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Charged Twice for One Transaction from Your Savings Account?

Reviewed on: 2026-07-03.

A person at a table puzzled as one coin splits into two falling from a single shopping bag, showing a payment taken twice.

Ramesh bought a microwave for Rs 18,000 with his debit card. The shop handed him one machine and one bill. Two days later his phone buzzed twice: the bank had taken Rs 18,000 out of his savings account twice on the same day, with the same reference number. His rent auto-debit then bounced, and the bank added a “insufficient funds” penalty. Ramesh had done nothing wrong, but his money was gone and the fees were stacking up.

A duplicate debit is a bank ledger error: the same single transaction has been posted to your savings account twice. It is not a payment dispute with a shop, and it is not cash missing from an ATM. This guide shows you, step by step, how to get the second debit reversed, recover the extra charges, and escalate to the RBI when the bank will not listen.

For the full procedural companion to this guide, including ready-to-use letter wording, see our main guide on reversing a duplicate bank debit and filing an RBI complaint.

Step 1: Confirm it is really a duplicate, not two purchases

The bank will only move quickly if your proof leaves no room for doubt. Open your savings account statement and compare the two debit lines side by side.

  1. Same reference number. Two genuine separate purchases create two different reference numbers (UTR, RRN, or transaction ID). A true duplicate usually carries the same reference, or one line carries a system reversal code. Note both reference strings exactly.
  2. Same amount, same payee, same date or next day. Duplicates often post on the same day, or when a held card authorisation is settled a second time by mistake.
  3. One delivery, one bill. Keep the single invoice, booking, or delivery note that shows you received the goods or service once.
  4. Merchant confirmation, if you can get it. A one-line email from the shop saying “we received one payment” closes the argument fast.

Download the statement as a PDF and highlight both lines. Screenshot the transaction detail screen for each entry so the reference number is visible.

A word of caution about timelines. People often assume RBI's strict “reverse in five days or pay Rs 100 a day” rule covers every duplicate debit. It does not. That rule (RBI circular RBI/2019-20/67, dated 20 September 2019) applies only to failed ATM, UPI, IMPS, card-present and AePS transactions where cash was not dispensed or funds did not reach the beneficiary. A pure duplicate posting in your ledger is a bank error handled under RBI's general customer-service norms and the Ombudsman scheme, with no fixed per-day compensation figure attached to it. Do not quote the T+5 rule for a ledger double-post; it will weaken your case. If your situation is actually an ATM shortfall, see ATM dispensed less cash than debited instead.

Step 2: Complain to the bank in writing on day one

Phone calls leave no trail. Put your complaint in writing the same day you spot the duplicate.

  1. Use the bank's complaint email, the in-app complaint option, or a signed letter handed in at the branch (keep a stamped copy).
  2. Quote both debit entries with date, amount and reference number.
  3. Ask for a complaint number. Every bank must give you one.

The relief you should ask for, in plain words: “Reverse the second debit of Rs [amount] dated [date], reference [number], with the original value date, and reverse the non-maintenance charge of Rs [amount] levied on [date] as a consequence.”

Value date matters and is easy to miss. The value date is the date the bank treats your money as having left the account. If you ask only for “reversal,” the bank may credit the money today but leave the wrong value date, so the interest, the bounced-auto-debit penalty, and the minimum-balance charge it caused stay on your statement. A value-dated reversal puts your account back as if the second debit never happened.

Step 3: Escalate inside the bank

If the branch or call centre closes the complaint without fixing the ledger, do not argue again at the counter. Go up the ladder in writing.

  1. Write to the bank's Principal Nodal Officer. The name, email and postal address are published on the bank's website under “Grievance Redressal.”
  2. Quote your original complaint number and the date you raised it.
  3. Repeat your exact relief ask: reversal with original value date, plus every consequential charge.

Keep each escalation dated. The dates become your proof later that you waited the required time before going to the RBI.

Step 4: Go to the RBI Ombudsman after 30 days

If the bank does not reply within 30 days, or replies but does not fix the duplicate, you can take the complaint to the RBI. The current scheme is the Reserve Bank - Integrated Ombudsman Scheme, 2026 (RB-IOS 2026), which was issued on 16 January 2026 and came into force on 1 July 2026, replacing the older 2021 scheme.

Under RB-IOS 2026 you must first have complained to the bank in writing. If no reply comes within 30 days, or you are unhappy with the reply, you must file with the Ombudsman within 90 days of that expiry or reply. So mark your bank-complaint date on a calendar: 30 days for the bank, then a 90-day window for the RBI.

You can file the RBI complaint in any of these ways:

  1. Online: at cms.rbi.org.in (the quickest route).
  2. Email: to [email protected].
  3. Post: to the Centralised Receipt and Processing Centre (CRPC), Reserve Bank of India, Central Vista, Sector 17, Chandigarh - 160017.
  4. Phone: the toll-free Contact Center with IVRS at 14448 (IVRS 24×7; agents 8 AM to 10 PM, Monday to Saturday).

The complaint to the RBI is free. You do not need a lawyer.

Step 5: Compensation you can claim

When the duplicate debit caused a knock-on loss (a bounced EMI penalty, a cheque bounce, lost savings interest, or just the time and stress of chasing the bank), you can ask the Ombudsman for compensation. Under RB-IOS 2026, clause 8(3):

  1. up to Rs 3 lakh for loss of time, expenses, and harassment or mental anguish; and
  2. up to Rs 30 lakh for consequential financial loss caused by the bank's error.

State each head separately in your complaint: “Rs X as consequential loss for the bounced EMI penalty on [date], and Rs Y for harassment and loss of time spent pursuing this from [date] to [date].” Vague claims get less.

Step 6: Use RTI to get the proof (public-sector banks only)

If the bank is dragging its feet and you need the internal transaction log, the Right to Information Act can help, but only for public-sector banks (SBI, PNB, Bank of Baroda, etc.). These banks are “public authorities” under the RTI Act, so their CPIO must give you the audit trail of both debit entries on request. Private banks (HDFC, ICICI, Axis, and others) are not covered by the RTI Act, so this route will not work for them.

File the RTI with the bank's Central Public Information Officer, asking for:

  1. the transaction log for both debits on your account on the date in question;
  2. the system reversal/reason code attached to each entry; and
  3. the date and reference of any internal note about the double-post.

The RTI reply is written proof that the same reference was debited twice, which strengthens both your bank escalation and your RBI complaint. See how to file an RTI online for the step-by-step fee and portal process.

When this guide is not the right one

  1. ATM gave less cash but debited the full amount? That is a failed-transaction case with the T+5 / Rs 100-a-day rule. See ATM dispensed less cash than debited.
  2. Bank credited your account twice and now wants the money back? That is the mirror situation. See bank credited your account twice and wants a reversal.
  3. An old auto-debit is still hitting your card after you replaced it? That is an e-mandate problem, not a ledger duplicate. See auto-debit continues after card replacement.
  4. Bank will not close your account and keeps adding charges? See bank refuses account closure and keeps deducting charges.

A short checklist before you send anything

  1. Two statement lines captured with reference numbers visible.
  2. Single invoice / delivery proof for the one purchase.
  3. Written bank complaint raised, complaint number noted, date marked.
  4. Escalation to Principal Nodal Officer dated.
  5. 30 days waited (or unsatisfactory reply received).
  6. RBI complaint filed at cms.rbi.org.in within the 90-day window.
  7. Compensation claimed under heads: consequential loss + harassment.
  8. RTI filed with the bank's CPIO (public-sector bank only) for the transaction log.

You do not have to accept a “system error” as the last word. A dated paper trail, a precise relief ask, and the 30-day-then-90-day escalation clock are usually enough to get the second debit reversed and the extra charges returned.

Support this work

If this guide helped you, two small things keep it running:

  1. Get the RTI Playbook — our practical ebook with ready-to-use RTI templates, fee tables, and escalation letters for banks, government offices, and tribunals. It turns the steps above into copy-paste forms you can file today.
  2. Donate to support this work — Right to Information Wiki is free and ad-light. Your contribution pays for the research, fact-checking, and server costs behind guides like this one.

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