How to Dispute a Wrong or Fraudulent UPI Transaction
Whether you sent money to the wrong VPA, were charged twice by a merchant, or were defrauded, UPI has a structured dispute process — and time is critical. This guide walks you through every escalation channel available to you.
Raise a dispute immediately inside your UPI app, then call your bank's helpline. For fraud, also call 1930 and file on cybercrime.gov.in. Keep your 12-digit UPI transaction reference number (UTR) handy — every step of the process will require it.
Key Takeaways
- You have a 180-day window under RBI guidelines to raise a dispute, but the sooner you act, the better.
- Your bank is your primary point of contact — UPI app helpdesks escalate to banks anyway.
- For fraud, parallel-track the bank dispute with the 1930 Cyber Helpline simultaneously.
- NPCI's grievance portal is the final escalation after bank and RBI Ombudsman channels.
A wrong or fraudulent UPI transaction is stressful. The good news is that India has a layered dispute resolution system — your UPI app, your bank, the RBI Banking Ombudsman, and the Cyber Crime authorities all play a role. The key is to move quickly and keep records.
This guide covers three scenarios: sending to the wrong person, a merchant overcharging or double-charging, and outright fraud where money was taken without your genuine consent.
Before You Start: Find Your Transaction Reference Number
Every UPI transaction generates a 12-digit UPI Reference Number (also called UTR — Unique Transaction Reference). You will need this at every step. Find it by:
- Opening your UPI app > Transaction history > Tap the transaction > Look for “UTR” or “Transaction ID”
- Checking the SMS your bank sent at the time of the transaction
- Logging into your bank’s net banking portal and finding the debit entry
Screenshot this reference number and the full transaction detail before you proceed.
Step 1: Raise a Dispute in Your UPI App
Open the transaction in your UPI app
In PhonePe: History > tap the transaction > “Raise a Dispute” or “Need Help”. In Google Pay: Transactions > select payment > “Report a problem”. In Paytm: Passbook > select transaction > “Raise a Dispute”.
Select the correct issue category
Options typically include: “Sent to wrong person”, “Amount debited but not received by merchant”, “Duplicate charge”, or “Unauthorised transaction”. Choose accurately — this determines how the case is routed.
Provide supporting detail
Add a brief description and attach any screenshots. Submit and note the complaint/ticket number provided. The app will usually commit to a resolution timeline — typically 3–5 business days for technical failures, longer for disputed authorised transactions.
Simultaneously call your bank’s customer care. UPI app helpdesks and bank helpdesks work the same backend system, but calling the bank directly sometimes moves faster, especially outside business hours.
Step 2: Call Your Bank’s Customer Care
Reach your bank’s 24×7 helpline
Use the number on the back of your debit card or the official bank website — not a number found via a Google search (fraud helplines masquerading as bank numbers are a documented threat). State: “I need to raise a UPI dispute. My UTR is [number].”
For fraud: request an account hold
If the transaction was unauthorised, ask the bank to flag the transaction and, if possible, raise a freeze request to the beneficiary bank. Note the name and employee ID of the person you spoke with, and the complaint reference number.
Step 3: For Fraud — File on Cyber Crime Portal Simultaneously
Call 1930 immediately
The National Cyber Crime Helpline operates 24×7. Early reporting gives authorities a window to freeze the receiving account before funds are moved onward. Have your UTR, the fraudster’s UPI VPA (from your transaction history), and the transaction timestamp ready.
File a report on cybercrime.gov.in
Visit cybercrime.gov.in and file under “Financial Fraud”. You will receive an acknowledgement number — keep it. This creates an official record that supports any subsequent bank escalation or legal action.
Step 4: Escalate to the Bank’s Grievance Officer
If your bank does not resolve the dispute within the committed timeline (typically 30 days for most banks), escalate to the bank’s Nodal / Grievance Officer. Their contact details are mandatorily published on every bank’s website under the “Customer Service” or “Grievance Redressal” section.
Write a formal email with: your name, account number, UTR, timeline of events, what you have already done, and what resolution you expect. Keep a copy.
Do not share your PIN, full card number, or OTP with anyone claiming to be calling from your bank’s fraud department. Genuine bank fraud teams will verify your identity using your registered details — they never ask for sensitive credentials.
Step 5: RBI Banking Ombudsman
If the bank does not resolve to your satisfaction within 30 days, you can file a complaint with the RBI Integrated Ombudsman Scheme at cms.rbi.org.in. This is free of charge and covers UPI disputes. The Ombudsman can direct the bank to refund, compensate, and take corrective action.
Step 6: NPCI Grievance Portal
As a last resort before consumer court, you can escalate to NPCI’s grievance portal. NPCI oversees the UPI network and can intervene when member banks are unresponsive. Provide your full escalation history when filing.
Realistic Expectations
Wrong transfers to another individual are the hardest to recover. UPI is designed for consent-based transfers — if you authorised the transaction (even under false pretences), the bank may treat it as a customer error. Fraud is more recoverable if reported fast enough to freeze the recipient account. Technical failures (debit without credit, double charges) are resolved reliably within the banking system’s standard timelines.
Sources
Frequently Asked Questions
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