Gym Membership Cancellation Refund Dispute Guide India 2026
You paid Rs 28,000 for an annual gym membership at Cult.fit, then your company transferred you to Pune three months in. The branch refuses a pro-rated refund, the app has locked you out, and now an unauthorised UPI auto-debit of Rs 28,000 has hit your account for next year. This 2026 citizen guide walks you through reversing that debit within 24 hours via RBI rules, recovering the unused months under Section 23 of the Indian Contract Act 1872, and filing a District Consumer Commission complaint under the Consumer Protection Act 2019 unfair-contract clause.
Direct answer (45 words): A gym cannot keep money for unused months when you have a documented reason like relocation, injury, pregnancy or job loss. You are entitled to a pro-rated refund under contract law plus compensation for any auto-debit done without your e-mandate consent.
First 10 Minutes - Emergency Drill
If an auto-debit just hit your account or you are locked out of the gym app, do these six things in order before you do anything else.
- Open your bank app and screenshot the unauthorised debit (date, amount, beneficiary VPA).
- Call the bank helpline and dictate the words “I dispute this UPI auto-debit, no e-mandate notice received in 24 hours, please raise a chargeback under RBI e-mandate framework dated 25 August 2021”.
- Email the gym at care@cult.fit / care@anytimefitness.in / contact@goldsgymindia.com with subject “Cancellation request and refund demand under Consumer Protection Act 2019 Section 2(47)”.
- Save every push notification, app screenshot, locker tag photo, ID card scan into a folder named “GYM_DISPUTE_2026”.
- Lodge a complaint on the National Consumer Helpline (1915) and note the docket number.
- File an RBI Ombudsman complaint at cms.rbi.org.in if the debit happened without 24-hour pre-debit SMS or email.
Speed matters. Under the RBI e-mandate framework you have a stipulated reversal window. Banks must process a chargeback within T+1 working day if you raise it before the auto-debit settlement clears.
Why Gyms Refuse Refunds - The Three Trap Clauses
Indian gym contracts share three printed clauses that have been struck down by consumer commissions repeatedly but still appear on every form you sign.
- “Membership fee is non-refundable under all circumstances”: voided by Section 2(47) of the Consumer Protection Act 2019 which calls this an unfair contract.
- “Transfer fee of Rs 2,000 to Rs 5,000 applies on cancellation”: has no statutory basis. Courts treat it as unjust enrichment under Section 70 of the Indian Contract Act 1872.
- “Auto-renewal at end of term unless 60-day written notice given”: directly violates Reserve Bank of India e-mandate rules that mandate explicit fresh consent and 24-hour pre-debit notification.
The legal position is settled. Bharti Knitting Co. v DHL Worldwide Express (1996) 4 SCC 704 held that one-sided standard-form contracts cannot bind a consumer to terms that defeat the very purpose of the agreement. The Supreme Court in LIC of India v Consumer Education and Research Centre (1995) 5 SCC 482 went further and called such printed exclusions “unreasonable and unfair”.
The Refund Calculation Formula
Most gyms try to confuse you with talk of “registration fee”, “joining bonus” and “promotional waivers”. Ignore the noise. Use this single formula on the back of your envelope.
Refund due = (Total amount paid) minus 1)
Worked example. You paid Rs 30,000 for 12 months. You used 4 months before relocating. Refund due is Rs 30,000 minus (4 multiplied by 2,500) which equals Rs 20,000. The gym is legally bound to return Rs 20,000 to your origin bank account within 30 days of your written cancellation notice.
| Plan paid | Months in plan | Months used | Per-month rate | Refund due |
| Rs 15,000 | 6 | 2 | Rs 2,500 | Rs 10,000 |
| Rs 30,000 | 12 | 4 | Rs 2,500 | Rs 20,000 |
| Rs 50,000 | 24 | 9 | Rs 2,083 | Rs 31,250 |
| Rs 45,000 | 18 | 11 | Rs 2,500 | Rs 17,500 |
Statutory Backbone - Three Acts You Cite
Memorise these three citations. Every email, legal notice and consumer complaint you draft will lean on at least one of them.
- Indian Contract Act 1872, Section 23. Any contract whose object or consideration is unlawful, fraudulent, or against public policy is void. A clause that forces a citizen to pay for a service they cannot receive (because they have relocated, are injured, or pregnant) is void on the unconscionability prong.
- Consumer Protection Act 2019, Section 2(47). Defines “unfair contract” to include any term causing significant change in the rights of the consumer, including imposing penalties on the consumer for breach disproportionate to the loss to the trader. Introduced in 2019, this clause has been used by district commissions in Bengaluru, Mumbai and Delhi to strike down gym lock-in penalties.
- Consumer Protection (E-Commerce) Rules 2020, Rule 5(3). Requires every e-commerce entity (Cult.fit's app sale falls here) to publish a clear refund policy and process refunds within “reasonable time”. The District Commissions read this as 30 days from cancellation request.
The RBI e-mandate framework dated 25 August 2021 is the fourth weapon. It applies to every recurring UPI debit and demands a 24-hour pre-debit notification with the option to opt out. A gym that auto-renewed without that notification has violated the RBI circular and you can claim reversal plus compensation through the Banking Ombudsman route.
Drafting tip. When you write your legal notice, cite all three statutes plus the RBI circular even if only one applies. Demand letters that bristle with citations get faster settlements.
Sample Cancellation Email - Use This Template
Send this email from the address registered with the gym, with read-receipts on, the same day you decide to cancel. Copy your bank's grievance cell.
To: care@<gym>.in CC: nodalofficer@<your-bank>.com Subject: Cancellation of membership ID <ID> and demand for pro-rated refund under Consumer Protection Act 2019 Dear Sir or Madam, I, <full name>, holder of membership ID <ID> at <branch>, write to record the following. 1. I purchased a <12 / 24> month membership on <date> for Rs <amount>. 2. Due to <relocation to City / documented injury vide medical certificate dated DD-MM-YYYY / pregnancy / job loss>, I am unable to continue using the facility from <date>. 3. I have used <X> months of the plan. The unused balance is <Y> months. 4. The pro-rated refund due to me is Rs <calculated amount>, computed as (Total paid) minus (Months used multiplied by per-month rate). 5. I withdraw consent for any further auto-debit on UPI, card or e-mandate with immediate effect, and I am separately instructing my bank under the RBI e-mandate framework dated 25 August 2021. 6. I demand the refund of Rs <amount> to the original payment account within 30 days, failing which I will file a District Consumer Commission complaint under Section 35 of the Consumer Protection Act 2019, claiming the principal plus 12 percent interest plus Rs 25,000 in compensation for mental harassment plus litigation costs. Yours faithfully <Name> <Phone> | <Email> <Date>
Sample Legal Notice Through Advocate
If the cancellation email is ignored for 15 days, escalate with a registered AD lawyer's notice. Attach a copy when you later file at the consumer commission.
LEGAL NOTICE UNDER SECTION 35 OF CONSUMER PROTECTION ACT 2019 To, The Branch Manager <Gym name and full address> From, Advocate <Name> On behalf of <Client name>, holding membership ID <ID> Sir, Under instructions from and on behalf of my client, I serve you with this notice. 1. My client paid Rs <amount> on <date> for a <duration> membership at your <branch> outlet. 2. By reason of <ground for cancellation>, my client has been unable to use the service from <date> onward. 3. My client served a written cancellation request on <date> demanding a pro-rated refund of Rs <amount>. The said request remains unanswered and the membership stands de facto cancelled at your end since my client is locked out of the access app. 4. Your refusal to refund the unused portion is hit by Section 23 of the Indian Contract Act 1872 (unconscionable bargain) and Section 2(47) of the Consumer Protection Act 2019 (unfair contract). It also offends the principle laid down in Bharti Knitting Co. v DHL Worldwide Express, (1996) 4 SCC 704. 5. You are hereby called upon to refund the sum of Rs <amount> together with interest at 12 percent per annum from <date> together with Rs 25,000 as compensation for harassment, within 15 days of receipt of this notice. 6. Failing compliance, my client will be constrained to file a complaint before the District Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission, <City>, with all attendant costs payable by you. Date: Place: Advocate <Name> Enrolment No <###>
Sample RTI to GST Council - Audit the Vendor
Many small gyms collect 18 percent GST from members but never deposit it. An RTI to the local GST authority forces a record check that often produces a settlement within weeks. File this RTI with the GST Council secretariat or your zonal CGST office, fee Rs 10 by IPO or court fee stamp.
To The Public Information Officer Office of the Commissioner, CGST and Central Excise <Zone / City address> Subject: Application under Section 6(1) of the Right to Information Act 2005 Sir, Please furnish the following information regarding M/s <Gym legal name>, GSTIN <if printed on receipt>, address <branch address>. 1. Whether the said firm is registered under the Central Goods and Services Tax Act 2017. If yes, the date of registration and the HSN or SAC code declared for fitness centre services. 2. The total GSTR-3B returns filed by the said firm in financial years 2024-25 and 2025-26, with month-wise turnover and tax discharged. 3. Whether any audit, scrutiny or show cause notice has been issued to the said firm in the last three years. 4. Action taken on consumer complaints, if any, received against the said firm regarding non-issue of tax invoice or non-deposit of GST collected. I enclose Rs 10 by Indian Postal Order number <###> as application fee. If any part of the information is held to be exempt, kindly invoke Section 10 severance and disclose the rest. The information sought is in the larger public interest under Section 8(2). Yours faithfully <Name> <Address> <Phone> <Date>
If the PIO refuses or delays beyond 30 days, file a First Appeal under Section 19(1) and approach the Central Information Commission under Section 19(3) thereafter. Use the AI RTI Drafter to refine the wording and the First Appeal Builder to draft the escalation.
Reversing the Auto-Debit - RBI E-Mandate Route
This is the single most under-used remedy. Almost every gym that runs a UPI mandate or a card-on-file auto-renew is in violation of the RBI e-mandate framework. The framework requires three things from the merchant before any recurring debit clears.
- A pre-debit notification by SMS or email at least 24 hours before the debit date, naming the merchant and the amount.
- An opt-out link in that notification that the customer can click to cancel the upcoming debit.
- Authentication via Additional Factor of Authentication (AFA) the first time the mandate is set up, with the customer's explicit nod to the recurrence.
If your gym debit clears without you receiving a pre-debit SMS, file these three complaints in parallel.
- Bank chargeback. Visit the home branch with a printed dispute form citing “RBI Notification DPSS.CO.PD No 447/02.14.003/2021-22 dated 25 August 2021”. Demand reversal under T+1 timelines.
- RBI Ombudsman. File at cms.rbi.org.in. Attach the bank statement, the absent SMS, and your cancellation email to the gym.
- NPCI dispute. For UPI mandates, lodge a UDIR (Unified Dispute and Issue Resolution) request through your bank's UPI app under “Raise dispute”.
War story. A Bengaluru member of a popular fitness chain reversed an annual auto-renew of Rs 24,000 in 11 days using only a bank chargeback letter that quoted the RBI circular by number. No lawyer, no commission filing.
Real-Life Case - Sneha's Recovery
Sneha M, 31, Hyderabad to Bengaluru relocation, March 2026.
Plan: Cult.fit Elite, 12 months, Rs 36,000 paid in November 2025. Months used before relocation: 4. Refund due by formula: Rs 36,000 minus (4 multiplied by 3,000) equals Rs 24,000. Gym response on first email: “Membership is non-refundable, you can transfer for Rs 5,000 fee.”
Sneha's escalation timeline. Day 0 (15 March): Sent the cancellation email template above. Day 7: No response. Sent a WhatsApp screenshot of the email to the branch manager. Day 12: Received a “Rs 8,000 goodwill refund” offer. Refused in writing. Day 15: Lawyer's legal notice served by registered AD post, Rs 1,500 cost. Day 23: Branch sales head called, settled at Rs 22,000 plus a Bengaluru transfer waiver. Day 27: Money credited.
Net recovery: Rs 22,000. Total cost: Rs 1,500 (notice) plus zero court fee. Time: 27 days.
Pre-Signing Checklist - Freeze, Refund and Auto-Debit
Before you sign any new gym membership in 2026, run through this six-point checklist with the sales counsellor and ask them to initial each clause on a side sheet. The minute they refuse to initial, walk out.
- Freeze policy in writing. Minimum 30 days a year of free freeze without medical certificate. Most gym SOPs already permit this internally; force them to print it.
- Pro-rated refund clause. Insert a handwritten line “Pro-rated refund payable on documented relocation, injury, pregnancy or job loss” above your signature.
- Transfer fee cap. Cap any transfer fee at Rs 500. Strike out any clause exceeding this.
- No auto-renewal. Tick “Do not auto-renew at end of term” on the e-mandate page. If the app has no such option, do not authorise the mandate at all and pay by netbanking.
- Tax invoice with GSTIN. Always insist on a tax invoice that shows the gym's GSTIN. Photograph it.
- App lockout clause. Demand a written undertaking that the access app will not lock you out until physical de-registration is complete.
Common Mistakes That Sink Refund Claims
- Signing the printed contract without crossing out the “non-refundable” clause. Cross it out and initial; the gym staff almost never object on the spot.
- Cancelling only verbally over the phone. Without an email or WhatsApp trail, the consumer commission cannot fix the date of cancellation under Section 2(47) CPA.
- Forgetting to revoke the e-mandate at the bank end. The merchant cancellation does not auto-cancel the bank mandate. Both must be killed.
- Filing at the wrong District Commission. File at the place where you reside or where the gym branch is: Section 34(2)(d) CPA gives you the choice.
- Demanding a refund without a documented ground. “I no longer wish to attend” is weaker than “I have relocated, here is my appointment letter”.
- Missing the limitation period. Two years from the cause of action under Section 69 CPA. Mark the date in your calendar.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a gym legally refuse a refund if I signed a non-refundable contract?
No. A printed “non-refundable” clause is a one-sided unfair term struck down by Section 2(47) of the Consumer Protection Act 2019 and Section 23 of the Indian Contract Act 1872. The Supreme Court in LIC of India v Consumer Education and Research Centre (1995) 5 SCC 482 held that such standard-form exclusions are void against public policy.
How do I reverse an unauthorised UPI auto-debit by my gym?
Visit your bank within 24 to 48 hours of the debit, file a written chargeback citing the RBI e-mandate framework dated 25 August 2021, and lodge a parallel complaint at cms.rbi.org.in. If the merchant did not send the mandatory 24-hour pre-debit notification, the bank must reverse the transaction.
What is the time limit to file a consumer complaint against the gym?
Two years from the date of the gym's refusal to refund, under Section 69 of the Consumer Protection Act 2019. The District Commission can condone delay if you show sufficient cause, but do not bank on that. File within 18 months to be safe.
Is a transfer fee of Rs 5,000 demanded by my gym legal?
A transfer fee has no statutory basis and is treated as unjust enrichment under Section 70 of the Indian Contract Act 1872. District Consumer Commissions across Bengaluru, Mumbai and Delhi have repeatedly capped or struck down such fees in 2024 and 2025 orders.
Can I file a consumer complaint without a lawyer?
Yes. Section 35(1) of the Consumer Protection Act 2019 permits a consumer to appear in person. Filing fee at the District Commission for claims up to Rs 5 lakh is Rs 200, and the e-Jagriti portal lets you file online without leaving home.
Does an injury or pregnancy qualify as a valid ground for refund?
Yes. A medical certificate from a registered MBBS doctor stating that the member cannot perform high-impact exercise for the remainder of the membership term is treated as supervening impossibility under Section 56 of the Indian Contract Act 1872. The unused balance becomes refundable.
What compensation can I claim beyond the refund?
Under Section 39(1) of the Consumer Protection Act 2019 you can claim the principal refund plus 9 to 12 percent interest plus Rs 10,000 to Rs 50,000 as compensation for mental harassment plus litigation costs. Document every email, every call wait, and every visit to maximise the compensation head.
Sources and Further Reading
- Indian Contract Act 1872: Section 23, Section 56, Section 70.
- Department of Consumer Affairs: Consumer Protection Act 2019 full text and rules.
- Consumer Protection (E-Commerce) Rules 2020: refund and grievance timelines.
- RBI e-mandate framework dated 25 August 2021.
- e-Jagriti portal: file consumer complaints online.
- National Consumer Helpline: call 1915 or chat online.
- RBI Banking Ombudsman: for auto-debit reversals.
Related Reading on RTI Wiki
One last nudge. A polished cancellation email with three statutory citations almost always beats a printed “non-refundable” clause. Send it on a Monday morning, follow up Wednesday, and you will usually have the money by month-end.