Bank Posted the Same Debit Twice: How to Get the Duplicate Entry Reversed

Reviewed on: 2026-06-12.

Bank Refuses to Reverse Duplicate Debit Entry evidence and complaint desk

Direct answer: a duplicate debit entry is a bank ledger error, not a payment dispute. The same transaction has been posted to your account twice. Write to your branch with the date, amount and reference number of both entries, and ask for reversal with the original value date so interest and charges are recalculated. Banks are expected to reverse erroneous debits promptly under RBI's customer service norms. If the bank does not resolve it within 30 days, file a free complaint with the RBI Integrated Ombudsman at cms.rbi.org.in.

This guide covers a posting error by the bank itself. It is different from paying a merchant twice through UPI, and different from cash not coming out of an ATM. For an ATM shortfall, see ATM dispensed less cash than debited. If the bank credited you twice and is now demanding the money back, the reverse situation is covered in bank credited your account twice and wants a reversal.

How to prove the duplication from your statement

The bank will only act fast if your evidence removes all doubt. Open your statement and compare the two debit lines.

  • Same reference number. A genuine repeat purchase creates two different UTR, RRN or transaction reference numbers. A duplicate posting usually carries the same reference, or one entry carries a system reversal code. Note both reference strings exactly.
  • Same amount, same payee, same date or next day. Duplicates often post on the same day or when a held authorisation is settled a second time.
  • One delivery, one bill. Keep the single invoice, booking, or delivery confirmation that shows you received the goods or service once.
  • Merchant confirmation, if available. If a card terminal was involved, a one-line email from the merchant confirming a single sale settles the matter quickly.

Download the statement as a PDF and highlight both lines. Screenshot the transaction detail page for each entry showing the reference number.

Step-by-step

  1. Raise it in writing on day one. Use the bank's complaint email, the in-app complaint option, or a letter at the branch. Phone calls leave no trail. Quote both entries with references and ask for a complaint number.
  2. Ask for reversal with the original value date. Value-dating matters. If the wrong debit caused a minimum balance charge, a bounced auto-debit, or lost savings interest, a value-dated reversal undoes those side effects. Ask for each consequential charge to be reversed too.
  3. Name the relief precisely. “Reverse the second debit of Rs [amount] dated [date], reference [number], with value date [original date], and reverse the non-maintenance charge of Rs [amount] levied on [date] as a consequence.”
  4. Escalate inside the bank. If the branch or call centre closes the complaint without fixing the ledger, write to the bank's principal nodal officer. The contact is on the bank's website under grievance redressal. Attach the first complaint number.
  5. Go to the RBI Ombudsman after 30 days. If the bank has not resolved the complaint within 30 days, or rejects it, file at cms.rbi.org.in under the Integrated Ombudsman Scheme. It is free, covers public and private banks, and a clear duplicate posting with matching references is among the simplest deficiency cases an Ombudsman sees. The RBI helpline 14448 can guide you on filing.

Sample complaint to the bank

To: The Branch Manager, [Bank], [Branch]
Subject: Duplicate debit entry - request for value-dated reversal -
A/c [account number]

1. My account was debited twice for the same transaction:
   Entry 1: Rs [amount], date [date], reference [UTR/RRN].
   Entry 2: Rs [amount], date [date], reference [UTR/RRN].
2. This is a single transaction posted twice. I received the goods/
   service once. The invoice is enclosed.
3. Please reverse the second debit with value date [original date]
   and reverse all consequential charges, including [charge, date].
4. Please confirm in writing with a complaint reference number.
   If unresolved in 30 days, I will approach the RBI Ombudsman.

[Name, mobile, email, date]

Where RTI fits, and where it does not

If your account is with a public sector bank, you can file an RTI with the bank's Public Information Officer for the transaction audit trail of both entries and the status of your complaint, since public sector banks are public authorities. That record shows exactly when and how the second posting occurred. See how to file an RTI online. Private banks such as HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank and Axis Bank are not covered by the RTI Act, so for them the route is the nodal officer and then the RBI Ombudsman only. Either way, RTI gets you records, not the refund itself. Keep the complaint, not the RTI, as your main engine.

Common mistakes

  • Disputing it as fraud. A duplicate posting is an error, not an unauthorised transaction. Filing it as fraud sends the case to the wrong team and slows the reversal.
  • Accepting a plain credit without value-dating. A simple credit today does not undo a charge or interest loss the duplicate caused last month. Ask for value-dated reversal and consequential charge reversal in the same letter.
  • Waiting on the phone queue. Thirty days for Ombudsman eligibility count from a recorded complaint. Get a written complaint number on day one.
  • Deleting the evidence. Keep the PDF statement, both reference numbers, and the single invoice until the reversal is confirmed in writing.

Frequently asked questions

How fast should the bank reverse a duplicate debit?

There is no single published number for ledger errors, but RBI's customer service framework expects banks to correct erroneous debits promptly, and most banks fix clear duplicates within days once the references match. The 30-day mark matters for a different reason: it opens the RBI Ombudsman route.

The bank says both debits are genuine. What do I do?

Ask the bank, in writing, for the transaction trail of each entry: the channel, terminal or originator, and the authorisation for each. Two genuine transactions will have two distinct authorisations. If the bank cannot show two, escalate with that reply attached.

A charge bounced because the duplicate emptied my account. Who pays?

Ask the bank to reverse the bounce charge and to issue a letter you can show the merchant or lender whose payment failed. A deficiency that causes a consequential loss is squarely within what the Ombudsman can compensate, so list every consequence in your complaint.

Does this guide apply to a duplicate EMI or SIP debit?

Yes, if the same mandate executed twice in one cycle. Quote the mandate reference (UMRN for NACH) and both debit references. Also alert the lender or fund house so the extra instalment is tagged and returned. If a mandate keeps firing after you replaced a card, see auto-debit continues after card replacement.

Can I go to the consumer forum instead of the RBI Ombudsman?

You can, but for a pure ledger error the Ombudsman is faster and free. Keep the consumer forum for cases where you suffered a larger loss the bank refuses to compensate.

Will the duplicate debit affect my CIBIL score?

Not directly, but if it caused an EMI bounce, the missed payment could be reported. Get the bank's letter accepting its error and ask it to instruct correction of any credit bureau entry that resulted.

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