CIBIL score check and free credit report — citizen guide 2026

How to check your CIBIL score and free credit report in 2026 — RTI Wiki citizen guide

Quick answer. You are entitled to one free full credit report every calendar year from EACH of India's four RBI-licensed bureaus - TransUnion CIBIL, Experian, Equifax and CRIF High Mark - under RBI circular DBR.CID.BC.No.10/20.16.042/2016-17 (effective 1 January 2017). Pull all four, read the 300-900 score, and check every account and enquiry line. Since 26 April 2024 the bureau must SMS or email you whenever a lender pulls your report. Spot a wrong entry? You can dispute it free and claim Rs 100 per day if it is not fixed in 30 days. This is a citizen guidance page - not an official government, regulator, bank, or bureau page.

Most Indians first see their CIBIL score on the day a loan is rejected. By then it is too late to fix anything before the decision. The smarter move is to check your own report first, for free, before you ever apply - and the law gives you the right to do exactly that, four times over.

What a credit score and credit report actually are

A credit score is a three-digit number between 300 and 900 that a credit bureau computes from your borrowing and repayment history. Lenders read it in seconds to decide whether to lend, how much, and at what interest rate. A Credit Information Report (CIR) is the full file behind that number - your personal details, every loan and credit card, the month-by-month repayment record, and every enquiry made on your file.

India has exactly four RBI-licensed Credit Information Companies (CICs), all governed by the Credit Information Companies (Regulation) Act, 2005 (CICRA): TransUnion CIBIL, Experian India, Equifax India, and CRIF High Mark. Your lenders may report to one, some, or all four - so the four reports are not identical, and an error can sit in one bureau while the others look clean.

Your right to ONE free full report a year - from each bureau

This is the entitlement most people never use. Under RBI circular DBR.CID.BC.No.10/20.16.042/2016-17 dated 1 September 2016, effective 1 January 2017, every CIC must give each individual one free full credit report (FFCR), including the score, once per calendar year on request, in electronic form.

Four bureaus, one free report each = four free pulls every year. Pulling your own report is a “soft enquiry” and never lowers your score. The RBI also told the bureaus to put a clearly visible, dedicated free-report button on their websites.

Bureau Free annual report at
TransUnion CIBIL cibil.com/freecreditscore
Experian India experian.in
Equifax India equifax.co.in
CRIF High Mark crifhighmark.com

How to check your CIBIL score free - the channels

  1. The bureau's own free annual report. Go to the bureau website, click the free-report button, authenticate with your PAN, date of birth and an OTP to your registered mobile, and download the FFCR. This is the one guaranteed-free full report per bureau per year.
  2. Your bank or lender app. Most banks (HDFC, ICICI, SBI YONO, Axis, Kotak and others) and many NBFCs show a free CIBIL or Experian score inside net-banking or their app. These are usually refreshed monthly and are genuinely free - but they show the score and a summary, not always the full account-level report.
  3. Aggregator and fintech apps. Several apps display a free score. Treat the number as a useful monitor, but always cross-check the full report on the bureau's own site before you act on it, and avoid any app that asks for a fee to “see your score”.
  4. Paid on-demand reports. Beyond your one free annual pull, each bureau sells additional reports or subscriptions. You rarely need these - the free annual pull plus your bank-app score covers most people.

Stagger them. Pull one bureau every quarter - CIBIL in January, Experian in April, Equifax in July, CRIF in October - and you get a free, almost-continuous view of your credit health across all four, all year, for Rs 0.

How to read your report - score bands and the four factors

The 300-900 scale, in plain terms:

  • 750-900 - excellent. Best approval odds and the lowest interest rates.
  • 650-749 - good to fair. Approvals likely, but terms may be tighter.
  • 550-649 - weak. Expect rejections or steep interest premiums.
  • 300-549 - poor. Most regulated lenders will decline.

Lenders broadly treat 750+ as a strong score. The number is driven by four things: payment history (paying every EMI and card bill on time is the single biggest factor), credit utilisation (how much of your card limit you use - keep it low), credit mix and age (a healthy blend of secured and unsecured loans, held long), and enquiries (too many fresh loan applications in a short window drags the score). For the deep “how to rebuild a damaged score” playbook, see Credit Score Damaged? Repair Playbook 2026.

When your score updates - the new fortnightly rule

Your score is not live - it moves when lenders report your data to the bureaus. Under RBI circular DoR.FIN.REC.No.32/2024-25 dated 8 August 2024, effective 1 January 2025, lenders must now report borrower data fortnightly - on the 15th and the last day of every month - instead of the old monthly cycle, and the bureau must ingest it within a few days. So a payment you make today can show up in two to six weeks, not two months. If you cleared a default or closed a loan, wait one or two reporting cycles before you panic - then check.

The enquiry alert - your built-in fraud tripwire

Since 26 April 2024, under RBI's customer-service direction (circular RBI/2023-24/72 dated 26 October 2023), every bureau must send you an SMS or email whenever a lender accesses your credit report - provided your mobile number or email is on file with the bureau and the enquiry reflects in your CIR.

Treat these alerts as a free fraud tripwire. If you get an enquiry alert for a loan or card you never applied for, someone may be using your PAN. Pull the full report immediately, find the unauthorised account or enquiry, and dispute it. Keeping your mobile and email updated at all four bureaus is the cheapest identity-theft alarm you will ever install.

Real-life example - Kashvi Pathak caught it before the loan

Kashvi Pathak, 29, marketing manager, Pune. Planning a home-loan application in 2026.

“I had read that you get one free CIBIL report a year, so before applying I just pulled mine in January - free, on cibil.com, took five minutes with my PAN and an OTP. Score 791, fine. But two weeks later my phone buzzed: an SMS alert that a finance company in another city had pulled my credit report. I had applied for nothing. I logged in, pulled the full report, and there it was - a fresh hard enquiry for a personal loan I never made, on my PAN. I raised a free online dispute that night flagging the unauthorised enquiry and froze nothing else. Because I caught it from the alert and not from a rejection, the bad enquiry was sorted in under three weeks and my score was never dragged down. The whole thing cost me nothing. If I had waited until the bank ran my file, that phantom loan could have become a default in my name.”

—Kashvi, 2026

The lesson: the free annual report plus the enquiry SMS alert let Kashvi find a problem before it cost her a loan - the exact opposite of finding out at the rejection desk.

Found a wrong entry? How to dispute it (in brief)

If your report shows an error - a loan you closed still marked active, a default that is not yours, a “settled” status when you paid in full, or an account you never opened - you have a strong, time-bound legal right to get it corrected, free.

  1. Pull the full report from the bureau that holds the error and circle the exact wrong line (account number, DPD, outstanding, or status).
  2. Raise a free online dispute on that bureau's portal. The bureau forwards it to your lender, the lender investigates, and the bureau updates your report.
  3. Mind the 30-day clock. Under RBI circular RBI/2023-24/72 (effective 26 April 2024), the lender has 21 days and the bureau 9 days - 30 days total. If your dispute is not resolved within 30 calendar days, you are entitled to Rs 100 per day of further delay as compensation.
  4. Escalate if ignored - to the lender's nodal/grievance officer, then to the RBI Ombudsman via the Complaint Management System at cms.rbi.org.in (helpline 14448).

This page deliberately keeps the dispute summary short. For the full step-by-step dispute walkthrough, bureau-by-bureau portals, draft complaint letters and case law, use the dedicated guides below:

Common mistakes when checking your score

  • Never pulling the other three bureaus. People check only CIBIL and assume the rest match. An error in Experian, Equifax or CRIF can still sink a loan that lender pulls from.
  • Paying for what is free. Your one annual FFCR per bureau is free by law. Never pay an app or agent to “show your score”.
  • Confusing a soft pull with a hard one. Checking your own report (soft enquiry) never lowers your score. Only lender-initiated hard enquiries do.
  • Ignoring the enquiry SMS. An alert for a loan you did not apply for is a fraud signal - act on it the same day.
  • Panicking before a reporting cycle passes. After a payment or closure, wait one or two fortnightly cycles before assuming the bureau got it wrong.

Sources

  • RBI - Free Annual Credit Report to Individuals, circular DBR.CID.BC.No.10/20.16.042/2016-17 (1 Sept 2016): rbi.org.in notification
  • RBI - Strengthening of Customer Service by CICs and CIs, circular RBI/2023-24/72 (26 Oct 2023, w.e.f. 26 Apr 2024): rbi.org.in notification
  • RBI - Frequency of reporting of credit information, circular DoR.FIN.REC.No.32/20.16.056/2024-25 (8 Aug 2024, w.e.f. 1 Jan 2025): rbi.org.in notification
  • Credit Information Companies (Regulation) Act, 2005 (CICRA): indiacode.nic.in
  • TransUnion CIBIL - free credit score: cibil.com/freecreditscore

Frequently asked questions

How can I check my CIBIL score completely free in 2026?

Pull your one free full credit report per calendar year directly from each bureau's website (CIBIL, Experian, Equifax, CRIF High Mark) using your PAN and an OTP. Most banks also show a free score inside their app, refreshed monthly.

How many free credit reports am I entitled to each year?

One free full report per calendar year from each of the four RBI-licensed bureaus - so four free pulls a year in total, under RBI circular DBR.CID.BC.No.10/20.16.042/2016-17, effective 1 January 2017.

Does checking my own CIBIL score lower it?

No. Checking your own report is a “soft enquiry” and never affects your score. Only hard enquiries - when a lender pulls your file for a new loan or card - can have a small effect.

What is a good CIBIL score?

The scale runs 300 to 900. Lenders broadly treat 750 and above as strong, 650-749 as good to fair, and below 650 as weak. The higher the score, the better your approval odds and interest rate.

Why is my CIBIL score different across the four bureaus?

Because lenders do not report to every bureau, and they report at slightly different times. Each bureau computes its own score from the data it holds, so the numbers - and any errors - can differ.

How often is my CIBIL score updated?

Since 1 January 2025, lenders must report your data fortnightly - on the 15th and last day of each month - under RBI circular DoR.FIN.REC.No.32/2024-25. A payment usually reflects within two to six weeks.

I got an SMS that a lender checked my credit report but I did not apply for anything. What should I do?

Since 26 April 2024 bureaus must alert you on every enquiry. An alert for a loan you never applied for can signal PAN misuse. Pull your full report at once, find the unauthorised account or enquiry, and raise a free dispute.

I found a wrong entry. How long does the bureau get to fix it?

Thirty calendar days - the lender gets 21 and the bureau 9. If it is not resolved within 30 days, RBI circular RBI/2023-24/72 entitles you to Rs 100 per day of further delay as compensation.

Do I have to pay to dispute a wrong entry?

No. Raising a dispute on any of the four bureau portals is free. Avoid agents or “credit repair” services that charge thousands - you can do the entire process yourself for Rs 0.

Where do I escalate if the bureau ignores my dispute?

First to the lender's nodal or grievance officer, then to the RBI Ombudsman through the Complaint Management System at cms.rbi.org.in or the helpline 14448.

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