How to Recover Money Sent to Wrong Bank Account / Wrong UPI (2026)

You typed one digit wrong. Or a friend's UPI handle changed and you didn't notice. ₹35,000 has just gone to a stranger. This page is the operational recovery playbook — exactly what RBI rules require the bank to do, the NPCI dispute process, the 1930 angle when the receiver refuses to cooperate, and how to escalate to the Banking Ombudsman if the bank stalls.

Citizen Crisis Response Network — 48-hour rule
RBI's circular DBR.AML.BC.No.97/14.01.001/2018-19 (and follow-ups) requires banks to proactively contact the receiver within 48 hours of a customer's complaint about a wrong-credit transfer. Most banks don't volunteer this — you have to ask in writing.

If you sent money to the wrong bank account or wrong UPI ID in India: (1) immediately raise a dispute through your bank's app / branch with the UTR (UPI/IMPS) or transaction reference, (2) send a written request quoting RBI's 48-hour rule, asking the bank to contact the receiver, (3) raise an NPCI dispute through the UPI app within 3 days, (4) call 1930 if the receiver refuses to refund (it becomes a fraud / dishonest retention case), (5) escalate to the RBI Banking Ombudsman at cms.rbi.org.in after 30 days. If receiver agrees, refund typically lands in 24–72 hours.

In this guide

The 30-minute drill

  1. Capture transaction proof — screenshot the success page; note the UTR (12-digit) for IMPS/UPI, or the txn reference for NEFT/RTGS, exact amount, time, payer & payee account / VPA.
  2. Open the bank app's dispute flow — most apps have “Dispute / Raise complaint” against any individual transaction. Select “Wrong beneficiary” if available, else “Other.”
  3. Contact bank customer-care via the published 24×7 number — quote the UTR; ask the agent to register an “incorrect credit transfer” case under RBI's 48-hour customer-protection guidance. Note the SR (service request) number.
  4. Email the branch — send the screenshot, UTR, exact amount, and demand action under RBI's 48-hour rule.
  5. NPCI dispute (UPI only) — within 3 days of the transaction; raise from your UPI app → “Raise dispute” → category “Wrong receiver.”
  6. Save everything — bank SR, NPCI dispute number, branch acknowledgement.
Citizen tip — The faster you raise the formal dispute, the higher the chance the receiver hasn't yet drawn or moved the money. First 6 hours is the highest-success window.

How RBI rules work

RBI's policy is clear: a wrong credit is a fiduciary obligation. The receiving bank is required to:

  • Inform the unintended beneficiary that funds are unintendedly received
  • Request consent to reverse the credit
  • If consent is given, reverse the entry within the bank's settlement window
  • If consent is not given, inform the remitter so legal recovery can be pursued

Key RBI references:

  • Master Direction on Customer Service — banks must have a documented procedure for wrong-credit cases
  • Branch-level complaint is a regulatory obligation, not a courtesy
  • Banking Ombudsman scheme (now under RB-IOS, 2021) accepts wrong-credit non-resolution as a ground

The receiver bank's hands are tied without the receiver's consent — the bank cannot debit a non-fraud credit unilaterally. That's why receiver outreach matters. And that's why a non-cooperating receiver becomes a fraud / dishonest retention matter under BNS 2024 §316 / §319, escalated through 1930 + police FIR.

NPCI / UPI dispute process

If the transaction is UPI:

  1. Open your UPI app (PhonePe / GPay / Paytm / BHIM / app linked to your bank)
  2. Find the transaction → “Help” or “Raise dispute”
  3. Category: “Money sent to wrong UPI ID” / “Beneficiary mismatch”
  4. Add the UTR, amount, your VPA, and a brief description
  5. Submit; you'll get an NPCI complaint reference
  6. SLA: bank must respond within 30 calendar days

NPCI escalates the dispute to the receiver bank, which then runs the consent loop above. NPCI's own role is not to refund — it routes the case.

If you used IMPS with a 16-digit MMID + mobile, the receiver-bank lookup is via that MMID. Same for NEFT by IFSC + account.

When the receiver refuses to refund

This is where most cases stall. Under Indian law, the receiver who knows the credit is unintended and refuses to return it is committing dishonest retention of property — actionable under:

  • BNS 2024 §316 — Cheating by personation (if they impersonated)
  • BNS 2024 §319 — Cheating
  • BNS 2024 §312 — Dishonest misappropriation
  • Civil suit for recovery under Order VII, CPC

Steps:

  1. Get the bank's written reply stating the receiver refused
  2. File at cybercrime.gov.in / 1930 under “Online Banking Fraud → Wrong Transfer Retention”
  3. File a police FIR at the jurisdictional station (BNS 2024 §312 / §319), citing the bank reply
  4. File a civil recovery suit if amount is significant
  5. Banking Ombudsman complaint in parallel — RB-IOS 2021 covers this

The pressure of an FIR + ombudsman + civil notice almost always forces a refund without trial — most receivers fold within 7–14 days of formal notice.

Sample written complaint to your bank

To,
The Branch Manager,
[Your bank], [Branch], [City]

Subject: Wrong-credit transfer — UTR [12-digit] dated [date] — request
for action under RBI customer-protection guidance

Sir / Madam,

I, [Your name], holder of A/C [number], inform you that on [date] at
[time] I made an [UPI / IMPS / NEFT] transfer of ₹[amount] to a wrong
beneficiary as detailed:

   UTR / Reference no.   : ___
   Amount                : ₹___
   Intended beneficiary  : [name, A/C no., IFSC]
   Actual beneficiary    : [name, A/C no., IFSC]   (received in error)

Per RBI's customer-protection guidance, I request your bank to:

  1. Within 48 hours, contact the receiver bank and request return of the
     wrong credit.
  2. Provide me a written acknowledgement of this complaint and an SR
     number.
  3. Update me on the receiver's response within 7 working days.
  4. If the receiver refuses, provide me a written confirmation of
     refusal so I may file appropriate legal proceedings.

I have already raised an NPCI dispute (Reference: ___) and contacted
your customer-care (SR: ___). Kindly resolve this on priority.

Yours faithfully,
[Signature, Name]
[Phone, Email]
[Date]

Escalation ladder

  • Day 0 — App dispute + customer-care SR + branch email
  • Day 1–3 — NPCI dispute (UPI); follow up branch
  • Day 7 — Written reminder; demand status
  • Day 30 — Banking Ombudsman complaint at cms.rbi.org.in
  • Day 30+ — If receiver refused, file FIR + civil suit
  • Day 60–90 — Ombudsman award expected; RBI requires 90-day resolution

Each step writes a paper trail that the next step depends on. Skip none.

What not to do

  • Do not transfer “verification” amounts to test if the receiver will refund — every paisa is harder to recover
  • Do not message the receiver from a new number making threats — it weakens your civil/criminal case
  • Do not abandon the dispute after 30 days — the ombudsman window is 1 year from the cause of action
  • Do not pay any “recovery agent” / “cyber expert” who promises a ₹1,000 fee for “fast refund” — these are themselves scams
  • Do not delete the original transaction screenshot, app history, or SMS — they are your case

Can compensation be claimed?

  • The principal amount — yes, refund is the standard remedy
  • Interest — Banking Ombudsman often awards interest at savings rate from the wrong-credit date
  • Mental harassment — Consumer Forum can award ₹10,000–₹1,00,000 on negligence
  • Bank deficiency — if your bank ignored the 48-hour rule, the ombudsman can award compensation up to ₹20 lakh
  • Receiver's bank deficiency — if the receiver bank failed to follow the consent process, ombudsman applies

What to do in the next 30 minutes (printable card)

  1. 0–5 min — Screenshot success page; note UTR; capture details
  2. 5–15 min — App dispute → “Wrong beneficiary”; bank customer-care SR
  3. 15–25 min — Email to branch; demand RBI 48-hour-rule action
  4. 25–30 min — UPI app NPCI dispute (if UPI)
  5. +24 h — Branch visit; written acknowledgement
  6. +30 days — Banking Ombudsman if unresolved

Long-tail keywords this page targets

money sent wrong UPI ID recover, wrong account transfer recover India, RBI 48 hour rule wrong credit, NPCI wrong beneficiary dispute, banking ombudsman wrong transfer, IFSC typo recovery, sent money wrong VPA refund, IMPS UTR wrong account, NEFT mistake recovery, RTGS wrong account return

People also ask

  • Q: Can the bank deduct money from the wrong receiver without consent?
    No. The receiver's account credit is the receiver's property unless court orders or law allows. The bank can only request consent.
  • Q: What if the receiver has withdrawn the cash already?
    The case becomes a recovery case — FIR + civil suit. The receiver remains personally liable.
  • Q: Will the bank refund me even if the receiver refuses?
    Generally no, unless your bank's negligence is established. The remedy is against the receiver, not your bank.
  • Q: Is there a deadline to raise the dispute?
    Faster is better. NPCI dispute should be within 3 days for UPI. Banking Ombudsman accepts complaints within 1 year of the cause.
  • Q: Can I track the receiver's identity?
    Through the bank — your bank can ask the receiver bank to share name/contact under the consent process. Direct lookup isn't possible.

Voice-search queries

“How to get back money sent to wrong UPI?” · “RBI 48 hour rule wrong transfer.” · “NPCI dispute wrong account.” · “Banking Ombudsman wrong credit.” · “Sent money to wrong account India.”

SVG / infographic prompts

[Action timeline] "Wrong transfer recovery"
T+0    : screenshot UTR
T+15min: app dispute + bank SR
T+1d   : NPCI dispute + branch email
T+7d   : reminder + bank reply
T+30d  : Ombudsman + FIR (if refused)
T+90d  : refund / award

[Decision tree] "Receiver responds?"
YES: refund in 24-72h
NO : FIR + Ombudsman + civil suit
NO RESPONSE: same path

[Comparison table] "Channel vs dispute window"
UPI : NPCI within 3 days
IMPS: bank within 7 days
NEFT/RTGS: bank within 7 days
Cheque: stop-payment if uncashed

Government & authority references

  • RBI — RB-IOS 2021 (integrated ombudsman scheme): cms.rbi.org.in
  • RBI — Master Direction on Customer Service
  • RBI — Master Direction on Limiting Liability of Customers, 2017
  • NPCI — UPI dispute redressal: npci.org.in
  • MHA — National Cyber Crime Reporting Portal: cybercrime.gov.in · 1930
  • BNS 2024 §312 (dishonest misappropriation), §316 (cheating by personation), §319 (cheating)
  • BNSS 2024 §173 for FIR
  • CPC Order VII for civil recovery

FAQ

++++ Can I cancel an IMPS transfer once initiated? | No — IMPS is real-time and irreversible from the sender side. Recovery is only via the receiver's consent or legal action. ++++

++++ I sent money to a frozen / closed account — what happens? | The credit fails and is auto-reversed to your account within 24–48 hours. If not, raise the dispute with UTR. ++++

++++ Bank says “we will write to receiver in 30 days.” Is this acceptable? | No. RBI's customer-protection framework requires receiver outreach within 48 hours. Cite this in writing and escalate. ++++

++++ The receiver agreed to refund but says they need help — can I send another OTP? | Never. Real refunds are bank-to-bank reversals. “Send OTP for refund” is a scam-on-scam — the receiver is now trying to drain you further. ++++

++++ How does Banking Ombudsman calculate compensation? | Principal + interest at savings rate + reasonable mental-harassment compensation. Quantum can extend to ₹20 lakh or actual loss, whichever lower. ++++

Myth vs reality

Myth Reality
“Once sent, money is gone forever.” Most wrong transfers are recoverable in 7–30 days when paperwork is correct.
“Bank will auto-reverse a wrong UPI.” Only the receiver's consent or legal order reverses a successful credit.
“Police won't entertain wrong transfers.” They will when the receiver refuses — BNS 2024 §312/§319 apply.
“Ombudsman is slow.” RB-IOS 2021 mandates resolution within 30 days of full documentation.
“I should pay a 'recovery agent.'” Recovery is free through the official channels above. Agents are scams.

Last word

Wrong-account / wrong-UPI transfers are one of the most recoverable financial accidents — but only if you treat the first 24 hours like a compliance project, not a personal embarrassment. RBI's 48-hour rule + NPCI dispute + Banking Ombudsman create a paper trail that almost always works. Save your UTR for every transaction; with that one number, recovery is mostly a matter of patience.

This page is part of RTI Wiki's Citizen Crisis Response Network. Updates tracked through RBI Master Directions, NPCI circulars, and Banking Ombudsman annual reports.