian pension has stopped or is held up. This is stressful, but it is fixable. Your pension is not lost. This guide explains why a life certificate gets rejected, how to submit a valid one from another country, who to contact at your bank and pension office, and how RTI can help you get answers.
Reviewed on: 2026-05-29.
Quick answer
A rejected life certificate freezes your pension; it does not cancel it. Find the exact rejection reason from your bank or the Jeevan Pramaan portal. Fix the cause, then resubmit through one of two routes: a digital Jeevan Pramaan certificate using Aadhaar biometrics, or a physical life certificate attested by the Indian Embassy or Consulate. Send it to your pension disbursing bank, confirm receipt in writing, and ask for the held arrears. If the records are with a public-sector bank or government pension office, you can use RTI to find out why it was stopped.
This guide is for Indian pensioners living outside India whose annual life certificate (also called a digital life certificate or Jeevan Pramaan) has been rejected, returned, or marked invalid, and whose pension has therefore stopped or is on hold. It is also useful for:
Every pensioner has to prove once a year that they are alive so the pension keeps coming. When you live abroad, that yearly step is harder, and a small data mismatch can stop the money. The good news is simple: the pension is your right, and a late or rejected certificate only pauses it. Once you submit a valid certificate, payment restarts and withheld amounts are normally released. If your pension has already missed credits, see our detailed companion guide on pension not credited and life certificate complaints.
Gather your basics in one folder. You need your Pension Payment Order (PPO) number, your pension account number and bank branch, your Aadhaar number (if you have one), your passport, and your overseas address proof. Find your last working life certificate or Jeevan Pramaan receipt if you have one.
Now find out exactly why it was rejected. Log in to the Jeevan Pramaan portal if you used the digital route, and look for the status of your last submission. If you cannot see a clear reason there, email or call your pension disbursing bank branch and ask: what was the recorded reason, and what do they need from you now. Write down the answer. The fix depends entirely on the reason.
Note whether the problem looks like a data mismatch (name or date of birth differing between Aadhaar and pension records), a technical failure (biometrics not captured, Aadhaar inoperative), or a delivery failure (the certificate never reached the right pension sanctioning authority or branch).
Pick your route. If you have a working Aadhaar and access to a compatible fingerprint or iris device, the digital Jeevan Pramaan route is fastest. If Aadhaar is the problem, or you have no device, plan for a physical life certificate attested abroad.
For the digital route, make sure your Aadhaar is operative and your mobile number is reachable. If there is a name or date-of-birth mismatch between your Aadhaar and your pension records, that mismatch is likely the root cause and must be corrected first; see our guide on the correct sequence for fixing name mismatches across Aadhaar, PAN and bank records.
For the physical route, check the attestation that your pension bank accepts. Many pensioners abroad obtain a life certificate signed and stamped by the Indian Embassy or Consulate, or by an authorised official your bank recognises. Confirm the exact format and signatory your disbursing bank will accept before you spend a consulate appointment on it. Requirements differ between banks and between the central and state pension rules.
Draft your covering letter to the pension disbursing bank using the template in this guide. List your PPO number, pension account, the rejection reason, and the corrected certificate you are now submitting. State clearly that you are requesting resumption of pension and release of any arrears withheld during the gap.
Plan how you will deliver it. A digital Jeevan Pramaan flows electronically to the bank and pension authority. A physical certificate is usually couriered or scanned and emailed to the branch, depending on what the bank accepts. Keep proof of submission: the Jeevan Pramaan ID, the courier tracking number, or the email with a read receipt.
If an elderly parent abroad needs help and there are wider issues with their affairs in India, our guide for families on handling an emergency for NRI parents covers banking and document access steps you may also need.
| Document | What it proves | Where to get it |
|---|---|---|
| Pension Payment Order (PPO) number / copy | Your pension identity and sanctioning authority | Your pension file; bank pension branch; or pension sanctioning authority |
| Pension account passbook / statement | The disbursing account and that pension was stopped | Your pension disbursing bank |
| Rejection reason (screenshot or written note) | The exact cause to fix before resubmitting | Jeevan Pramaan portal status; or bank pension branch |
| Aadhaar (if held) and proof it is operative | Needed for digital Jeevan Pramaan biometric route | Your records; official UIDAI portal for status |
| Passport and overseas address proof | Identity and your current country of residence | Your records; utility bill or residence permit |
| Physical life certificate attested abroad | Proof you are alive, accepted by the bank | Indian Embassy / Consulate, or authorised officer your bank accepts |
| Jeevan Pramaan ID / acknowledgement | That a digital certificate was generated and sent | Jeevan Pramaan portal after successful submission |
| Evidence of name / date-of-birth correction (if any) | The data mismatch behind the rejection is fixed | Aadhaar update receipt; bank record update letter |
| Covering letter to the disbursing bank | Your written request to resume pension and release arrears | Prepared by you (see template below) |
| Proof of submission / delivery | That the bank received your certificate and letter | Courier tracking; email receipt; branch acknowledgement |
Do not resubmit blindly. A second certificate that hits the same problem will be rejected again and waste weeks. Find the recorded reason from the Jeevan Pramaan portal status or directly from your pension disbursing bank. Ask the branch to put the reason in writing or email. Match it to one of the common causes: data mismatch, Aadhaar or biometric failure, wrong PPO number, or the certificate not reaching the correct authority.
Two bodies matter. The pension sanctioning authority of your former department sanctioned your pension and issued the PPO. The pension disbursing bank pays you each month and handles your annual life certificate. For most life-certificate rejections, the disbursing bank is your first contact. If the issue is the PPO itself or the original sanction, the pension sanctioning authority is the right body. Knowing this saves you from being sent back and forth.
If the rejection is a name or date-of-birth mismatch between Aadhaar and pension records, correct the mismatch before resubmitting. If your Aadhaar is inoperative or unlinked, resolve that first. If the PPO number was entered wrongly, get the correct number from your pension records or the bank. Do not skip this step; it is the single most common reason resubmissions keep failing.
For the digital Jeevan Pramaan route, complete the biometric authentication using a compatible device, enter your PPO and pension account details exactly as they appear in records, and generate the certificate. Save the Jeevan Pramaan ID. For the physical route, obtain a life certificate attested by the Indian Embassy or Consulate, or by an officer your bank accepts. Confirm the accepted format with your bank first, because requirements vary by bank and by central or state pension rules.
Send the certificate to your pension disbursing branch with a clear covering letter (template below). Quote your PPO number, pension account, the earlier rejection reason, and your request to resume pension and release withheld arrears. Keep proof of submission. If you email, ask for an acknowledgement and save it.
After a reasonable wait, confirm with the branch that the certificate is accepted and pension has restarted. Ask specifically about the arrears for the months pension was withheld; these are normally released once a valid certificate is on file. Get the confirmation in writing or by email so you have a record.
If the branch does not act within a reasonable time, write to the branch manager, then to the bank's pension nodal officer or grievance cell. Reference your submission proof and dates in every message. For broader complaint routes that combine grievance escalation, our guide on using CPGRAMS and RTI together explains how to push a government-linked complaint upward.
If your bank or pension office is a public authority and will not explain the delay, file an RTI for the records (see the RTI section below). Separately, while you are fixing this, keep your nominee and family pension details accurate and consistent across the bank and the pension sanctioning authority, so a future family pension claim for your spouse is not held up by old discrepancies.
| Stage | Action | Forum / Destination | Target timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Submit a valid life certificate with a covering letter; request arrears | Your pension disbursing bank branch (pension desk) | Follow up after a few working days |
| 2 | Written complaint if no action or unclear reason | Branch manager, then bank pension nodal officer / grievance cell | As per the bank's grievance policy |
| 3 | Approach the sanctioning authority for PPO or sanction issues | Pension sanctioning authority of your former department | Varies by department |
| 4 | RTI application for status and recorded reasons | CPIO of the public-sector bank or government pension office | 30 days (RTI Act response window) |
| 5 | Banking regulator complaint if a bank deficiency persists | The banking ombudsman / RBI complaint route for the bank | As per the regulator's process |
| 6 | Government grievance escalation | CPGRAMS for a government department or public-sector body | Government target timeline |
Replace the text in square brackets with your own details before sending.
To, The Branch Manager (Pension Desk) [Name of Pension Disbursing Bank] [Branch Name and Address]
Date: [DD/MM/YYYY]
Subject: Resumption of pension and release of arrears — rejected life
certificate resubmitted — PPO No. [Your PPO Number]
Respected Sir / Madam,
1. I am [Your Name], a pensioner drawing pension through your branch.
PPO Number: [Your PPO Number]. Pension Account: [Account Number]. I am currently residing abroad at [Your Overseas Address].
2. My annual life certificate submitted on or about [DD/MM/YYYY] was
rejected / returned. The reason recorded was: [reason as told to you / as shown on the Jeevan Pramaan portal].
3. As a result, my pension has been stopped / withheld from
[month/year]. I have now corrected the underlying cause and am submitting a valid life certificate, details below: - Mode: [Digital Jeevan Pramaan ID: XXXX] / [Physical life certificate attested by the Indian Embassy/Consulate at [place], dated DD/MM/YYYY].
4. I request you to:
(a) Accept the enclosed valid life certificate;
(b) Resume my monthly pension from the next cycle; and
(c) Release the arrears withheld for the period the pension was
stopped.
5. Kindly acknowledge receipt of this letter and confirm in writing
the date from which my pension is resumed and the arrears credited.
I am available on [phone / email] for any clarification.
Yours faithfully,
[Your Full Name] PPO No. [Your PPO Number] Pension Account No. [Account Number] [Phone Number] [Email Address]
Enclosures: 1. Valid life certificate (Jeevan Pramaan ID / attested certificate) 2. Copy of PPO / pension records 3. Proof of correction (if a name/DOB mismatch was fixed) 4. Copy of passport and overseas address proof
The Right to Information Act, 2005 applies to public authorities. A public-sector pension disbursing bank, a government pension office, or a pension sanctioning authority of a central or state department is generally covered. RTI can be a useful tool in a stopped-pension situation in these specific ways:
To file an RTI, see our step-by-step RTI filing guide. The Central government RTI fee is a small prescribed amount; state rules and fee modes vary, so check the relevant authority. The public information officer must respond within the RTI Act timeline. If you get no reply or an unhelpful one, use our guide on filing a first appeal under RTI Section 19. For deeper strategy on using RTI in benefit and records disputes, see The RTI Playbook.
RTI has clear limits in a life-certificate and pension dispute:
If pension credits are already missing month after month, our focused guide on pension not credited and life certificate complaints walks through the bank and regulator complaint route in detail. Browse the full library at our NRI and Cross-Border guides.
No. A pension is not forfeited because a life certificate was late or rejected. Once you submit a valid life certificate, the pension disbursing bank restarts payment and normally releases the withheld arrears for the months in between. Submit a fresh certificate quickly and follow up with your pension branch in writing.
Yes. You generally have two routes from abroad. You can generate a digital Jeevan Pramaan certificate using Aadhaar biometric authentication if you have a working Aadhaar and a compatible device, or you can obtain a physical life certificate attested by the Indian Embassy or Consulate, or by an authorised officer accepted by your pension bank, and send it to the disbursing branch.
Common reasons include a name or date-of-birth mismatch between Aadhaar and pension records, a PPO number entered incorrectly, an inoperative or unlinked Aadhaar, biometric authentication failure, or the certificate not reaching the correct pension sanctioning authority. Check the exact rejection reason on the Jeevan Pramaan portal or with your bank before resubmitting.
It can cause confusion if records are left unresolved. Keep your pension records, nominee and family pension details accurate and consistent across the bank and the pension sanctioning authority. If a family pension claim later arises, clean records and a clear paper trail make the transition far smoother for your spouse or dependant.
Yes, where a public authority holds the records. A public-sector pension disbursing bank, a government pension office, or a pension sanctioning authority is covered by the RTI Act. You can ask for the status of your certificate, the reasons recorded for rejection, and the date pension was stopped. RTI gives you information; it does not by itself restart the pension.
Both have roles. The pension sanctioning authority of your former department sanctions the pension and issues the Pension Payment Order (PPO). The pension disbursing bank then pays you each month and processes your life certificate. If the problem is payment or life-certificate handling, start with the bank; if it concerns the PPO or the sanction itself, approach the pension sanctioning authority.
Timelines vary by bank and authority. Many disbursing branches process a valid life certificate within a few working days and resume payment from the next cycle, releasing arrears thereafter. If there is no movement after a reasonable wait, escalate in writing to the branch manager, then the bank nodal officer, and use the bank or regulator grievance route.