- Getting scammed online feels terribly stressful, scary, and infuriating.
- The Reserve Bank of India wants to take some of the sting out of it with a new compensation plan for victims of digital banking fraud.
- This new framework means you won’t have to untangle a mess of bureaucracy to get your money back.
- The rules are pretty clear, but you’ve got to follow them closely.
- Here’s what you need to know, broken down without all the fine print.
Getting scammed online feels terribly stressful, scary, and infuriating. The Reserve Bank of India wants to take some of the sting out of it with a new compensation plan for victims of digital banking fraud. So, what’s actually changing? This new framework means you won’t have to untangle a mess of bureaucracy to get your money back. The rules are pretty clear, but you’ve got to follow them closely. Here’s what you need to know, broken down without all the fine print.

What Can You Actually Get Back?
This plan is all about protecting people who lose smaller amounts to online scams. So if someone steals from your account here are the numbers you should know:
- If you lose ₹50,000 or less you can apply under this rule.
- You get back 85% of the money you lost, This refund has a limit of ₹25,000. The RBI pays 65% of that, and your bank plus the receiving bank split the rest.
- Maximum payout is ₹25,000, no matter what.
- You can use this benefit only once in your lifetime so make it count.
You Have Only 5 Days to Report
Timing is everything. When you spot suspicious activity, there’s no time to agonize. You have just 5 calendar days to act. Here’s what you have to do:
- Tell your bank right away. Use the app, call customer care, or walk into a branch whatever’s fastest.
- Contact authorities. Either call 1930, the National Cyber Crime helpline, or file a complaint on the official cybercrime portal.
Miss the five-day deadline, or skip talking to the police? You won’t get the 85% refund.

Zero Liability: When the Bank Owes You Everything
Sometimes, the scam isn’t your fault at all. In those cases, you shouldn’t lose a single rupee. RBI’s “zero liability” rule says you’ll get a full refund no cap, no partial payout if:
- The bank’s security systems mess up, or they fail to send you alerts about transactions.
- Thieves steal your money through a big system hack (not your own mistake), and you report fast within the five-day window.
Here’s the kicker: The bank has to prove you were careless. If they can’t, they have to accept you’re the victim and pay up.
Banks Can’t Stall
No more waiting forever to hear back. RBI has set hard deadlines:
- 45 days for banks to settle any domestic fraud complaint.
- 60 days for international fraud.
- For credit card scams, the bank must add the money back to your card (temporarily) within 5 days, so you’re not slammed with late fees or interest while they investigate.
When Does This Start?
Banks need time to upgrade their systems for all this. These rules kick in starting January 1, 2027. Until then always stay alert. Don’t share OTPs. Keep your phone number updated with your bank. Read your transaction alerts. A safety net is great, but avoiding scams in the first place is always better.

