Bank Won't Close Your Account and Charges Keep Coming? Here Is the Answer
Reviewed on: 2026-06-12.
Direct answer: a bank cannot keep your account open against your will, and charges that accrue after you handed in a valid closure request are the bank's problem, not yours. Submit a written closure request, get it acknowledged with a date, clear the genuine pre-conditions once (mandates, linked products, instruments), and demand reversal of every charge debited after that date. If the bank does not close the account and reverse the post-request charges within 30 days, file with the RBI Integrated Ombudsman at cms.rbi.org.in. Continuing to debit charges on an account the customer has asked to close is a standard deficiency-of-service ground.
The dated acknowledgement is the hinge of the whole case. Before it exists, the bank can say you never asked. After it exists, every non-maintenance charge, SMS charge, or debit card fee that posts is evidence against the bank.
The two RBI rules branches forget
Two regulatory positions defeat the most common charge traps, and quoting them in writing changes the conversation at the counter.
- Minimum balance penalties cannot push your balance below zero. RBI told banks in 2014 that charges for non-maintenance of minimum balance should not turn a positive balance negative. If your idle account drifted into minus purely through such charges, dispute the negative figure instead of paying it.
- Inoperative accounts cannot be charged for minimum balance at all. Under RBI's instructions on inactive and inoperative accounts, an account with no customer transactions for two years is classified inoperative, and banks cannot levy minimum balance charges on it, nor charge for reactivation. If your “forgotten” account was quietly debited for years, ask when it was classified inoperative and seek reversal of charges levied after that date.
Neither rule replaces closure. They clean up the balance so the account can close at nil.
Step-by-step
- List and kill every mandate. EMIs, SIPs, insurance premiums, UPI AutoPay, NACH instructions. Cancel each at the source app or biller, not only at the bank, and screenshot the confirmations. A live mandate is the one legitimate reason a closure stalls.
- De-link products. A loan repaying from this account, a locker billing rent to it, an FD or demat mapped to it. Move each link and get written confirmation.
- Submit the written closure request. Address it to the branch manager. State the account number, the instruction to close, where to send the closing balance, and one more line: “reverse all charges levied on or after the date of this request”. Take a stamped copy, or send by registered post or the bank's complaint portal for a timestamp.
- Surrender instruments against acknowledgement. Unused cheque leaves and the debit card, if the bank requires them.
- Collect the closure confirmation. A closure letter plus a final statement showing nil balance. Without these, a stray charge can resurrect the account months later.
- Escalate on a clock. No action within the bank's stated turnaround: grievance redressal officer, then principal nodal officer. Past 30 days from your complaint, or on a rejection: RBI Ombudsman at cms.rbi.org.in, attaching the acknowledged request and the statement showing post-request debits. The remedy to ask for is precise: closure, reversal of post-request charges, and compensation for any consequential loss.
If the account went negative
Do not pay a disputed negative balance just to make the closure happen. Ask in writing for a date-wise breakup of how the balance went below zero. Strip out charges barred by the two RBI rules above and charges levied after your closure request. What remains, if anything, is the real figure. Get the waiver or the final figure confirmed in writing first, because a “negative balance” can otherwise follow you into collection calls or bureau remarks. If the account was converted to a chargeable product without your consent, which is how many salary accounts start bleeding, see account converted to a paid product without consent and wrong salary account conversion.
Does RTI help here?
Only as a side tool, and only for public sector banks. You can ask the bank's Public Information Officer for the policy and circular governing closure timelines and charge waivers, the date your closure request was logged, and the noting on why it is pending. That record makes an Ombudsman complaint sharper. Private banks, small finance banks and payments banks are outside the RTI Act entirely. Either way, RTI cannot close the account or refund a rupee; the grievance ladder does that. Filing basics are at how to file an RTI online.
Frequently asked questions
Is there a fee for closing a savings account?
Most banks close free after the account is about a year old; some charge if you close within the first year. The fee must appear in the bank's published schedule of charges. If a closure fee is quoted that you cannot find in the schedule, ask in writing which tariff entry authorises it.
The branch says I must visit the home branch to close. True?
Policies differ, but most banks now accept closure at any branch or through a signed form sent by post, and several accept video or app-based closure for fully KYC-verified accounts. Ask for the bank's closure process in writing; “home branch only” stated nowhere in policy is itself escalation material.
Can I simply withdraw everything and ignore the account?
That is the most expensive option. Charges keep accruing, the balance goes negative, and years later the figure surfaces during a loan application. Spend the one visit needed to close it formally.
The bank closed my complaint saying charges are "as per schedule". What next?
The schedule justifies a charge on a live, serviced account. It does not justify charges on an account you formally asked to close, nor charges that breach the two RBI rules above. Escalate with the acknowledgement date as your anchor, and let the Ombudsman weigh the timeline.
My closure is stuck because a single auto-debit keeps reviving.
Cancel the mandate at the merchant end and ask the bank in writing to disable the specific NACH or AutoPay mandate by its UMRN. If debits continue after a card was replaced or blocked, the pattern in auto-debit continues after card replacement applies.
Two debits hit the account the same day for the same charge.
That is a duplicate ledger posting, a separate problem with a faster fix. See duplicate debit entry reversal.
Related guides
Download the account closure and charge reversal checklist (PDF).
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