From 1 July 2026, if your bank, NBFC, wallet, or credit bureau gives you bad service and does not fix it, you can take the matter free to the RBI Ombudsman and get up to Rs 30 lakh as compensation. This is the big change brought in by the Reserve Bank Integrated Ombudsman Scheme 2026, known as RB-IOS 2026. The Reserve Bank of India notified it on 16 January 2026, and it replaces the older 2021 scheme. The old cap was Rs 20 lakh. The new one is higher, and the way you complain stays simple and online.
The 2026 scheme keeps the same one-window system but improves the money you can recover and tightens the filing time. Here is the side-by-side picture.
| Feature | Old RB-IOS 2021 | New RB-IOS 2026 |
|---|---|---|
| Compensation for consequential financial loss | Up to Rs 20 lakh | Up to Rs 30 lakh |
| Extra for loss of time, expenses, harassment | Up to Rs 1 lakh | Up to Rs 3 lakh |
| Time limit to file with Ombudsman | Within one year of the bank reply | Within 90 days of the bank reply or deadline |
| Who is covered | Banks, eligible NBFCs, PPI wallet issuers, credit bureaus | Same entities continue to be covered |
| Cost to file | Free | Free |
| Limit on the disputed amount itself | No limit | No limit |
The headline is simple. More compensation, a shorter filing window, same free online process.
Under RB-IOS 2026, the RBI Ombudsman can award you up to Rs 30 lakh for any consequential financial loss caused by the deficiency in service. This is separate from the disputed amount, which has no cap at all. On top of that, the Ombudsman can give you up to Rs 3 lakh for your lost time, the expenses you spent chasing the issue, and the harassment or mental stress you faced.
The scheme covers complaints against:
If your problem is with any of these regulated entities, you have one common door to knock on. You do not need to find a different ombudsman for banks, wallets, or NBFCs. It is one scheme for all of them.
You cannot jump straight to the Ombudsman. You must first give your bank or company a chance to fix the problem. Follow these steps in order.
There is no fee at any stage. The proceedings are summary in nature, which means they are quick and not bound by strict court-like rules of evidence.
The single ground for complaint is “deficiency in service” by the regulated entity. In plain words, the company did not give you the service it was supposed to. Common examples include:
You can complain whether or not the deficiency caused you a money loss.
The Ombudsman will reject or not consider complaints in certain cases. Knowing these saves your time.
If your complaint is outside the scheme, the Ombudsman will tell you. You can then use the right forum, such as the consumer court.
Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak, a retired teacher, had Rs 40,000 wrongly debited by his bank for a failed online payment in March 2026. He complained to the bank in writing and kept the reference number. The bank did not reverse the money even after 30 days. So in May 2026 he filed free on https://cms.rbi.org.in, attaching his bank complaint and statements. He asked for the wrongly debited amount plus compensation for the weeks of stress and the calls he made. The Ombudsman reviewed the proof, the bank could not justify the debit, and Dr. Pathak got his Rs 40,000 back along with a small compensation for his time and harassment. He paid nothing for the process. This example is illustrative and shows how the steps work in practice.
The RBI Ombudsman is the fast route, but the Right to Information Act 2005 is a useful backup. Banks that are public sector are public authorities, so you can file an RTI to ask for your complaint records, the action taken, and internal notes. This builds proof for your Ombudsman case. Read the RTI Act 2005 to understand your rights. To draft a clean RTI quickly, use the AI RTI Drafter. If a public authority ignores your RTI, the First Appeal Builder helps you escalate. For the full method of using RTI to solve real problems, see The RTI Playbook.
It comes into force on 1 July 2026. RBI notified it on 16 January 2026. Complaints filed before 1 July 2026 stay under the old 2021 scheme.
You can get up to Rs 30 lakh for consequential financial loss, plus up to Rs 3 lakh for your time, expenses, and harassment. The disputed amount itself has no upper cap.
Yes. You must first complain in writing to the bank, NBFC, wallet, or credit bureau. Only after 30 days with no fix, or after a rejection, can you approach the Ombudsman.
File free online at the CMS portal, https://cms.rbi.org.in. You can also send it by email or post to the Centralised Receipt and Processing Centre of RBI at Chandigarh.
No. Filing and the whole process are completely free of cost.
You must file within 90 days of the bank reply, or 90 days from when the entity's response deadline expired, whichever is later.
Banks, eligible NBFCs, non-bank prepaid wallet and card issuers, and credit information companies that maintain credit scores.
It will not take pure business decisions, vendor or staff disputes, matters in court, services RBI does not regulate, or complaints filed without first going to the entity.
Yes. Apart from the Rs 30 lakh for financial loss, the Ombudsman can award up to Rs 3 lakh for your lost time, expenses, and harassment.
By email to the Centralised Receipt and Processing Centre, or by post to the CRPC of RBI at Chandigarh. Online filing at https://cms.rbi.org.in is the easiest way.