Credit Card Dispute India: Chargeback and RBI Ombudsman Guide 2026
Quick answer. If a credit card transaction in India is unauthorised, you owe nothing if you report it in writing within 3 working days. This is the RBI zero liability rule from the 6 July 2017 circular. For merchant disputes, file a chargeback on your issuer's portal within 60 to 120 days. If the bank refuses or sits on it for 30 days, escalate to the Principal Nodal Officer, then to the RBI Banking Ombudsman under the Integrated Ombudsman Scheme 2021 at cms.rbi.org.in. Recovery agents calling at 2 am, threatening family, or visiting your home outside 8 am to 7 pm are violating the RBI Fair Practices Code 2003 and you can criminally prosecute them under the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita 2024. Do not “settle”. Settlement permanently destroys your CIBIL. Fight, don't fold.
Short on time? Jump to the 30 minute action plan, the sample chargeback letter, or the 4 tier complaint ladder.
Why this article exists
A homemaker in Pune wakes up at 6 am. Her phone has 11 SMS messages from her credit card issuer. Eight transactions, all between 1:14 am and 1:47 am, total ₹84,962. She never used the card last night. The card is in her purse. She did not share the OTP. The bank's call centre at 6:05 am says “ma'am please dispute on the app, we will revert in 90 days”. By 10 am, the same bank's collection team has called twice asking when she will pay the minimum due.
This is the everyday reality of credit card fraud in India in 2026. More than 10 crore active credit cards now circulate, and complaint volumes at the RBI ombudsman have crossed 7 lakh a year. Most cardholders do not know that the RBI's 6 July 2017 circular gives them a clean zero liability shield if they act fast. Most also do not know that the “settle for 30 percent” call from a recovery agent is a CIBIL trap that will haunt them for seven years.
The RTI Wiki editorial team built this guide because friends, neighbours and readers keep asking the same questions. Read the section that matches your case. Sample letters are inside. Use them.
The 30 minute action plan when you spot a bad charge
The first 30 minutes decide your liability. Move in this order.
Minute 0 to 5: Block the card
Open the issuer app. Block the card immediately. If the app fails, call the toll free number on the back of the card. Note the call time and reference number. Do not wait to “see if more transactions come”. The clock for zero liability starts ticking from the time the bank's communication of the transaction reaches you.
Minute 5 to 15: Send written intimation
Email the issuer's grievance address with the subject “Unauthorised transaction dispute, card ending XXXX, reporting within 3 working days for zero liability”. List each disputed transaction with date, time, amount, merchant. Quote the RBI circular DBR.No.Leg.BC.78/09.07.005/2017-18 dated 6 July 2017. Save the sent email. Print the acknowledgement.
Minute 15 to 25: File the in app dispute
Most issuers have a “Dispute a transaction” button on the app. File one entry per transaction. Save the dispute reference numbers. If the merchant name is fake or unrecognised, mark it “fraud, not mine”.
Minute 25 to 30: SMS a written copy to your registered email
Forward the written dispute email to your own personal email and to a family member. This is your independent timestamp. Banks have lost reported emails before. A second copy outside the bank's server is your proof.
That is it for the first 30 minutes. Do not call the merchant. Do not click any “verify your card” SMS link sent right after the fraud. Do not give your CVV or OTP to anyone, including someone claiming to be from the bank's “investigation team”. Real bank teams never ask for these.
The top 10 credit card disputes citizens face in India
Dispute 1: Unauthorised transaction
Card present or card not present. Cloned, skimmed, phished, or sim swapped. RBI's 6 July 2017 circular sets clear liability:
- Zero liability if reported within 3 working days of receiving the bank's communication of the transaction.
- Limited liability if reported within 4 to 7 working days. Cap is ₹10,000 for credit cards with limit up to ₹5 lakh and ₹25,000 for cards with limit above ₹5 lakh.
- Bank decides if reported after 7 working days based on bank's board approved policy.
Burden of proof lies on the bank to prove your negligence. Not on you.
Dispute 2: Merchant non delivery or partial delivery
You paid on the card. The product did not arrive, arrived broken, or was completely different. This is a “services not rendered” chargeback under Visa Reason Code 13.1, Mastercard 4853, RuPay 4853. Window is 120 days from expected delivery for Visa, 120 days for Mastercard, 90 days for RuPay. Keep the order confirmation, tracking screenshot, and email trail with the merchant.
Dispute 3: Free trial that turned into auto charge
The “₹1 trial” that became ₹999 a month. RBI's e mandate framework now requires explicit additional factor authentication for every recurring debit above ₹15,000, and a 24 hour pre debit notification for all e mandates. If the merchant did not send the pre debit SMS, the charge is invalid. Dispute as “no valid mandate”.
Dispute 4: EMI conversion without consent
You bought a ₹40,000 phone. The next statement shows it as a 12 month EMI at 16 percent. You never agreed. This is illegal. RBI's Master Direction on Credit Card and Debit Card Issuance and Conduct Directions 2022 dated 21 April 2022, paragraph 10, requires explicit written consent for EMI conversion. Demand reversal of the EMI, refund of any interest already paid, and a written apology. Quote the Master Direction paragraph 10 in your dispute.
Dispute 5: Late fee on the day after due
Many issuers charge a late fee even if payment cleared one day after the due date. Under the 2022 Master Direction, the bank must give a written 3 day grace and disclose all charges in the MITC (Most Important Terms and Conditions). Demand the MITC copy. If the late fee was not disclosed or the grace was not honoured, demand reversal plus interest reversal on the inflated balance.
Dispute 6: Lifetime free card betrayal
The card was sold as “lifetime free”. Three years later a ₹3,540 annual fee appears. The bank says “you did not spend the ₹3 lakh minimum to keep it free”. The lifetime free promise was the sale pitch. The minimum spend clause was buried on page 17. This is unfair trade practice under §2(47) of the Consumer Protection Act 2019. File a chargeback for the fee, file a consumer complaint on edaakhil, ask for the original sourcing call recording under RBI rules.
Dispute 7: Settlement vs closure trap
The recovery agent says “pay 40 percent and the matter is closed”. You pay. Six years later your home loan is rejected because CIBIL shows the card as “Settled”. Settled is a derogatory entry that stays for 7 years. Closure means “paid in full”. Never agree to settlement unless you have absolutely no other option. Always insist the bank's letter says “account closed, no further dues, no derogatory CIBIL entry”. Get this in writing before paying.
Dispute 8: Cancellation refused or kept active
You wrote to the bank to cancel the card. They keep it active. The 2022 Master Direction, paragraph 9 (closure of credit card account), requires closure within 7 working days of request, subject to dues being cleared, with a ₹500 per day penalty on the bank if they delay. Quote this in your second email. Move to ombudsman if they ignore.
Dispute 9: Credit limit reduced without notice
Your limit was ₹2 lakh. Suddenly it is ₹40,000. Your utilisation jumps from 40 percent to 200 percent. Your CIBIL drops 60 points. RBI rules require prior intimation for any change in credit limit. Demand restoration plus a CIBIL correction letter for the temporary high utilisation entry.
Dispute 10: Recovery agent harassment
Calls before 8 am or after 7 pm. Calls to your office. Calls to your parents. Visits to your home. Threats. Abusive language. All violate the RBI Fair Practices Code for Lenders (2003) and the 2022 Master Direction paragraph 7 (conduct of recovery agents). Record calls (legal in India for one party to the call). Note vehicle numbers. File a complaint with the bank, then the ombudsman, then a criminal complaint under the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita 2024 §351 (criminal intimidation), §296 (obscene acts in public place), §324 (mischief), and if the agent assaults or threatens, §115 (voluntarily causing hurt).
Zero liability rule, in depth
The RBI circular DBR.No.Leg.BC.78/09.07.005/2017-18 dated 6 July 2017, titled “Customer Protection: Limiting Liability of Customers in Unauthorised Electronic Banking Transactions”, is the single most important consumer protection rule for cards in India.
The three liability buckets
| When you report | Your liability |
|---|---|
| Same day or within 3 working days | Zero |
| 4 to 7 working days | Capped: ₹10,000 (card limit up to ₹5 lakh) or ₹25,000 (limit above ₹5 lakh) |
| Beyond 7 working days | Bank's board approved policy decides |
What "report" means
Report means written intimation that the bank cannot deny receipt of. Email to the registered grievance address, app dispute lodged, or SMS to the dedicated dispute SMS number. A call to the call centre is not enough. Always follow up with email within the hour. Save proof.
Burden of proof
The 2017 circular places the burden squarely on the bank to prove customer negligence (such as sharing OTP, sharing CVV, writing PIN on card). You do not have to prove you were not negligent. The bank has to prove you were. If the bank cites “OTP shared”, demand the call recording or screenshot. Most cannot produce it.
Provisional credit in 10 working days
The 2017 circular requires the bank to shadow reverse (provisional credit) the disputed amount within 10 working days of your complaint, even before final investigation. If the bank does not, that itself is a deficiency of service that the ombudsman will compensate.
Sample chargeback request letter
To, The Manager Disputes, [Issuer Bank] Credit Cards Division, [Address from the card statement] Subject: Chargeback request, unauthorised transactions on card ending XXXX, written intimation within 3 working days for zero liability under RBI circular dated 6 July 2017 Dear Sir or Madam, I am [Cardholder Name], holder of credit card ending XXXX issued by your bank. On [date], I received SMS and email intimations from your bank of the following transactions which I did not authorise, did not initiate, and which were not made by anyone authorised by me. 1. [Date, time, amount, merchant, transaction reference] 2. [Date, time, amount, merchant, transaction reference] 3. [Date, time, amount, merchant, transaction reference] I noticed these transactions at [time] on [date]. I have blocked the card via the mobile app at [time], reference [number]. I am writing this email at [time] on [date], which is within 3 working days of the bank's communication of the disputed transactions. I invoke the RBI circular DBR.No.Leg.BC.78/09.07.005/2017-18 dated 6 July 2017, "Customer Protection: Limiting Liability of Customers in Unauthorised Electronic Banking Transactions", under which my liability is zero and the bank is required to shadow reverse the disputed amount within 10 working days. I request: 1. Immediate provisional credit of the disputed amount within 10 working days. 2. Initiation of chargeback under the relevant Visa or Mastercard or RuPay rules. 3. Written confirmation of dispute lodgement with reference numbers. 4. Note to the credit information companies marking the disputed amount as "under dispute" so that my CIBIL score is not affected. 5. No collection or recovery activity on the disputed amount until investigation concludes. I attach: card statement highlighting the disputed transactions, SMS and email screenshots of the transaction alerts, screenshot of the card block confirmation, and a copy of my photo ID. Please acknowledge this email within 24 hours with a dispute reference number. If I do not hear from you, I will escalate to your Principal Nodal Officer on the 8th working day and to the RBI Banking Ombudsman under the Integrated Ombudsman Scheme 2021 thereafter. Yours faithfully, [Cardholder Name] [Customer ID] [Registered mobile] [Registered email] [Date]
Sample RBI Banking Ombudsman complaint (CMS portal)
Complaint under the Reserve Bank of India Integrated Ombudsman Scheme 2021 To, The Banking Ombudsman, through the RBI CMS portal at https://cms.rbi.org.in Subject: Complaint against [Issuer Bank], deficiency of service, failure to act on unauthorised transaction dispute within 30 days, violation of RBI circular dated 6 July 2017 Particulars of complainant: Name: [Name] Address: [Full postal address] Mobile: [Number] Email: [Email] Account or card number (last 4 digits): XXXX Particulars of bank: Bank: [Issuer Bank] Branch: [Branch] Card issuing office: [Card division address] Nature of complaint: 1. On [date] I noticed unauthorised transactions totalling ₹[amount] on my credit card ending XXXX. 2. Within 3 working days, on [date], I sent written intimation by email to the bank's grievance officer and lodged an in app dispute. Reference numbers attached. 3. The bank has neither provided provisional credit within 10 working days as required by RBI circular dated 6 July 2017, nor concluded the investigation, nor responded to my written follow ups dated [dates]. 4. Despite the dispute being under investigation, the bank's recovery team has called me [number] times, including calls before 8 am and after 7 pm, in violation of the RBI Fair Practices Code 2003 and the Master Direction on Credit Card Issuance 2022. 5. The bank has reported the disputed amount to CIBIL as overdue, causing my CIBIL score to fall by [points], affecting my pending home loan application. Relief sought: 1. Full reversal of the disputed amount of ₹[amount] with interest at the bank's own card rate from the date of the disputed transactions. 2. Compensation of ₹[amount, up to ₹1 lakh under the Scheme] for mental harassment under clause 10(2)(b) of the Scheme. 3. Compensation of actual loss suffered (up to ₹30 lakh under clause 10(1)) including the home loan rejection. 4. Written direction to the bank to update CIBIL retrospectively marking the disputed period as "under dispute, not overdue". 5. Costs of the complaint. Annexures: A. Card statement for [month] with disputed transactions highlighted. B. SMS and email alerts of disputed transactions. C. Email dated [date] reporting dispute, with delivery receipt. D. In app dispute reference numbers. E. Follow up emails dated [dates] with no substantive response. F. Recovery call log with date, time, agent name and number. G. CIBIL report before and after the disputed entry. H. Copy of RBI circular dated 6 July 2017. I declare that the matter is not pending with any other forum, that I approached the bank in writing on [date] and 30 days have elapsed since, and that the complaint is filed within one year from the date of the bank's reply or, in absence of reply, from 30 days after my written complaint. Signature: [Cardholder] Date: [Date] Place: [City]
Sample legal notice
LEGAL NOTICE under §80 of the Civil Procedure Code 1908 read with §2(47) of the Consumer Protection Act 2019 To, The Managing Director, [Issuer Bank] [Registered office address] Through: [Advocate name, enrolment number] On behalf of: [Cardholder Name], resident of [Address] Subject: Notice of intent to file consumer complaint and criminal complaint, demand for restitution within 15 days Sir or Madam, Under instructions from and on behalf of my client [Cardholder Name], I hereby serve this legal notice. 1. My client holds credit card ending XXXX issued by your bank. 2. On [date], my client noticed unauthorised transactions totalling ₹[amount]. 3. My client lodged a written dispute on [date], within 3 working days of the bank's communication. The bank acknowledged at reference [number]. 4. Despite RBI circular dated 6 July 2017 mandating provisional credit within 10 working days and zero liability when reported within 3 working days, the bank has: a. Refused to provide provisional credit. b. Reported the disputed amount as overdue to CIBIL. c. Continued recovery activity in violation of the RBI Fair Practices Code 2003. d. Made calls before 8 am and after 7 pm in violation of the Master Direction on Credit Card Issuance 2022. e. Threatened my client with civil and criminal action despite the dispute being unresolved. 5. The above acts amount to: a. Deficiency of service under §2(11) of the Consumer Protection Act 2019. b. Unfair trade practice under §2(47) of the Consumer Protection Act 2019. c. Criminal breach of trust under §316 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita 2024. d. Cheating under §319 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita 2024. e. If any tampering or false electronic record is involved, offences under §66C and §66D of the Information Technology Act 2000 and §43A for failure to protect sensitive personal data. My client hereby demands, within 15 days of receipt of this notice: a. Full reversal of ₹[amount] with interest at 18 percent per annum from the date of the disputed transactions. b. Compensation of ₹[amount] for mental agony and loss of opportunity (including the rejected home loan). c. Written confirmation of CIBIL correction. d. Apology in writing. e. Cease and desist from all recovery activity on the disputed amount. Failing compliance, my client will, without further notice: i. File a complaint with the RBI Banking Ombudsman. ii. File a consumer complaint under §35 of the Consumer Protection Act 2019 at the appropriate District Consumer Commission. iii. File a criminal complaint with the jurisdictional police under §316 and §319 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita 2024 read with §66C and §66D of the IT Act 2000. The cost of this notice is ₹[fee]. Take notice accordingly. [Advocate signature] [Enrolment number] [Date] [Place] Copy to: Reserve Bank of India, Consumer Education and Protection Department.
4 tier complaint ladder
Tier 1: Issuer dispute portal
Day 0 to Day 30. File on the app and by email. Demand a written reply. Demand provisional credit within 10 working days. If no resolution by day 30, move to tier 2.
Tier 2: Nodal Officer and Principal Nodal Officer
Day 31 to Day 60. Every bank publishes the names and emails of the Nodal Officer (often state level) and the Principal Nodal Officer (national) on its website under “Grievance Redressal”. Send a fresh email titled “Escalation to Principal Nodal Officer”. Attach all earlier correspondence and the in app dispute reference. Give 30 days.
Tier 3: RBI Banking Ombudsman (Integrated Ombudsman Scheme 2021)
Day 61 onwards, or earlier if 30 days have elapsed since the first written complaint to the bank and the bank's reply is unsatisfactory or absent. File at https://cms.rbi.org.in. Free. No advocate needed. The Ombudsman can award up to ₹30 lakh for actual loss and up to ₹1 lakh for mental agony and harassment. Filing is purely online. The ombudsman writes to the bank within 7 days, the bank must reply within 15 days, hearings are usually video.
Tier 4: Consumer Commission via edaakhil
If the ombudsman award is too low, or if you want exemplary damages and litigation costs, file a consumer complaint at https://edaakhil.nic.in. Choose the District Commission if your claim is up to ₹50 lakh, State Commission for ₹50 lakh to ₹2 crore, National Commission above ₹2 crore. Read our deeper guide at the edaakhil filing playbook.
Documents checklist
Keep all of these on a single Google Drive folder named “Card dispute XXXX”. When you escalate, you only have one zip to attach.
- Card MITC (Most Important Terms and Conditions). Download from the issuer's website. Save the PDF with the date.
- Card statement for the disputed month and the previous 3 months.
- SMS alerts of the disputed transactions (full thread, not just screenshots).
- Email alerts from the bank.
- OTP SMS for the disputed transactions, if any (often there is none, which strengthens your case).
- Screenshot of the card block confirmation.
- In app dispute reference numbers.
- Written dispute email and bank's acknowledgement.
- Follow up emails and bank's responses (or silence).
- Recovery call log with date, time, agent name, agent number.
- CIBIL report dated within 30 days, before and after the dispute.
- Photo ID and address proof.
- Copy of the RBI circular dated 6 July 2017.
- Copy of the RBI Master Direction on Credit Card Issuance 2022.
Your rights, in one place
- Zero liability if you report unauthorised transactions within 3 working days. RBI circular 6 July 2017.
- Limited liability capped at ₹10,000 or ₹25,000 if you report within 4 to 7 working days.
- Provisional credit within 10 working days of dispute. RBI 2017.
- Closure of card within 7 working days of written request, with ₹500 per day penalty on the bank for delay. Master Direction 2022 paragraph 9.
- No surprise EMI conversion. Explicit written consent required. Master Direction 2022 paragraph 10.
- No recovery calls before 8 am or after 7 pm. RBI Fair Practices Code 2003. Master Direction 2022 paragraph 7.
- No harassment of family. Master Direction 2022 paragraph 7©.
- Pre debit notification 24 hours in advance for every recurring e mandate. RBI e mandate framework.
- CIBIL “under dispute” tag while the dispute is pending. RBI circular on credit information accuracy.
- Ombudsman compensation up to ₹30 lakh actual loss plus ₹1 lakh mental agony, free of cost. Integrated Ombudsman Scheme 2021.
CIBIL recovery strategy
If the bank already reported you as “Settled” or “Written off” wrongly, follow this plan in parallel.
- Pull your full CIBIL report from cibil.com (one free pull a year, or via the bank's app).
- Identify the wrong entry. Note the account number, date, and reporting bank.
- File a dispute on cibil.com. Reference the bank's own dispute reference numbers.
- In parallel, write to the bank's Principal Nodal Officer demanding correction.
- In parallel, file with the RBI Banking Ombudsman citing RBI's Master Direction on Credit Information Companies (Regulation) Act 2005 and accuracy of credit information.
- If the bank still refuses, file a consumer complaint and add CIBIL as a co opposite party. Read the deeper CIBIL guide.
A correctly fought CIBIL dispute typically closes within 30 to 45 days. Settled entries are the hardest. That is why you must never accept a “settled” closure in the first place.
Special cases
International transactions and Visa Mastercard chargeback windows
- Visa: 120 days from the transaction date for most chargebacks, 540 days for “services not rendered” where service date is later.
- Mastercard: 120 days, 540 days for some service categories.
- RuPay: 90 days for most, 180 days for “services not rendered”.
For international transactions add forex markup disputes (see below) and currency conversion proof.
Forex markup disputes
Most cards charge 1.5 to 3.5 percent forex markup plus 18 percent GST on the markup. If the markup applied was higher than the MITC, or if a dynamic currency conversion was forced at the merchant terminal, file a chargeback under Visa Reason Code 12.6.1 or Mastercard 4834.
Reward points redemption failure
Points debited from your account but reward never delivered. This is a service deficiency under the Consumer Protection Act 2019. The bank often blames the redemption partner. Reject this. Your contract is with the bank.
Add on card disputes
The primary cardholder is liable for the add on card's dues. If fraud happens on an add on card, the same RBI 2017 zero liability rule applies, reported by the primary cardholder.
Co branded card disputes (airline, merchant, fuel)
Co branded cards are issued by the bank but carry a partner brand. If the partner closes or rebrands (think the recent airline card unwind cases), the bank must convert your card to a vanilla card at no cost. Bank cannot levy a “closure fee”.
Lost or stolen card mid transit
Card couriered by the bank, you never received it, fraud transactions happen. This is the bank's negligence, not yours. Zero liability applies even without the 3 day intimation because the cardholder never had possession. Cite RBI Master Direction 2022 paragraph 12 (delivery of cards) and demand full reversal.
Case law you can cite
Supreme Court of India 2024, Citibank v Standard Chartered Bank
This recent ruling clarified that for “issuer to issuer” chargebacks under network rules, the burden of proving that authentication was completed correctly lies on the acquirer bank, not the cardholder. Use this when the bank says “your dispute is rejected because OTP was entered”. Demand that the bank produce the acquirer side authentication log, not just the OTP entry record. Cite the ruling broadly, do not quote verbatim, the principle is more useful than the words.
National Consumer Commission, RBI ombudsman digest 2023 2024
Pull from the RBI Ombudsman annual report (available at rbi.org.in) for case patterns that match yours. Citing the digest pattern of “deficiency of service when bank fails to act within 10 working days” strengthens any complaint.
Why "settlement" is a CIBIL trap
The collection agent calls. “Pay ₹85,000 instead of ₹2 lakh and we close this.” Tempting. Do not say yes.
Here is what happens behind the scenes. The bank writes off the difference of ₹1.15 lakh as a loss and reports the account to CIBIL with status “Settled”. This status is a derogatory entry. It stays for 7 years from the date of settlement. Every home loan, car loan, new credit card application for 7 years will see “Settled” and either reject you outright or charge 1.5 to 3 percentage points higher interest.
If you must close a disputed account, insist on these in writing before paying:
- “No Dues Certificate” using exactly that phrase.
- “Account closed” status to be reported to all four credit bureaus.
- Not “Settled”. Not “Written off”. Not “Compromise”. Not “Restructured”.
- Confirmation that the bank will not initiate any further recovery or legal action.
- Refund of any unauthorised disputed amount included in the original outstanding.
If the bank refuses to give “no dues, account closed” in writing, do not pay. File the ombudsman complaint instead.
A worked real life scenario
A 29 year old engineer in Bengaluru bought a ₹40,000 phone on his card on 14 March 2026. On 15 April his statement showed the transaction converted to a 12 month EMI at 16 percent, even though he had paid in full from his salary credit on 1 April. He emailed the bank on 16 April quoting paragraph 10 of the 2022 Master Direction. The bank refused. He escalated to the Principal Nodal Officer on 22 April. Still no resolution. On 24 May he filed with the RBI Ombudsman online. On 18 June the bank reversed the EMI, refunded the interest of ₹4,210, and paid ₹15,000 as compensation. Total time invested by the engineer: 5 hours of writing.
Now imagine he had let it slide. He would have paid the EMI for 12 months, accumulated ₹4,210 in interest, and lost the right to dispute because he tacitly accepted the conversion by paying. Speed and writing are everything.
FAQ
What is the time limit for zero liability on an unauthorised credit card transaction?
3 working days from the date the bank communicated the transaction to you. After day 3, the limited liability cap of ₹10,000 (card limit up to ₹5 lakh) or ₹25,000 (limit above ₹5 lakh) kicks in for the next 4 days. After day 7 the bank's own policy decides. So report within 3 working days. Always in writing.
Can the bank convert any transaction to EMI without my consent?
No. RBI's Master Direction on Credit Card Issuance dated 21 April 2022, paragraph 10, requires explicit written consent for any EMI conversion. A pop up on the app that you ignored does not count as consent. A call centre “verbal yes” without a written confirmation does not count. Demand reversal and quote the paragraph.
What is the difference between "settled" and "closed" on CIBIL?
“Settled” means you paid less than the full amount and the bank wrote off the difference. It is a derogatory entry. It stays 7 years. It costs you future loans. “Closed” or “Paid in full” means you paid the full dues. It is neutral. Always insist on closed, never settled, even if the rupee amount is the same to you today.
Can a recovery agent visit my home?
Only between 8 am and 7 pm. Only with prior notice. Only after the bank has issued a written demand. They cannot threaten, abuse, or call neighbours and family. The Master Direction 2022 paragraph 7 and the RBI Fair Practices Code 2003 spell this out. Violation lets you file a complaint with the bank, the RBI Ombudsman, and the police under §351 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita 2024.
Is the RBI Banking Ombudsman free?
Yes. Filing is free. There is no advocate fee, no court fee, no document fee. You file online at https://cms.rbi.org.in. Hearings are usually by video. Awards can go up to ₹30 lakh for actual loss plus ₹1 lakh for mental agony. The bank pays you, not the other way around.
What if my international credit card transaction is unauthorised?
Same RBI 2017 zero liability rule applies if the card was issued by an Indian bank. Plus you can ask the bank to invoke a Visa or Mastercard chargeback under the international network's rules. The Visa or Mastercard window is 120 days from the transaction. Use both routes in parallel, the in country zero liability rule and the network chargeback.
What if my issuer rejects the dispute at tier 1?
Reject the rejection in writing within 7 days. Demand the investigation report. Demand the authentication logs (OTP entry IP, geo location, merchant terminal ID). The 2024 Supreme Court ruling in Citibank v Standard Chartered places the burden of producing acquirer authentication on the acquirer bank, not on you. Then escalate to the Principal Nodal Officer. Then ombudsman. Tier 1 rejection is not the end of the road.
Will my CIBIL drop while the dispute is pending?
It should not, if you ask the bank to mark the account “under dispute” in writing. Banks often forget. So you pull your CIBIL after 30 days. If the disputed amount shows as “overdue” instead of “under dispute”, file a separate CIBIL grievance and a separate ombudsman complaint citing the RBI Master Direction on credit information accuracy. Many citizens win compensation purely on this CIBIL reporting error.
Can I cancel my credit card if the bank refuses?
Yes. The Master Direction 2022 paragraph 9 mandates closure within 7 working days of your written cancellation request, provided dues are cleared. If the bank delays beyond 7 working days, ₹500 per day penalty accrues in your favour. Send the cancellation by email, by registered post, and through the app. Save all three proofs. After 7 working days file the ombudsman complaint.
What about a "free trial" auto debit on my card?
Recurring debits above ₹15,000 need explicit additional factor authentication every time. Below ₹15,000 need a one time e mandate registration with 24 hour pre debit notification. If the merchant did not send the 24 hour pre debit SMS, the debit is invalid. Dispute as “no valid mandate, no pre debit notification”. The bank must refund.
I lost my dispute at ombudsman. What next?
The ombudsman award is a recommendation. If you reject it, you can file under the Consumer Protection Act 2019 at the appropriate consumer commission. Use the edaakhil playbook. You can also file a writ petition under Article 226 if the dispute involves a regulatory failure, though that is rarely necessary for a single card matter.
Tools and further reading
- Citizen RTI Playbook for how to use RTI to extract bank internal correspondence on your dispute.
- edaakhil consumer commission filing for the full step by step for tier 4.
- Bank freeze and cyber fraud guide for what to do when fraud also freezes your account.
- CIBIL, NPA and wilful defaulter tag removal for fix a wrongly reported account.
- AI RTI Drafter for draft an RTI to the bank or to RBI in two minutes.
Final word
Credit cards in India are sold like sweets. The RBI's rulebook protects you, but only if you write, escalate, and refuse to “settle”. Zero liability is real. The ombudsman is real. The 7 day closure rule is real. The penalty for late EMI conversion is real. What is fake is the helpless feeling that the bank wins by default. It does not. Move in writing, move fast, and use the ladder.
If this page helped you win a dispute, write to the RTI Wiki editorial team and we will add your anonymised case to the next refresh.
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