If your pension landed in the wrong bank account, act on two fronts at once: trace and recover the money, and correct the account on record so it never repeats.
Reviewed on: 2026-05-29.
When a pension lands in the wrong bank account, the first job is proof, then correction.
Quick answer
Do two things in parallel. First, tell the authority that pays your pension and your bank that a credit went to the wrong account, in writing, and ask them to trace it and arrange recovery. Second, get the wrong account corrected on your pension record so the next month is safe.
Money already sitting in a stranger's account usually cannot bounce back on its own. The receiving bank has to step in, so a written, dated complaint with the payment reference is your strongest tool. RTI does not pull the money back, but it gets you the proof of what account was recorded and what was done about it.
This guide is for pensioners and family members who expected a pension credit but it went somewhere else. It fits whether you are a:
Move while offices and phone lines are open. Call your pension-disbursing bank branch and your pension office, and ask them to flag a wrong credit and start a trace. Get a complaint or token number for every call.
Government offices, treasuries and EPFO are usually closed, so use this day to assemble proof and draft your case at home.
File what can be filed online and prepare Monday's escalation.
| Document or evidence | Why it matters / where to get it |
|---|---|
| Pension Payment Order (PPO) or sanction letter | Shows your correct pensioner details and the authority that pays you; the anchor for every complaint. |
| Bank passbook or statement of your correct account | Proves the pension did not arrive where it should; print the relevant months. |
| Pension mandate or account details you submitted | Shows the account you actually asked for, to compare against what was recorded. |
| SMS, email or alert about the credit | May reveal the date, amount and the wrong account the money went to. |
| Payment reference (UTR) of the misdirected credit | Lets both banks trace the transaction; ask your bank or the pension office for it. |
| Aadhaar and bank-linking status | Relevant when pension is paid by Aadhaar-linked transfer that may route to the last seeded account. |
| Identity and address proof | Needed for any correction, KYC or grievance you file with the bank or office. |
| Copies of complaints and acknowledgments | Every token, stamped letter or grievance ID builds your record for escalation. |
| Step | Who to approach | How to reach them | Typical timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| Branch and disbursing authority | Bank branch manager and pension or treasury office | In person with a written complaint, or by phone with a token number | A few days for an acknowledgment |
| Online grievance | CPGRAMS, EPFiGMS or your state grievance portal | File online with your proof and complaint references | As per the portal timeline |
| Bank nodal officer | Principal Nodal Officer of your bank | Written complaint or email quoting your earlier complaint number | A few weeks |
| RBI Banking Ombudsman | Reserve Bank of India, Integrated Ombudsman | RBI complaint portal cms.rbi.org.in or helpline 14448 | After the bank's reply or the wait shown on the portal |
| RTI and first appeal | Public Information Officer, then First Appellate Authority | RTI Online for central bodies, or your state RTI portal | Reply within the statutory window; appeal if it lapses |
| Consumer forum (if deficiency persists) | District consumer commission via e-Daakhil | Online at edaakhil.nic.in after exhausting grievance routes | Varies by case |
Adapt the bracketed parts. Keep a copy of everything you send.
Subject: Wrong credit of my pension to an incorrect bank account - request for trace, recovery and correction
To, [Branch Manager / Pension or Treasury Office / EPFO Regional Office] [Bank or Office name and address] Subject: Pension credited to the wrong bank account - request to trace, recover and correct Respected Sir/Madam, I am a pensioner. My pension for [month/year] did not reach my correct bank account [account number, bank, branch]. From the information available to me, it appears the amount of [amount, if known] was credited to a different/incorrect account on [date], with payment reference [UTR, if known]. My details are: - Name: [your name] - PPO / Pension ID: [number] - Correct bank account: [account number, IFSC, branch] - Aadhaar-linked account (if applicable): [bank name] I request you to: 1. Trace this transaction and share the account it was credited to and the reference number. 2. Coordinate with the receiving bank to recover and reverse the wrong credit. 3. Correct the bank account recorded against my pension so future credits reach my correct account. 4. Confirm the corrective action in writing. I am attaching my PPO, passbook, mandate and identity proof. Please treat this as urgent, as I depend on this pension. Thank you. Yours faithfully, [Your name] [Phone] [Address] [Date]
RTI helps when a public authority handles your pension and you need proof. Use it to obtain records, not to recover money. From the disbursing authority you can ask for:
This applies to government and treasury pensions, EPFO, public-sector banks and welfare or NSAP pension bodies, which are public authorities under RTI.
RTI will not force the money back, will not order a reversal, and does not bind a purely private bank, because private banks are not public authorities under RTI. Match your remedy to the problem instead:
Often yes, but not automatically. Money sitting in another person's account usually returns only when the receiving bank steps in. File a written, dated complaint with your bank and pension office, give the payment reference, and ask them to trace it and coordinate a reversal. Keep following up until it is resolved.
No. RTI is for records and proof, not money recovery. It can get you the account recorded against your pension, the credit reference, and what action was taken on your complaint. Use those records to push your bank, the pension office, the grievance portal or the Ombudsman to act on recovery and correction.
Start with your pension-disbursing bank branch and the office that pays your pension, in writing. Then file the matching online grievance: CPGRAMS for government and PSU-bank pensions, EPFiGMS for EPFO pensions, or your state portal for state and welfare pensions. Escalate to the bank nodal officer and RBI Ombudsman only after a written complaint.
Common reasons are a data-entry error in your mandate, an outdated account on the pension record, or Aadhaar-linked routing. Aadhaar-linked pensions can land in the last account seeded against your Aadhaar, not the one you expect. Check your seeding and the recorded account, and correct both.
A wrong credit means the money reached a different, incorrect account; a failed credit means it never went out or was returned. Ask your bank for the payment reference and status. A wrong credit needs recovery from the receiving account; a failed credit needs the disbursing office to re-release it.
Raise it with EPFO through its grievance system, EPFiGMS, and at your EPFO regional office, quoting your PPO and pension account. EPFO is a public authority, so you can also file an RTI for the account recorded and the action taken. Keep your complaint references for any escalation.
Give the bank and pension office a written complaint and a reasonable period to reply, as shown on the relevant portal. If there is no fix, escalate to the bank's nodal officer, then the RBI Ombudsman. For a public authority that does not reply to your RTI within the statutory window, use the first-appeal route.