You cleared the loan, but the No-Dues Certificate has not arrived. Here is how to demand it in writing and get your security released this weekend.
Reviewed on: 2026-05-29.
When a loan is paid or settled but the NOC never arrives, a written demand and the right escalation can force the lender to release it.
Quick answer
Once you have repaid the loan in full or paid the agreed one-time settlement, the lender must close the account and give you a No-Dues Certificate (NOC) or closure letter. This document is your proof that nothing is owed. The first fix is a written demand to the lender, quoting your loan account number and the date and amount you paid, asking for the NOC, the return of any security or original documents, and removal of any lien or hypothecation.
If the lender stalls, do not keep chasing on the phone. Raise a formal written grievance with its grievance or nodal officer. If that does not work within the lender's stated time, escalate to the RBI Ombudsman through the CMS portal. The NOC matters because without it your security stays charged, your property papers stay held, and your credit report can keep showing the loan as open.
This guide is for you if you have finished paying a loan but the lender has not handed over the closure paperwork.
Build your closure proof file. Collect the loan account number, your loan sanction or agreement copy, the final payment receipt or bank statement showing the last instalment or the settled amount, and any settlement offer letter if it was a one-time settlement. List anything the lender is still holding as security, such as original property documents, share certificates, a vehicle invoice, or post-dated cheques. Note the date you became fully paid up.
Put the demand in writing on Saturday.
Make it formal and set your follow-up. Send the representation in this guide to the lender's grievance or nodal officer, attaching your payment proof and the list of security held. Demand the NOC, the closure status in writing, and the return of documents within the lender's stated time. Save the complaint reference, and set a reminder to escalate to the RBI Ombudsman if there is no proper response.
| Document or evidence | Why it matters / where to get it |
|---|---|
| Loan account number | Lets the lender, the Ombudsman and the credit bureaus locate the exact account; on your loan papers, statements, or app. |
| Loan sanction letter or agreement copy | Shows the original terms and what security you pledged; helps you list what should now be returned. |
| Final payment receipt or bank statement | Proves you cleared the loan or paid the settled amount; download from net banking or keep the lender's receipt. |
| Settlement offer letter (if a one-time settlement) | Shows the agreed amount the lender accepted; the lender issues this before you pay the settlement. |
| No-Dues Certificate or closure letter (the goal) | Confirms the account is closed and nothing is owed; this is what you are demanding from the lender. |
| List of security or documents held by the lender | Property papers, vehicle invoice, share certificates, or post-dated cheques the lender must return after closure. |
| Latest credit report | Lets you check whether the loan still shows as open or as settled, so you can ask for it to be corrected. |
| Written demand and any reply | Starts the paper trail; keep your email, the acknowledgement, and any reference number with dates. |
| Step | Who to approach | How to reach them | Typical timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ask for the NOC and documents | Lender's customer care | Customer-care email or phone, quoting the loan account number | As per the lender's stated turnaround |
| Formal grievance for the NOC | Lender's grievance / nodal officer | Grievance email or portal listed on the lender's website | Within the lender's stated response time |
| Regulatory complaint | RBI Ombudsman (Integrated Ombudsman Scheme) | RBI CMS portal cms.rbi.org.in or helpline 14448 | After the lender's time limit, as per the scheme |
| Deficiency-in-service claim | Consumer commission | e-Daakhil edaakhil.nic.in or National Consumer Helpline | As per the commission |
| Lift vehicle hypothecation | Transport / RTO via Parivahan | parivahan.gov.in after the lender gives the closure form | As per the RTO process |
| If lender is a public/PSU bank | RTI to that bank's Public Information Officer | The bank's RTI/PIO channel or rtionline.gov.in | Reply due within the RTI timeline |
Adapt the bracketed parts. Keep a copy of everything you send.
Subject: Loan account [Loan A/c No.] fully paid/settled - issue No-Dues Certificate (NOC), return security and remove lien
To, The Grievance / Nodal Officer [Name of bank / NBFC] Subject: No-Dues Certificate not issued after closure of loan account [Loan A/c No.] - issue NOC, return original documents and remove lien/hypothecation Dear Sir/Madam, I held loan account [Loan A/c No.] with you. This account has been fully repaid/settled. My final payment of Rs. [amount] was made on [payment date] through [mode / reference], and the account became fully paid up on [date]. Proof of payment is enclosed. Despite this, I have not received the No-Dues Certificate (NOC) / closure letter for this account, and the following security/documents are still held by you: - [e.g. original property documents] - [e.g. vehicle invoice / share certificate / post-dated cheques] I request you to: 1. Issue me the No-Dues Certificate / closure letter confirming this account is closed and nothing is outstanding. 2. Return all original documents and security held against this loan. 3. Remove any lien, hypothecation or charge created on my asset(s) and provide the paperwork needed to update the records (e.g. the form to lift vehicle hypothecation / charge satisfaction). 4. Confirm that the closure has been or will be reported correctly to the credit bureaus. Please treat this as a formal grievance and share a complaint reference number, and confirm the above to me in writing within your stated turnaround. If this is not resolved within the time allowed, I will escalate to the RBI Ombudsman through the CMS portal (cms.rbi.org.in) and pursue other available remedies. Documents enclosed: proof of final payment / settlement letter, list of security held. Thank you. [Your full name] [Registered mobile number] [Registered email] [Date]
RTI helps only when the records you want sit with a public authority. For this problem, that means your lender is a public-sector body, or you are seeking records held by a government office.
RTI does not work against a private bank, NBFC, or housing-finance company, because they are not public authorities. Most retail and home loans are with private or non-banking lenders, so RTI is usually the wrong tool to force an NOC out of them.
The correct first remedies here are the grievance and complaint routes, not RTI:
A No-Dues Certificate (NOC) or closure letter is the lender's written confirmation that your loan is fully paid or settled and nothing is owed. You need it as permanent proof of closure, to get your pledged security and documents back, to remove any lien or hypothecation on your asset, and to make sure your credit report shows the account as closed. Keep it safe even years later.
Stop chasing by phone and put it in writing. Email the lender's customer care and grievance officer, quoting your loan account number and the date and amount of your final payment, and demand the NOC, the return of documents, and lien removal. Ask for a reference number. If there is no proper response within the lender's stated time, escalate to the RBI Ombudsman on cms.rbi.org.in.
Yes. After full repayment or settlement, the lender must return all original documents and security you pledged - property papers, a vehicle invoice, share certificates, fixed-deposit receipts, or post-dated cheques - and remove any charge on the asset. List each item in your written demand. For a property loan, also ask for the paperwork needed so the charge can be marked satisfied in the records.
Only if your lender is a public-sector bank or government-owned body, since RTI applies to public authorities. Then you can ask its Public Information Officer for the closure status, whether the NOC was issued, and the action on your grievance. For a private bank, NBFC, or housing-finance company, RTI does not apply - use the lender's grievance route and, if needed, the RBI Ombudsman.
First give the lender a written grievance and its allowed response time. If the NOC or your security is still not released, file on the RBI CMS portal at cms.rbi.org.in, or call helpline 14448. Attach your proof of final payment or the settlement letter, your written demand, and the lender's response so the Ombudsman can see that closure is established and the NOC is overdue.
Not on your credit record. A one-time settlement, where the lender accepts less than the full outstanding, is usually reported to the bureaus as 'settled', which can make future borrowing harder. A full closure, where you pay the entire outstanding, is reported as 'closed'. Whichever you did, insist on the matching letter in writing and check your credit report afterwards.
The hypothecation entry on a vehicle is removed by the transport authority, not the lender alone. Once the lender gives you the closure document or the form it issues for this, you apply to lift the hypothecation through the Parivahan system or your RTO. If the office then delays, you can follow up there, and an RTI to that public office can ask for the status of your application.
The NOC is your key proof. After closure the lender should report the account as closed to the bureaus, but updates can lag or show errors. Get the NOC first, then raise a correction with the credit bureau and the lender, attaching the NOC as evidence that the account is closed and nothing is owed. Keep the dispute reference and re-check the report after the update.