A cheque in India is valid for three months from the date written on it. After that it goes “stale” and your bank will refuse to pay it, so you must ask the drawer for a fresh cheque. This single rule, set by the Reserve Bank of India and in force since 1 April 2012, decides whether the paper in your hand is still money or just a useless slip.
⚡ Quick answer: A cheque, demand draft, pay order or banker's cheque is valid for 3 months from the date on the instrument. Present it within that window. A post-dated cheque cannot be paid before the date it carries. A bounced cheque can lead to a criminal case under Section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881.
Bankers once honoured cheques presented within six months. The Reserve Bank of India cut this to three months because instruments were circulating “in the market like cash” for half a year. The rule sits in RBI circular DBOD.AML BC.No.47/14.01.001/2011-12 dated 4 November 2011 (RBI/2011-12/251), issued under Section 35A of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949.
The circular directs that with effect from 1 April 2012, banks should not pay any cheque, demand draft, pay order or banker's cheque presented beyond three months from the date it bears. The clock runs from the date on the face of the instrument, not the day you received it.
A “stale” cheque is one presented after its three-month life has expired. Your bank's clearing system simply rejects it. There is no penalty on you for trying, but you gain nothing and lose time.
| Situation | Cheque status | What you should do |
|---|---|---|
| Cheque dated within last 3 months | ✅ Valid | Deposit normally |
| Cheque dated 3+ months ago | ❌ Stale | Ask drawer for a fresh cheque |
| Cheque with a future date | ⏳ Post-dated | Wait, then present within 3 months of that date |
| No date written at all | ⚠️ Incomplete | Return to drawer to date and sign |
The fix for a stale cheque is never to argue with the bank. It is to go back to the person or company that issued it and request a replacement. Salary, refund and dividend cheques that arrive late are the usual culprits, so act before three months slip by.
A post-dated cheque carries a date in the future. It is a valid instrument, but it is not payable before that date. This is the general principle under the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881: an instrument payable on a fixed future day cannot be demanded earlier.
If you bank a PDC too soon, the bank should not pay it before its date. If a bank does clear it early, that is an error: you can complain in writing, ask for reversal, and escalate to the bank's grievance cell and then the RBI Ombudsman if the bank does not fix it.
PDCs are common in EMIs, rent, vendor payments and advance deals. Two practical rules keep you safe:
If a cheque is presented in time and bounces for insufficient funds or because it exceeds an arrangement, the drawer can face criminal liability under Section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881. The payee must send a demand notice within 30 days and the drawer gets 15 days to pay. We cover the notice, timelines and defences in detail in our dedicated guide: Defending a cheque bounce (Section 138) case.
For higher-value cheques, the RBI's Positive Pay System (PPS), live since 1 January 2021, asks the issuer to confirm key cheque details with the bank before clearing. Banks enable it for cheques of ₹50,000 and above. If confirmation is missing, clearing can be delayed or the cheque rejected. If your valid cheque is held back under PPS, see how to dispute a Positive Pay rejection.
A salaried worker in Pune receives a ₹40,000 settlement cheque dated 5 January. He misplaces it and finds it on 20 April, past three months. His bank returns it as stale. He emails the employer's HR, attaches a scan, and asks for a fresh cheque. A new cheque dated that week clears in two days. No fee, no penalty, just a fresh date.
| Item | Detail |
|---|---|
| Cheque validity | 3 months from instrument date |
| Earlier validity | 6 months (until 31 March 2012) |
| Effective date of 3-month rule | 1 April 2012 |
| Governing RBI circular | DBOD.AML BC.No.47/14.01.001/2011-12 |
| Positive Pay threshold | ₹50,000 and above |
| Bounce law | Section 138, NI Act 1881 |
No. RBI directs banks not to pay any cheque, draft, pay order or banker's cheque presented beyond three months from its date. The cheque is treated as stale and returned unpaid.
It cannot be banked, but the underlying debt does not vanish. You simply ask the drawer for a fresh, currently dated cheque or another mode of payment.
You should not. A post-dated cheque is not payable before the date it carries. If a bank clears it early, that is an error you can dispute in writing with the bank.
Yes. The same RBI direction covers cheques, demand drafts, pay orders and banker's cheques. All become stale three months after the date on the instrument.
A cheque that bounces for insufficient funds can lead to a criminal case under Section 138 of the NI Act, 1881, after a proper demand notice. See our cheque bounce defence guide for the full procedure.
Bank deposits are insured up to ₹5 lakh per depositor per bank. See our guide on the DICGC deposit insurance claim procedure.
Reviewed for accuracy. Prepared with guidance from Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak and Kashvi Pathak.