Cheque Rejected Under Positive Pay System: What to Do
If a high-value cheque you issued was returned because of the Positive Pay System (PPS), the usual reason is that you never submitted the cheque details to your bank for confirmation, or the details you submitted did not match the cheque presented. The fix is simple: log in to your bank app, internet banking, SMS or branch, re-confirm the cheque number, date, payee name and exact amount, and ask the payee to deposit the cheque again. No legal notice is needed, because this is a validation failure, not a dishonour for insufficient funds.
What the Positive Pay System is
The Positive Pay System is a fraud-check introduced by the Reserve Bank of India that became operational from 1 January 2021 for cheques cleared through the Cheque Truncation System (CTS). The National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) built the facility inside CTS and made it available to all banks.
Under PPS, when you write a large cheque you re-confirm its core details with your bank electronically before it is presented for payment. The drawee bank then cross-checks what you submitted against the actual cheque image. If the two match, the cheque clears normally. If you never submitted the details, or they do not match, the bank can flag or return the cheque so a forged or altered cheque does not slip through.
The threshold: when PPS applies
PPS is enabled by banks for all account holders issuing cheques of Rs 50,000 and above. RBI left the lower limit as the common availability threshold and allowed banks to decide their own policy above it. RBI also said banks may consider making PPS confirmation mandatory for cheques of Rs 5,00,000 and above.
In practice this means the rule is bank-policy dependent. Some banks only flag a missing confirmation; others may decline to clear a high-value cheque until you confirm the details. So whether your cheque is actually returned depends on your bank's threshold and policy, not on a single national cut-off. Always assume that any cheque of Rs 50,000 or more may need confirmation.
Why your cheque was returned
A PPS return almost always comes down to one of these:
- You did not submit the cheque details to your bank before the payee deposited it.
- The amount you confirmed does not match the amount written on the cheque (a common slip when you round off or transpose figures).
- The payee name you entered differs from the name written on the cheque.
- The cheque number or date you submitted is wrong.
- You confirmed the details after the cheque was already presented, so the bank had nothing to match it against.
This is important: a PPS return is a clearing or validation failure. It is not the same as a cheque bounce for insufficient funds, and on its own it does not attract criminal liability under Section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act. For how a genuine dishonour for insufficient funds works, see the cheque bounce Section 138 guide.
Step by step: re-confirm and resubmit
- Find the return reason on the cheque return memo your payee received from their bank. It will say the cheque was returned under Positive Pay or that details were not confirmed or did not match.
- Open your bank channel that supports PPS confirmation: the mobile banking app, internet banking, SMS service, or your branch. Most banks accept it through the app.
- Enter the cheque details exactly as written on the cheque: cheque number, date, beneficiary or payee name, and amount. Match the figures and the name letter for letter.
- Submit the confirmation and save the reference number or screenshot the acknowledgement.
- Tell the payee the details are now confirmed and ask them to deposit the same cheque again. Confirmation must be in the bank's system before the cheque is re-presented.
- If your bank app does not show a PPS option, call your bank or visit the branch and ask them to register the cheque under Positive Pay for you.
How to raise it with the bank
If the cheque was returned even though you did confirm the details correctly, or your bank gave you no way to submit them, raise a complaint:
- Write to the branch manager with the cheque number, the confirmation reference, and the return memo, asking why a compliant cheque was returned.
- If the branch does not resolve it, escalate to the bank's Nodal Officer or Principal Nodal Officer for grievances.
- If you get no satisfactory reply within 30 days, you can approach the RBI Ombudsman under the Reserve Bank Integrated Ombudsman Scheme at cms.rbi.org.in.
You can also use the Right to Information route for public sector banks to ask for the exact return reason and the internal record, and the RTI Wiki home page has tools and templates to help you draft that request. For the wider strategy of using information rights to settle disputes, read The RTI Playbook.
Frequently asked questions
Is a Positive Pay return the same as a cheque bounce?
No. A PPS return is a validation failure because the cheque details were not confirmed or did not match. A cheque bounce under Section 138 is a dishonour for insufficient funds or a stopped payment on a legally enforceable debt. A PPS return on its own does not attract Section 138 liability.
Do I have to use Positive Pay for every cheque?
Banks enable PPS for cheques of Rs 50,000 and above, and may make it mandatory for cheques of Rs 5,00,000 and above. For smaller cheques it usually does not apply. Check your own bank's policy, because the exact threshold above Rs 50,000 is set by each bank.
What details do I need to confirm under Positive Pay?
The minimum details are the cheque date, the beneficiary or payee name, and the amount, along with the cheque number. Submit them exactly as written on the cheque through SMS, the mobile app, internet banking, or an ATM.
Can I confirm the details after the cheque has been deposited?
You should confirm before the cheque is presented for clearing. If it was already returned, confirm the details now, save the acknowledgement, and ask the payee to deposit the same cheque again so the bank can match it.
Which cheques does Positive Pay cover?
PPS applies to cheques cleared through the Cheque Truncation System, which covers most cheque clearing in India. Banks have also been advised to set up similar checks for cheques cleared or collected outside CTS.
Next steps
Re-confirm your cheque details through your bank channel today, save the acknowledgement, and have the payee re-deposit the cheque. Keep your confirmation reference safe in case you need to prove compliance later. If the return looks wrong, escalate in writing to the branch and then to the bank's grievance officer. For a dishonour that is genuinely about insufficient funds, the Section 138 cheque bounce process is the correct route instead.
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