An enquiry you do not recognise on your credit report means someone pulled your file — here is how to trace it, get it removed, and protect yourself from fraud.
Reviewed on: 2026-05-29.
An enquiry you never made is a footprint someone else left on your credit report — this guide helps you trace and remove it.
Quick answer
An unknown enquiry on your credit report means a lender requested your credit information, usually because someone applied for a loan or card using your details. First, check carefully: an enquiry is only a footprint that your report was pulled. It is different from a new account or loan you never opened. If you see an account too, that is a more serious fraud and needs immediate action. The enquiries section names the lender and the date, so identify that lender first, ask them in writing to confirm there was no genuine application from you, and then raise a dispute with the credit bureau using that confirmation.
If you suspect identity theft, also report it on the national cybercrime portal and ask the bureau to place a fraud alert. RTI helps only in the narrow case where a public-sector bank or a government-scheme lender made the enquiry — you can ask its Public Information Officer for the application behind the pull. RTI does not apply to the credit bureaus or to private banks and NBFCs.
This guide is for you if a recent credit report shows an enquiry you do not recognise:
Pull your own credit report so the unknown enquiry is in front of you. You are entitled to one free full report each year from each bureau — CIBIL (TransUnion), Experian, Equifax and CRIF High Mark — through their official websites. Download it and open the 'Enquiries' or 'Enquiry Information' section. For each enquiry you do not recognise, note the lender's name, the date, the enquiry purpose (for example personal loan or credit card) and any amount shown. Save a clear screenshot or the PDF page.
Separate the two situations, because they need different action:
Also check whether you genuinely forgot an application — a pre-approved offer you accepted, a co-sign, or a recent card you applied for can show as an enquiry.
Draft your messages using the template lower down. Prepare one email to the enquiring lender asking it to confirm whether any application exists in your name and, if not, to withdraw the enquiry and report the correction to the bureau. Keep your PAN and ID ready for verification. If you suspect identity theft, plan to file a cybercrime complaint and request a fraud alert from the bureau on Monday. On Monday you send the lender email and, in parallel, prepare the bureau dispute.
| Document or evidence | Why it matters / where to get it |
|---|---|
| Your full credit report (the enquiries page) | Shows the exact unknown enquiry, the lender's name, the date and the purpose. Download free once a year from each bureau's official site. |
| List of the unknown enquiries | Write down each enquiry you dispute — lender, date, purpose, amount — so your complaint is specific and easy to verify. |
| Your PAN and a government ID | Used to confirm your identity when you email the lender, raise a bureau dispute, or file a fraud complaint. |
| Any rejection letter or loan decline message | If an unknown enquiry contributed to a loan or card rejection, this shows the real-world harm caused. |
| Proof you did not apply | Anything that helps — you were abroad, you bank only with one institution, or you never contacted that lender. Supports the 'no application' claim. |
| Screenshots of any suspicious SMS, email or OTP | If a fraudster used your details, alerts about loans or OTPs you did not request are useful evidence. |
| Copies of all emails and complaints you send | Builds a dated trail you will need if you escalate to the RBI Ombudsman or file a police complaint. |
| Step | Who to approach | How to reach them | Typical timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| Trace the lender | The enquiring bank or NBFC named in the enquiry | Email the customer grievance / nodal officer asking it to confirm no application and withdraw the enquiry | A few working days to acknowledge |
| Raise a dispute | The credit bureau (CIBIL / Experian / Equifax / CRIF High Mark) | Free online dispute facility on the bureau's official website | Within the timeline shown on the bureau's portal |
| Report identity theft | National Cyber Crime Reporting Portal / local police | cybercrime.gov.in, and ask the bureau for a fraud alert | File immediately; investigation varies |
| RBI Ombudsman (RB-IOS) | Reserve Bank of India, under the Integrated Ombudsman Scheme | RBI Complaint Management System at cms.rbi.org.in | After the lender/bureau fails or about 30 days pass |
| RTI (public-sector lender only) | Public-sector bank's Public Information Officer | Online RTI via rtionline.gov.in or a written application to the PIO | Reply due within the statutory RTI period |
| Consumer forum (last resort) | District Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission | e-Daakhil portal (edaakhil.nic.in) | Varies; weeks to months |
Adapt the bracketed parts. Keep a copy of everything you send.
Subject: Unknown enquiry on my credit report — request to confirm no application and withdraw it
To: Grievance / Nodal Officer, [Bank or NBFC name] Cc: Customer Service Subject: Unknown enquiry on my credit report — request to confirm no application and withdraw it Dear Sir/Madam, My credit report from [bureau name] dated [report date] shows an enquiry made by you on [enquiry date] for [purpose, e.g. personal loan / credit card]. I did not apply for any such credit and did not authorise anyone to apply on my behalf. I request you to: 1. Confirm in writing whether any application exists in my name with you, and share its details and the documents submitted. 2. If there is no genuine application from me, withdraw this enquiry and report the correction to all credit bureaus you reported it to. 3. Tell me whether my personal details (PAN/Aadhaar) may have been misused, so I can take further protective steps. I have also raised a dispute with the bureau (reference [dispute reference], if available). If I do not receive a satisfactory response within a reasonable time, I will escalate to your Internal Ombudsman, the RBI Ombudsman, and file a complaint on the national cybercrime portal. Details for verification: Name: [your name] PAN: [your PAN] Registered mobile / email: [your contact] Kindly acknowledge this email and share a complaint reference number. Thank you, [Your name] [Date]
RTI helps only when the record sits with a public authority. For an unknown enquiry that means the enquiry was made by a public-sector or government lender — for example a nationalised bank, a regional rural bank, or a government scheme loan channel. You can file an RTI to that lender's Public Information Officer to obtain:
This is strong evidence to prove you made no application, to fix accountability, and to support your bureau dispute or a fraud complaint. An RTI to RBI can get you policy and circular-level information about the data-correction and ombudsman framework, but RBI will not decide your individual dispute through an RTI reply.
RTI does not apply to the credit bureaus. CIBIL, Experian, Equifax and CRIF High Mark are private companies, not public authorities, so you cannot RTI them. RTI also does not apply to a private bank, foreign bank, private NBFC or fintech lender that made the enquiry.
For these, the correct first remedies are:
It means a lender requested your credit information, usually because someone applied for a loan or card using your details. The enquiry is only a footprint that your report was pulled. It is not the same as an actual loan or card in your name. If you also see an account you never opened, that is a more serious fraud and needs immediate action.
A hard enquiry happens when a lender checks your report because you applied for credit, and many hard enquiries can lower your score. A soft enquiry happens when you check your own report or a lender makes a pre-approved offer, and it does not affect your score. Only unknown hard enquiries are worth disputing.
First identify the lender named in the enquiry and ask it, in writing, to confirm there was no genuine application from you and to withdraw the enquiry. Then raise a free dispute with the credit bureau, attaching the lender's reply and your identity proof. A genuine enquiry from a real application cannot be removed as an error.
Yes. Correcting an error in your credit information is a free service offered by the bureaus. You do not need to pay any agent. You can raise the dispute yourself on the official website of CIBIL, Experian, Equifax or CRIF High Mark and explain that you made no such application.
Act fast. File a complaint on the national cybercrime portal at cybercrime.gov.in, and ask each credit bureau to place a fraud alert on your file so future lenders verify harder before granting credit. Also email the enquiring lender to confirm no application exists and gather any suspicious SMS, email or OTP alerts as evidence.
Only in a narrow case. RTI works when a public-sector bank or a government-scheme lender made the enquiry — you can ask its Public Information Officer for the application behind the pull and who authorised it, which is strong evidence. RTI does not apply to the credit bureaus or to private banks and NBFCs, because they are not public authorities.
It can. Lender-initiated hard enquiries are counted by the scoring model, and several in a short period may lower your score and make new loans or cards harder to get. That is why it is worth tracing and disputing an enquiry you do not recognise rather than ignoring it.
Escalate. File a complaint with the RBI Ombudsman through the RBI Complaint Management System at cms.rbi.org.in, attaching your dispute reference and evidence. The Integrated Ombudsman Scheme covers banks, NBFCs and credit information companies. If identity theft is involved, pursue the cybercrime complaint and, if needed, the consumer forum.