CIBIL Score Dispute and Correction 2026

Step-by-step guide to disputing a wrong CIBIL or credit bureau entry in 2026, showing four bureau dispute portals and the RBI 30-day compensation rule.

Quick answer. Under RBI circular RBI/2023-24/72 (effective 26 April 2024), you can raise a free online dispute with any of India's four licensed credit bureaus. If your complaint is not corrected within 30 calendar days, you are entitled to Rs 100 per day compensation. This is a citizen guidance page - it is not an official government, regulator, bank, or insurance page.

For the full legal background and case-law on disputing a wrong credit score, see dispute CIBIL credit score 2026.

Why your error may be in more than one bureau

India has four RBI-licensed Credit Information Companies (CICs): TransUnion CIBIL, Experian India, Equifax India, and CRIF High Mark. Your lender may report to one, some, or all four. A wrong DPD (Days Past Due) entry, a loan shown as outstanding after closure, or a name/PAN mismatch can sit in any or all of them without the others correcting it automatically.

RBI requires each bureau to provide one free full credit report per calendar year. Checking all four before you dispute is the only way to know exactly where the error lives.

The RBI 30-day rule and Rs 100/day compensation

RBI circular RBI/2023-24/72 (DoR.FIN.REC.48/20.16.003/2023-24), dated 26 October 2023 and effective 26 April 2024, created a mandatory compensation framework:

  • The credit institution (CI - your bank or NBFC) has 21 calendar days from your complaint to send corrected data to the bureau.
  • The credit information company (CIC - the bureau itself) has a total of 30 calendar days from the date you filed the complaint to close it.
  • If the complaint is not resolved within 30 days, the CIC must pay you Rs 100 per calendar day for every additional day of delay.
  • Compensation is credited within five working days of resolution.
  • Where multiple lenders or bureaus share blame, liability is split proportionately among them.

This rule applies to disputes filed on or after 26 April 2024. Disputes closed before that date are not covered.

What is excluded: disputes about credit-score calculation methodology, certain matters under CICRA 2005, internal administration matters, and complaints already pending in court or another forum.

Step-by-step: raise a dispute at each bureau

Step 1 - Identify which bureau holds the error

Download your free annual credit report from each bureau's portal. Note the Account Number, DPD, Outstanding Amount, and the Status field (Closed / Active / Settled / Written Off) that is wrong.

Step 2 - Collect supporting documents

  • Loan closure letter or NOC from the lender
  • Bank statement or UPI screenshot showing the payment
  • Receipt for full and final settlement if applicable
  • Identity proof (PAN, Aadhaar) in case the name or address is mismatched
  • Any email or SMS from the lender confirming closure

Step 3 - File the online dispute

Each bureau has a dedicated dispute portal. All four portals are free:

  • TransUnion CIBIL - log in to your myCIBIL account at cibil.com, go to Credit Report, then Dispute Center, and click “Dispute an Item”.
  • Experian India - log in at consumer.experian.in/ECSINDIA-DCE/view/angular/index.html. Enter your Experian Reference Number (ERN) and Unique Transaction ID (UTI) from your credit report email, then choose “Raise A Dispute”.
  • Equifax India - register or log in at equifax.co.in, go to the dispute section, and enter your credit report number (shown top-left on your free full credit report). Email: [email protected]. Toll-free: 1800-209-3247 (Monday to Friday, 10:00-19:00).
  • CRIF High Mark - log in at cir.crifhighmark.com, go to “My Report”, select “Raise a Query”, choose the disputed account, and submit. Phone: 020-4056-2001 (Monday to Friday, 9:00-19:00).

After submitting, save the dispute ID or ticket number from each portal. You will need it to track status and to escalate if there is a delay.

Step 4 - Track the dispute

Log back into the same portal using your dispute ID. Bureaus are required to update you on action taken, including the reason if they reject the dispute. Check every 7-10 days. The clock runs from the date you filed, not from the date the bureau acknowledges it.

Step 5 - Follow up with the lender's nodal officer

If the bureau tells you it is waiting for the lender to confirm the correction, contact the lender directly. Under RBI circular RBI/2023-24/73, every credit institution must have a designated nodal officer for credit bureau disputes. Ask the lender's customer care for the name and email of this nodal officer and write to them - email, not just a phone call - with your dispute ID, the bureau name, and your supporting documents.

If 30 days pass without resolution

  1. Claim compensation: write to the bureau citing RBI/2023-24/72 and ask for Rs 100 per day calculated from day 31 to the resolution date. Provide your account details for the transfer.
  2. Escalate to the RBI Ombudsman: if the bureau or lender denies compensation or still does not fix the error, file a complaint at the RBI Complaint Management System at cms.rbi.org.in. This is the entry point for the Reserve Bank - Integrated Ombudsman Scheme, 2021. The toll-free helpline is 14448 (Hindi, English, and 10 regional languages). You can also email [email protected].
  3. You must have filed a formal complaint with the regulated entity (bank, NBFC, or bureau) first and either received an unsatisfactory reply or no reply within 30 days before the ombudsman will accept your complaint.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Disputing only at CIBIL. The error may be in Experian, Equifax, or CRIF and will still affect lenders who pull from those bureaus.
  • Calling instead of writing. Phone conversations leave no paper trail. Always raise your dispute through the portal or by email so you have a date-stamped record.
  • Paying agents who promise a guaranteed score fix. No third party can legally alter a genuine adverse entry. The dispute process is free and available directly to you.
  • Missing the lender-nodal-officer step. Bureaus can only update what lenders send them. If the lender has not corrected the data in its own system, the bureau cannot close the dispute.

How it works in practice

Consider a borrower who closed a personal loan in January 2026. In March, the CRIF High Mark report still showed the account as “Active” with a DPD of 30 days, even though the bank had issued a closure letter. The borrower logged into cir.crifhighmark.com, raised a dispute with the loan account number, and uploaded the closure letter - the whole process took about 15 minutes. A ticket number was generated immediately. On day 22 the bureau asked the borrower to contact the bank's nodal officer because the bank had not yet pushed the updated record. After an email to the nodal officer citing the ticket number, the bureau confirmed the entry was corrected to “Closed” by day 28. Total cost: zero. Had it crossed 30 days, the borrower would have been entitled to Rs 100 per day from day 31 onward under RBI/2023-24/72.

Frequently asked questions

My wrong entry is in all four bureaus. Do I file four separate disputes?

Yes. Each bureau holds its own copy of the data and requires its own dispute. Filing with one bureau does not automatically update the others. Once the lender corrects its internal records, all four bureaus should receive the corrected data in their next scheduled upload.

The bureau says it corrected the error but my score has not changed. Why?

A score recalculation happens automatically once corrected data is loaded, but it can take 30-45 days before lenders see the updated score. Pull a fresh credit report from the relevant bureau after 45 days to confirm the change is reflected.

What if the lender's nodal officer also does not respond?

Escalate to the RBI Complaint Management System at cms.rbi.org.in under the Reserve Bank - Integrated Ombudsman Scheme, 2021. You need a written record showing you complained to the regulated entity first and received no satisfactory response within 30 days.

Does the Rs 100/day compensation apply if the error is the bank's fault, not the bureau's?

Yes. Under RBI/2023-24/72, compensation liability is split proportionately among all responsible entities - the CI (lender) and the CIC (bureau). If the lender took more than 21 days to send corrected data, the lender bears a share of the Rs 100/day liability.

For a broader guide to asserting your consumer and information rights, see The RTI Playbook.

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