Do you actually need to visit the branch? Usually a self-declaration from home is enough.
If your bank texted you to “update KYC or your account will be frozen,” you can almost always handle it from your phone. Under the Reserve Bank of India's updated KYC Master Direction of 28 November 2025, a periodic re-KYC with no change or only an address change can be done by a simple self-declaration, and Aadhaar is not mandatory.
If you are short on time: jump to the step list below, “How to complete periodic re-KYC from home.” For most people, one self-declaration message settles it.
Every year banks flag a large number of accounts for periodic KYC update, and the reminder messages frighten people into thinking they must rush to a branch with a stack of documents. That fear is what scammers exploit too. The Reserve Bank of India consolidated and updated its Know Your Customer (KYC) Master Direction on 28 November 2025, including the sector-specific KYC directions for commercial banks, to make the routine update easier and to stop arbitrary account freezes.
The headline for an ordinary customer is simple. If nothing has changed since your last KYC, or only your address has changed, you do not need fresh documents and you do not need Aadhaar. A declaration is enough, and the bank has a fixed clock to act on it.
An Officially Valid Document (OVD) is the standing RBI definition. Any one of these works:
You choose which OVD to give. A bank cannot insist on Aadhaar when you offer another valid OVD from this list. For deeper help on document mismatches, see common KYC problems and how to fix them and how to fix a PAN and Aadhaar name mismatch.
A freeze for KYC is not the end of the matter. Work through these steps in order.
For the full escalation route, read the banking ombudsman complaint guide. And before you act on any “urgent KYC” message, check how the fake KYC update scam works so you do not hand details to a fraudster. For a deeper grounding in how RTI works, see The RTI Playbook.
No. The Reserve Bank of India's updated KYC Master Direction of 28 November 2025 re-emphasises that Aadhaar is not mandatory. You may use any Officially Valid Document, such as a passport, driving licence, or voter ID. Aadhaar is one option among several, and the bank cannot force it on you when you offer another valid OVD.
Yes, in most cases. If nothing has changed or only your address has changed, you can submit a self-declaration by email, registered mobile number, ATM, internet or mobile banking, or a letter. The bank must update your record within two months. A branch visit is needed only if your bank requires full re-verification, and even then you can usually use the Video-based Customer Identification Process from home.
It is a simple statement to your bank confirming there is no change in your KYC details, or giving your new address if only that changed. You do not attach fresh documents for a “no change” or “address-only” update. Send it through any allowed channel and keep the acknowledgement. The bank then has two months to update your record.
First, write to your bank's grievance channel and ask, in writing, for the exact reason. Quote the date you submitted your KYC. The bank cannot reject a KYC update without proper application of mind. If it is not resolved in 30 days or the reply is unsatisfactory, escalate to the RBI Ombudsman under RB-IOS, which is free and online.
V-CIP is the Video-based Customer Identification Process. A bank officer verifies you live over a video call while you show an Officially Valid Document. You need it when the bank wants to re-verify your identity, not just confirm “no change.” It is permitted for both new and existing customers and removes the need to visit a branch.