How to File a Credit Card Complaint with RBI in India
Updated 19 March 2026
Bottom Line: You must first complain to your card issuer and wait 30 days. If they don’t resolve it, escalate to RBI’s Complaint Management System (CMS) portal — it’s free, fully online, and covers every credit card issue from wrong charges to harassment by recovery agents.
Why You Might Need to Complain
Credit cards in India come with fine print that banks love to exploit. Here are the most common triggers:
- Unauthorised charges — transactions you never made, often after a data breach or card skimming
- Billing errors — wrong interest calculations, annual fees charged despite a waiver promise, or GST applied incorrectly
- Closure refusal — you ask to close the card, the bank stalls, and charges keep piling up
- Recovery agent harassment — calls at odd hours, threats, contacting your family or employer (all violations of RBI’s Fair Practices Code)
- Reward point devaluation — banks like HDFC, Axis, and SBI Cards have all quietly devalued points without adequate notice
- Add-on card issues — charges on supplementary cards you didn’t authorise
If any of this sounds familiar, here’s exactly what to do.
The Three-Tier Grievance Redressal System
RBI has a structured escalation path. You cannot skip steps — the Ombudsman will reject complaints where you haven’t first approached the bank.
| Stage | Where to Complain | Timeline | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tier 1 | Bank’s internal grievance cell | Bank must respond within 30 days | Free |
| Tier 2 | RBI’s Complaint Management System (CMS) | RBI acts within 30 days of receiving complaint | Free |
| Tier 3 | Appellate Authority at RBI | If you’re unhappy with Ombudsman’s decision | Free |
Tier 1: Complain to Your Bank First
Every card issuer in India is required to have an internal grievance redressal mechanism. Here’s how to find it:
- HDFC Bank — Call 1800-266-4332 or email [email protected]
- SBI Card — Call 1860-180-1111 or use the SBI Card app’s “Raise a Dispute” feature
- ICICI Bank — Call 1800-1080 or visit any branch with a written complaint
- Axis Bank — Call 1860-419-5555 or email [email protected]
- Kotak Mahindra — Email [email protected]
Pro tip: Always complain in writing — email or the bank’s online portal. Phone calls don’t create a paper trail. Save the complaint reference number. You’ll need it for Tier 2.
If the bank doesn’t respond within 30 days, or you’re unsatisfied with their response, move to Tier 2.
Tier 2: File with RBI’s Complaint Management System
RBI merged all its ombudsman schemes into the Integrated Ombudsman Scheme in November 2021. There’s now a single portal for everything — credit cards, banking, digital payments, NBFCs.
How to file online (recommended):
- Go to https://cms.rbi.org.in
- Click “File a Complaint”
- Select “Credit Card” as the complaint category
- Enter your bank’s name, your complaint reference number from Tier 1, and details of the issue
- Upload supporting documents — statements, emails, screenshots of charges
- Submit — you’ll get a tracking number immediately
Alternatively, file offline:
- By post: Send a written complaint to the Centralised Receipt and Processing Centre, Reserve Bank of India, 4th Floor, Sector 17, Chandigarh — 160017
- By email: [email protected]
The Ombudsman can award compensation up to Rs 20 lakh for financial loss and up to Rs 1 lakh for mental agony and harassment.
Tier 3: Appeal to the Appellate Authority
If the Ombudsman’s decision doesn’t satisfy you, file an appeal within 30 days with the Appellate Authority (a Deputy Governor of RBI). This is rare — most complaints get resolved at Tier 2.
What RBI Can Actually Do
RBI’s powers here are real, not ceremonial. The Ombudsman can:
- Order the bank to reverse charges — including interest and penalties wrongly applied
- Award compensation — up to Rs 20 lakh
- Direct the bank to correct your CIBIL score — if the dispute affected your credit report
- Penalise the bank — RBI has fined HDFC Bank, Kotak, and others crores of rupees for systemic violations
Common Complaint Categories That Get Results
| Issue | Typical Resolution Time | Success Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Unauthorised transactions | 2-4 weeks at Tier 1 | High — banks usually reverse within 10 days if fraud is proven |
| Annual fee disputes | 1-2 weeks at Tier 1 | High — most banks waive if you push back |
| Recovery agent harassment | 2-4 weeks at Tier 2 | Very high — RBI takes these seriously |
| Billing/interest errors | 2-6 weeks | Moderate — depends on documentation |
| Card closure refusal | 2-4 weeks at Tier 2 | High |
Important RBI Rules Every Cardholder Should Know
- Zero liability on fraud: If you report an unauthorised transaction within 3 days, your liability is zero. Between 4-7 days, liability is capped at Rs 10,000-25,000 depending on your card type.
- No unsolicited cards: Banks cannot send you a credit card you didn’t apply for. If they do, you owe nothing — not even the annual fee.
- Billing transparency: Every charge on your statement must be itemised. Bundled or vague charges like “service fee” without explanation violate RBI guidelines.
- Right to close: You can close your card at any time after clearing dues. Banks cannot refuse or delay beyond 7 working days.
- Recovery agent conduct: Agents cannot call before 8 AM or after 7 PM, cannot use abusive language, and cannot contact third parties about your debt.
Tips to Strengthen Your Complaint
- Document everything — screenshots, call recordings (legal in India for personal use), email threads
- Quote specific RBI circulars — mention the Master Direction on Credit Cards (DoR.FIN.REC.No.61/03.10.01/2024-25) for extra weight
- Be specific about the remedy you want — “reverse Rs 4,500 charged on 12 Feb 2026” beats “fix my billing”
- Set deadlines — “I expect resolution within 15 days, failing which I will escalate to RBI CMS”
- File CIBIL disputes in parallel — if your credit score was impacted, don’t wait for the bank complaint to resolve
Related Guides on CardTrail
- Understanding Credit Card Charges and Fees in India — know what’s legitimate before you complain
- Best Credit Cards for Travel in India — cards with the strongest fraud protection and dispute resolution
- Comparing Credit Cards Side by Side — find cards from banks with better customer service track records
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I file an RBI complaint without first complaining to the bank?
No. RBI requires you to approach the bank first and wait 30 days (or receive an unsatisfactory response). The CMS portal will ask for your bank complaint reference number.
How long does RBI take to resolve a credit card complaint?
Most complaints are resolved within 30 days of filing with CMS. Complex cases involving fraud investigation may take up to 60 days.
Is there any fee to file a complaint with the Banking Ombudsman?
No. The entire process — Tier 1 through Tier 3 — is completely free. If someone asks you to pay to file an RBI complaint, it’s a scam.
What if the bank retaliates by downgrading my card or closing my account?
Retaliation is a violation of RBI’s Fair Practices Code. Document it and include it as an additional ground in your complaint. Banks have been penalised for this.
Can NRIs file complaints with RBI about Indian credit cards?
Yes. If the card was issued by an Indian bank and is governed by Indian regulations, NRIs can file complaints through the same CMS portal. You don’t need to be physically in India.
Will filing an RBI complaint affect my CIBIL score?
No. Filing a complaint has no impact on your credit score. However, if the underlying dispute involves a missed payment that the bank reported, you should separately dispute that with CIBIL (TransUnion) while the RBI complaint is in progress.
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