Edtech EMI Loan Started Before Course Access: How to Stop and Reverse It

Reviewed on: 2026-06-12.

Edtech EMI Loan Started Before Course Access evidence and complaint desk

You signed up for an upskilling course, and what you thought was an instalment “plan” was actually a loan from a lending partner. The EMIs started, but the course content, mentor or cohort never opened up. Here is how to decide your move.

  • If you are still inside the cooling-off window (the first few days the lender allows to exit), invoke it now. Write to the lending partner that you are exercising the cooling-off or look-up period and repaying only the principal for the days used, and tell the platform to cancel.
  • If access was promised but never given, treat it as non-delivery. Write to the platform and the lending partner together, demand cancellation of the loan and a refund, and stop the loan from being reported as your default for a service you never received.
  • If the platform has shut down or gone silent, complain to the lending partner directly, since the loan is a separate legal relationship, and raise it with the consumer authorities.

Why this works: The Reserve Bank's Digital Lending Guidelines of 2022 require that the actual lender, a bank or NBFC, deals with you transparently through its Lending Service Provider or platform. The borrower must get a Key Fact Statement, the lender's details, a grievance officer, and a cooling-off or look-up period during which the borrower can exit the loan by paying the principal and proportionate charges, without a penalty. That right is the lever when the course never opened.

First, understand who actually lent you the money

Most edtech “no-cost EMI” or “study now, pay later” offers are loans from a regulated lender, with the edtech firm acting only as the platform or Lending Service Provider. This matters because:

  • Your repayment obligation is to the NBFC or bank, not to the edtech firm. If the edtech firm vanishes, the loan does not.
  • Under the RBI Digital Lending Guidelines, 2022, the lender must give you a Key Fact Statement showing the loan amount, the annual percentage rate, the tenure, and all charges. A “no-cost” label does not remove the underlying loan.
  • The lender must publish a grievance officer and resolve complaints, and you have a cooling-off period to walk away early.

Find the lender's name in your loan agreement, the Key Fact Statement, the EMI debit narration in your bank statement, or the first SMS confirming the loan. You will write to that lender, not only to the course platform.

The cooling-off period is your strongest move

The RBI guidelines require a cooling-off or look-up period in digital loans, during which a borrower can exit by repaying the principal and the proportionate annual percentage rate, with no penalty. If you are early and the course never opened, this is the clean exit.

  • Write to the lender that you are exercising the cooling-off period for the loan dated [date], reference [number].
  • Confirm you will repay the principal for the days used, with no foreclosure penalty.
  • Ask the lender to stop further EMIs, cancel the standing instruction or e-NACH mandate, and confirm closure in writing.

If you are past the cooling-off window, you shift to the non-delivery argument below.

If access was never given: the non-delivery route

When the course was paid for through a loan but never delivered, write to both parties on the same day.

  1. To the edtech platform. Demand that it activate the full course at once or cancel and refund, and that it instruct the lending partner to close the loan, since the service you financed was not delivered. Quote your enrolment date and the access that is missing.
  2. To the lending partner (NBFC or bank). State that the financed service was not delivered, ask for the loan to be put on hold and cancelled, and ask that it not be reported as overdue to credit bureaus for a service you never received. Cite the RBI Digital Lending Guidelines, 2022 and ask for the grievance officer's decision in writing.

Doing both at once stops the platform and the lender blaming each other.

Documents and evidence checklist

  • The loan agreement and the Key Fact Statement showing the lender, amount, APR and tenure.
  • The enrolment confirmation and any promise of access dates.
  • Screenshots showing the course, mentor or cohort is locked or missing.
  • Bank statement showing the EMI debits and the lender's narration.
  • The e-NACH or auto-debit mandate details.
  • Your written complaints to the platform and the lender, with ticket numbers.

Escalation ladder

  1. Edtech platform grievance cell and the lender's grievance officer, in parallel. Give a reasonable, dated deadline.
  2. RBI Digital Lending / RBI Ombudsman. If the NBFC or bank does not resolve it within thirty days, escalate to the lender's nodal officer, then file with the RBI Ombudsman at cms.rbi.org.in under the Integrated Ombudsman Scheme for the loan side of the dispute.
  3. CCPA and National Consumer Helpline. For misleading “no-cost” or guaranteed-access claims by the platform, complain to the Central Consumer Protection Authority (CCPA) through the National Consumer Helpline on 1915, which can act against unfair trade practices and misleading advertisements.
  4. e-Daakhil. File a consumer complaint on edaakhil.nic.in against the platform for deficiency in service, claiming refund and compensation.

Sample letter to the lending partner

To
The Grievance Officer
[NBFC / Bank name], Digital Lending
[Email from the Key Fact Statement / website]

Date: [DD/MM/YYYY]

Subject: Cooling-off / cancellation of loan [number] for an edtech
course that was never made accessible

Respected Sir / Madam,

1. I took a digital loan of Rs [amount], reference [number], dated
   [date], routed through [edtech platform] to fund the course
   "[course name]".

2. The course access (content / mentor / cohort) was never provided.
   Screenshots of the locked access are attached.

3. [If within window: I hereby exercise the cooling-off / look-up
   period under the RBI Digital Lending Guidelines, 2022, and will
   repay only the principal for the days used, without penalty.]
   [If past window: As the financed service was not delivered, I
   request cancellation of the loan and a refund.]

4. Please stop further EMIs, cancel the e-NACH / auto-debit mandate,
   and do not report this account as overdue to any credit bureau for
   an undelivered service. Kindly confirm closure in writing.

5. If unresolved within 30 days, I will approach the RBI Ombudsman at
   cms.rbi.org.in and the CCPA through the National Consumer Helpline.

Yours faithfully,
[Name] | [Email] | [Mobile]

Enclosures: Loan agreement, Key Fact Statement, locked-access
screenshots, bank statement showing EMIs.

When RTI helps, and when it does not

RTI under the Right to Information Act, 2005 applies to public authorities. A private edtech firm and a private NBFC are not public authorities, so you cannot file an RTI against them. The RBI is a public authority. You may file an RTI with the RBI's Central Public Information Officer to ask, in general terms, about the status of action on a complaint you submitted at cms.rbi.org.in, or for published circulars on digital lending. For the actual cancellation and refund, the cooling-off right, the grievance officers, the RBI Ombudsman and the CCPA are the real remedies. See how to file RTI online and first and second appeals.

Common mistakes

  • Thinking the EMI is just a “plan”. It is a loan from a regulated lender; your duty is to that lender.
  • Missing the cooling-off window. It is the cleanest exit; act the moment access fails.
  • Writing only to the edtech firm. Always write to the lender too, since the loan survives the platform.
  • Letting it be reported as a default. Demand in writing that an undelivered course not be reported as overdue.
  • Ignoring the misleading claim. “No-cost” or “guaranteed placement” claims can be raised with the CCPA.

FAQ

Is my edtech EMI a loan or just a payment plan?

In most cases it is a loan from a bank or NBFC, with the edtech firm acting as the platform. Your loan agreement, Key Fact Statement and bank narration will name the lender. Your repayment duty is to that lender, even if the platform shuts down.

What is the cooling-off period in digital lending?

Under the RBI Digital Lending Guidelines, 2022, a digital loan must include a cooling-off or look-up period during which you can exit by repaying the principal and proportionate charges, without a penalty. It is the simplest way out if the course never opened.

The course never gave me access. Do I still have to pay the EMI?

You still owe the lender unless the loan is cancelled, so do not simply stop paying. Instead, write to the lender and the platform demanding cancellation and refund for non-delivery, and ask in writing that the account not be reported as overdue.

Can the loan hurt my credit score for a course I never used?

It can, if it is reported as overdue. That is why you must put your dispute in writing to the lender, demand that an undelivered service not be reported as a default, and escalate to the RBI Ombudsman if the lender ignores you.

The edtech company has shut down. Who do I deal with?

The lender, since the loan is a separate legal relationship that survives the platform. Write to the NBFC or bank's grievance officer, invoke the cooling-off right or non-delivery, and raise the misleading sales claims with the CCPA through 1915.

Where do I complain about a misleading "no-cost EMI" or "guaranteed job" claim?

To the Central Consumer Protection Authority through the National Consumer Helpline on 1915, which acts against misleading advertisements and unfair trade practices, and on e-Daakhil for a refund and compensation against the platform.

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