Your washing machine went in for a noisy drum and came back with a cracked control panel. Your fridge was kept at the service centre for three weeks for a gas top up and the compressor now hums louder than before. The technician swapped a “burnt” PCB without telling you, the bill jumped from the quoted ₹1,800 to ₹6,400, and the centre refuses any warranty on the work. This guide gives you a 30 minute action plan, an evidence checklist, the legal route under the Consumer Protection Act 2019 and the Legal Metrology Act 2009, and the full complaint ladder from company grievance to NCH 1915 to e-Daakhil. It covers both authorised brand service centres and local neighbourhood repair vendors.
The pattern is the same whether you call the brand toll free number or the shop two lanes away. A technician visits, opens the appliance, declares a part “gone”, and either takes the appliance away or insists you wait for a “company part”. Days turn into weeks. When the appliance comes back it has fresh scratches, a missing screw cover, a panel that does not click shut, or a new noise that was not there before. The invoice lists parts you cannot verify, labour at rates you never agreed to, and a “service charge” that no one mentioned during the first call.
This is not a one off. The Consumer Affairs Ministry data tabled in Parliament in 2024 shows that “service of household appliances” sits in the top five complaint categories on the National Consumer Helpline year after year, alongside e commerce, telecom, banking and electricity. The complaints cluster into six recurring buckets:
The law treats every one of these as a “deficiency in service” under §2(11) of the Consumer Protection Act 2019. You do not need to prove intent. You only need to show that the service fell short of what a reasonable consumer would expect, and that you suffered loss because of it.
Before you do anything else, spend half an hour locking down your position. This window matters because service centres routinely tell customers a week later that “the appliance was already like that when you brought it in”.
Minute 0 to 10. Photograph everything as it stands now.
Take 12 to 15 photos of the appliance from every angle, including the serial number sticker, the model number, the inside of the drum or fridge, the back panel and any visible damage. Shoot a 30 second video that pans across the appliance in one continuous take so timestamps and EXIF data are intact. Photograph the job sheet, the bill, the technician's visiting card and any WhatsApp chat with the service centre.
Minute 10 to 20. Get the story in writing.
Open WhatsApp or email and send the service centre a polite, factual message. Example: “I am writing to record that my [brand] washing machine, model [X], serial [Y], was given for repair on [date] for [fault]. It was returned on [date] with [list the new damage] which was not there earlier. The bill of ₹[amount] includes parts I did not approve. Please share the itemised breakup, the old parts that were replaced, and your grievance officer's contact.” Save the delivery and read receipts. If they call instead of replying in writing, send a follow up message summarising what they said.
Minute 20 to 30. Pull the warranty card and the invoice of the appliance itself.
Find your purchase invoice, warranty card, and any extended warranty or AMC document. Note whether the appliance is still under the original 12 or 24 month brand warranty, under an extended warranty, or out of warranty. This decides which ladder you climb first. Also note the date you first reported the fault, because the “clock” for deficiency in service starts from there, not from the day you finally lost patience.
If you do these three things in the first half hour, you walk into every later conversation with a timestamped record. Service centres back down fast when they realise the customer has a paper trail.
Use this list as a printable tick sheet. The first six items are the bare minimum to file any complaint. The rest strengthen your case and increase the compensation a District Commission is likely to award.
If the appliance was kept at the service centre for more than seven days, also ask for the “in centre log” or “workshop register entry”. Authorised centres are required by brand policy to maintain this. Most will not share it voluntarily, but the moment you cite “Consumer Protection Act 2019 §2(11)” in a written request, the tone shifts.
Three statutes do most of the heavy lifting for appliance repair complaints in India.
Consumer Protection Act 2019. §2(11) defines “deficiency” to include any fault, imperfection, shortcoming or inadequacy in the quality, nature and manner of performance which is required to be maintained. §2(47) defines “unfair trade practice” to include charging for goods or services in excess of the agreed price, and §2(9) lists six consumer rights including the right to be informed and the right to be heard. Under §35, you can file before the District Commission where you live or where the cause of action arose. The pecuniary limit for the District Commission is up to ₹50 lakh, which covers every household appliance repair dispute. There is no court fee for claims up to ₹5 lakh.
Legal Metrology Act 2009 and Legal Metrology (Packaged Commodities) Rules 2011. If the spare part sold to you came in a sealed pack, it must carry the MRP, the importer or manufacturer name, the net quantity, the month and year of manufacture or import, and a consumer care address. Charging above the printed MRP is an offence under §36 of the Act. The same applies to consumables sold during repair, such as filters, gas cylinders for fridge re gas, or branded detergent boxes some brands push during washing machine service.
Central Consumer Protection Authority (Prevention of Misleading Advertisements and Dark Patterns) Guidelines 2023. The CCPA notification dated 30 November 2023 lists thirteen “dark patterns” including “drip pricing”, “bait and switch” and “false urgency”. A service centre that quotes ₹1,800 on the phone and bills ₹6,400 after opening the appliance, or one that tells you “this part will be unavailable next week, replace now”, is squarely inside the dark patterns net. The CCPA can act suo motu and impose penalties up to ₹10 lakh for a first offence and ₹50 lakh for a repeat offence under §21 of the Consumer Protection Act.
For invoice and measurement disputes the Legal Metrology route is faster than the consumer commission, because the Controller of Legal Metrology in your state can issue a notice within days. For service deficiency the Consumer Commission via e-Daakhil is the right forum, because it can award compensation for mental agony and loss of use of the appliance, which Legal Metrology cannot.
If the technician forged a part number, swapped a genuine part for a refurbished one and passed it off as new, or charged for parts that were never installed, the conduct crosses into “cheating” under §318 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita 2023 and “criminal breach of trust” under §316 of the BNS. The procedure for filing such a complaint sits under the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita 2023. But criminal complaints are a last resort and almost never necessary. Ninety five percent of appliance disputes are resolved at the company grievance or NCH 1915 stage.
Climb the ladder in this order. Do not skip rungs, because every higher forum will ask “did you give the company a chance to fix this”.
Every company that sells goods or services in India is required under §5 of the Consumer Protection (E Commerce) Rules 2020 to display the name, designation and contact of a grievance officer who must acknowledge a complaint within 48 hours and resolve it within 30 days. For appliance brands, the grievance officer details sit on the “Contact us” or “Investor relations” page of the company website, often in small print at the bottom. Write a single email summarising the facts, attach the photos, and quote §5 of the 2020 Rules along with §2(11) of the 2019 Act. Keep it under 300 words. Ask for a specific remedy: free re repair, refund of the inflated portion of the bill, or replacement of the damaged panel.
For a local repair shop without a “grievance officer”, send the same letter to the shop owner by registered post AD. Indian post office's “Speed Post” with tracking works equally well and costs about ₹40. The acknowledgement card you receive back is gold standard proof of service.
If the company does not respond in seven days, escalate to NCH. The helpline is run by the Department of Consumer Affairs and operates in 17 languages from 8 am to 8 pm. You can call 1915, use the NCH app, WhatsApp 8800001915, or file online at consumerhelpline.gov.in. NCH registers your complaint, assigns a docket number and forwards it to the company's “convergence partner” desk. Many large appliance brands have signed convergence MoUs with NCH, which means a dedicated team at the company head office must respond within 15 days. The dashboard at consumeraffairs.gov.in publishes quarterly resolution rates for each company. Brands hate ranking low on this list, so escalation through NCH often moves cases that the regular customer care ignored. See the NCH 1915 walkthrough for the exact script and dashboard tour.
If the dispute is about spare parts billed above MRP, missing MRP labels, or short measurement of gas or refrigerant, file a parallel complaint with the Controller of Legal Metrology in your state. Most states have a “Legal Metrology” portal under the Department of Food Civil Supplies and Consumer Affairs. Attach photos of the sealed pack, the bill, and the spare part. The Controller can summon the service centre within 14 days and impose a fine of up to ₹25,000 for a first offence under §36 of the Legal Metrology Act 2009.
If 30 days have passed since the company grievance email with no acceptable resolution, file at edaakhil.nic.in. The portal lets you submit the complaint, attach evidence, pay the court fee online (zero for claims up to ₹5 lakh), and track hearings. The District Commission must dispose of the case within three months if no expert evidence is needed and five months if expert evidence is needed, under §38(7) of the 2019 Act. In practice it takes six to twelve months, which is still far faster than civil courts. Compensation typically includes refund or repair cost, ₹5,000 to ₹50,000 for mental agony, and ₹2,000 to ₹10,000 in litigation costs. See the e-Daakhil filing walkthrough for the field by field guide.
Reserve the police station for cases where the technician installed a refurbished part and represented it as new, sold a fake compressor or PCB with a forged serial number, or pocketed money for parts that were never installed. File a written complaint citing §318 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita 2023 (cheating) and where applicable §336 BNS (forgery). If the station refuses to register an FIR, send the same complaint by speed post to the Superintendent of Police under §173(4) BNSS 2023, which mandates registration of cognisable offences. The criminal route does not replace the consumer commission. Run both in parallel.
Use this template as a starting point. Replace the bracketed text. Send by email and by registered post.
To,
The Grievance Officer
[Brand or Service Centre Name]
[Address]
Subject: Deficiency in service and damage caused during repair of
[appliance model and serial number] under §2(11) of the Consumer
Protection Act 2019. Job sheet number [XXXX] dated [DD MM 2026].
Sir or Madam,
1. I purchased a [brand and model] [washing machine or refrigerator]
on [date of invoice] from [dealer name] for ₹[amount]. A copy of
the invoice is attached.
2. On [date], I reported a fault, namely [describe fault] and
booked a service request bearing job sheet number [XXXX].
3. Your technician [name] visited on [date] and took the appliance
to your workshop on [date]. The appliance was returned on [date],
that is [N] days later.
4. On return, the following new damage was visible, none of which was
present before drop off:
a. [list damage 1]
b. [list damage 2]
c. [list damage 3]
5. The bill issued is ₹[amount]. The verbal estimate given on [date]
over call recording number [X] was ₹[amount]. The bill includes
the following parts which I did not approve in writing:
a. [part 1] charged at ₹[amount]
b. [part 2] charged at ₹[amount]
6. You have neither shown me the old parts that were allegedly
replaced nor offered any warranty on the present repair.
7. This conduct amounts to deficiency in service under §2(11) and an
unfair trade practice under §2(47) of the Consumer Protection Act
2019. The pricing above the agreed estimate also attracts §2(47)(ii)
on charging in excess of the price displayed or agreed.
8. I therefore call upon you to, within 15 days:
a. Refund ₹[amount], being the difference between the verbal
estimate and the final bill.
b. Replace or repair the damage at [list damage] at no cost.
c. Provide a written warranty of at least 90 days on the present
repair.
d. Return the old parts that were replaced, with serial numbers.
9. If I do not receive a satisfactory reply within 15 days from the
date of receipt of this letter, I will be compelled to:
a. File a complaint before the District Consumer Disputes
Redressal Commission via e-Daakhil for refund, replacement,
compensation for mental agony and litigation costs.
b. Report the matter to the National Consumer Helpline 1915 and
to the Central Consumer Protection Authority for action under
the Dark Patterns Guidelines 2023.
c. Lodge a complaint with the Controller of Legal Metrology for
MRP and invoicing violations under §36 of the Legal Metrology
Act 2009, if applicable.
Yours faithfully,
[Name]
[Address]
[Phone and email]
[Date]
Enclosures: Purchase invoice, job sheet, photographs (12), WhatsApp
trail (4 pages), final bill, warranty card.
Yes. The Consumer Protection Act 2019 applies to any “service” rendered for consideration, whether the provider is a multinational brand or a one room shop in your lane. §2(42) defines “service” broadly and §2(37) defines “service provider” to include any person who provides a service. The District Commission will issue notice to the proprietor of the shop in his personal capacity if the shop is not registered as a company. Many citizens hesitate because the shop is “local”. The law makes no such distinction.
Send one written message to the service centre asking for the workshop log entry, the diagnosis report and a written delivery date. Mark a copy to the brand grievance officer and to nationalconsumerhelpline at nic dot in. If you do not hear back within 48 hours, file a complaint on the NCH portal citing §2(11) deficiency in service and “non return of goods entrusted for repair”. For appliances kept beyond 30 days you can also claim “loss of use” in any subsequent commission filing, typically computed as the rental cost of an equivalent appliance for the period of detention.
No. Replacing a part without consent and then billing for it is squarely an unfair trade practice under §2(47) of the Consumer Protection Act 2019. The technician must obtain your written or electronic consent, preferably on the job sheet, before replacing any part. If your job sheet does not have a “customer consent for parts replacement” column, write on the bottom yourself: “No part to be replaced without my written approval over WhatsApp.” Sign and date it. Take a photo. This single line shifts the burden of proof to the service centre.
Pay the verbal estimate amount and contest the rest in writing. Do not refuse the entire bill, because that gives the service centre a counter argument that you “refused to pay”. Pay ₹2,000 by UPI with the note “Towards agreed estimate. Balance disputed.” Then write a complaint to the grievance officer asking for the itemised breakup, MRP proof for any sealed parts, and a corrected invoice. If they do not provide it within 15 days, escalate to NCH and Legal Metrology Controller. The 2023 Dark Patterns Guidelines list “drip pricing” specifically, and the CCPA can act even without your individual complaint.
No, unless the new fault is genuinely unrelated to the earlier repair. Any reputable service practice gives a minimum 30 to 90 day warranty on the work. The absence of a written warranty does not mean you have no rights. The Consumer Protection Act 2019 reads in an “implied warranty of workmanlike service” through §2(11) and §2(47). Send a written demand for free re repair under deficiency in service. If the service centre insists on a fresh charge, refuse, and escalate. Get a second opinion from another technician on whether the new fault is connected to the earlier repair, and attach the second opinion to your complaint.
Yes, for personal evidentiary use. Indian law treats one party recording, where you are a participant in the call, as legal. Section 65B of the Evidence Act 1872, now §63 of the Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam 2023, prescribes the certification required for electronic evidence in court. Practically, save the recording with date stamp, write a one paragraph certificate identifying the device and how the recording was made, and sign it. That meets the §63 requirement for District Commission proceedings.
Both, in sequence. NCH 1915 is a conciliation forum, not an adjudicator. It writes to the company on your behalf and pushes for a settlement. Use it as the bridge between your written grievance and a formal commission filing. If NCH conciliation fails or the company sends a “case closed” reply without resolving your issue, take the NCH docket number to e-Daakhil and file before the District Commission. Commissions look favourably on complainants who tried the conciliation route first.
Three heads, awarded in most cases:
Punitive damages under §39(1)(d) of the 2019 Act are possible for “wanton” conduct but rare in first time complaints. A reported 2024 District Commission order from Bengaluru awarded ₹62,000 against a brand for a washing machine kept for 47 days and returned with a cracked door, broken down as ₹18,000 refund, ₹40,000 mental agony and ₹4,000 costs.
Yes, in two ways. First, the AMC contract is itself a “service” under the Consumer Protection Act 2019, so any breach of its terms is independently actionable. Second, AMC contracts usually specify response times, free visits per year, and parts coverage. Cite the exact clause in your complaint. Many AMC providers add an arbitration clause in fine print. The Supreme Court has held in Emaar MGF Land Ltd v Aftab Singh (2018) that arbitration clauses cannot oust the jurisdiction of consumer forums, so your right to go to the District Commission survives any arbitration clause.
This is the one situation that justifies a police complaint in addition to the consumer route. Get a second technician to certify in writing that the part is refurbished, ideally with photographs of the serial number, the casing condition, and any obvious signs of prior use. File a written complaint at the local police station under §318 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita 2023 for cheating, and where the serial number was tampered with, also §336 BNS for forgery. Simultaneously file at e-Daakhil. Both forums can run in parallel. The criminal complaint also tends to accelerate settlement, because companies prefer to refund rather than face an FIR.
A wide cinematic photograph in the Apple liquid glass green palette, showing a stainless steel washing machine and a tall refrigerator side by side in a middle class Indian kitchen. The washing machine front panel is slightly ajar with a faint scratch visible. A clipboard with a job sheet rests on top of the fridge. Soft morning light from a window on the left. Shallow depth of field. No people. No brand logos. Cool green and white tones, with a single warm amber tag on the clipboard reading “JOB CARD”. Photorealistic, 1200 by 630, 16:9.
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