Frozen or Lien-Marked Bank Account in India? How to Get It Released (2026)

Indian bank account frozen or lien-marked over a cyber-fraud complaint? A step-by-step 2026 guide to getting it released, limiting the lien, and protecting your rights.
Quick answer: If your Indian bank account has been frozen or "lien-marked" after a cybercrime complaint, it usually means money linked to a fraud passed through your account and a police request placed a hold on it through the national 1930 / cybercrime.gov.in system. You can push back. Insist the freeze be limited to only the disputed amount, put your side on record in writing with the investigating officer, and, if needed, apply to a magistrate to have the account released. This guide walks through it step by step. (General information, not legal advice. For your own case, consult a lawyer.)
What to do first (3 steps)
- Find out who froze it, and why. Ask your bank in writing for the reason for the lien, the exact amount held, and the police reference behind it, the NCRP acknowledgement number or FIR, plus the investigating officer's name and contact. Banks act on a request routed through the police, so they must be able to point you to it.
- Get the freeze limited to the disputed amount. A lien is meant to cover only the suspected sum, not your whole balance. Ask the bank and the officer, in writing, to restrict it so you can operate the rest of your account (see below, this is your strongest lever).
- Put your side on record with the investigating officer. Send a written statement plus your evidence as early as possible. If you were used without knowing, that fact is central to your defence and the sooner it is on file, the better.
Why your account was frozen
When someone reports a financial cyber fraud by calling 1930 or filing on the National Cyber Crime Reporting Portal (cybercrime.gov.in), the complaint enters the Citizen Financial Cyber Fraud Reporting and Management System (CFCFRMS), run by the Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre (I4C) under the Ministry of Home Affairs. CFCFRMS alerts every bank in the money trail to hold the suspected funds. It connects more than 85 banks and intermediaries and has put over ₹5,100 crore on hold since 2021.
The catch is that the system traces money automatically, account to account. So an account that only briefly received or passed on tainted funds, like an unwitting cash-exchange or a "mule" account someone used without your knowledge, can get caught downstream and frozen even if you never knew the money was dirty. If that is you, see our explainer on how mule accounts get flagged in India.
Whole account vs the disputed amount: your biggest lever
This is the single most useful thing to know: a lien is supposed to cover only the disputed sum, not your entire balance. The MHA's 2026 standard operating procedure on account freezing requires that a lien be limited to the disputed amount, and Indian High Courts have repeatedly struck down blanket freezes.
In June 2026, the Gujarat High Court (Arjun Kuruveetil Peethambaran v. The Police Inspector, 2026:GUJHC:32081) ordered a bank to de-freeze an entire account and mark a lien of only ₹1,100, the actual amount traced, holding that freezing the whole account over such a small tainted sum was disproportionate and violated the right to livelihood under Article 21 of the Constitution. The Madras and Kerala High Courts have applied the same proportionality principle in similar cases. Use this. Ask, in writing, that the lien be restricted to the disputed amount so the rest of your money is usable while the case continues.
Put your side on record with the investigating officer
Build a simple, documented account of what happened and send it to the investigating officer. Useful evidence to gather:
- A clear written statement of exactly what you did and when.
- The original group post, advertisement, or message where the deal started.
- Your chats and call logs with the people who contacted you.
- Proof that you only exchanged or withdrew cash and kept no benefit (no commission, no share).
- Your KYC documents and the relevant bank statements showing the money in and out.
Keep copies of everything you send, and note the date you sent it. A paper trail showing you cooperated early is valuable later.
Why intent matters if you were an unwitting mule
Indian law treats someone who knowingly launders money very differently from someone who was used without knowing. If you can show you had no idea the funds were fraudulent and gained nothing from the transaction, that is central to your defence. This does not make the freeze disappear on its own, but it shapes how the case against you can proceed, which is exactly why putting your side on record (above) matters so much.
Before you agree to "repay the victim" for an NOC
Investigating officers sometimes offer to issue a No-Objection Certificate (NOC) to your bank if you repay the victim. This is a genuine resolution route in many cases, but talk to a cyber-law lawyer before you commit. Agreeing to repay can be read as accepting liability, and if you were truly an unwitting intermediary you may not be on the hook for the full amount. Get any arrangement in writing, and read the safety warning below carefully about who you actually pay.
The court route to release the account
If the officer does not lift the freeze within a reasonable time, your lawyer can apply to the jurisdictional magistrate to have the account released. The freeze is an attachment of property and, under the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita (BNSS), 2023, which replaced the old Code of Criminal Procedure on 1 July 2024, a debit-freeze of a bank account requires a magistrate's order under Section 107. The same magistrate can order release. Applications for the custody and release of property are made under BNSS Section 497 (the old CrPC Section 451) and Section 503 (the old CrPC Section 457). A lawyer who handles cyber cases will know the local practice for these applications.
Escalate an over-broad or stuck freeze
If the bank has frozen more than the disputed amount, or simply will not explain the hold, complain in writing to the bank's nodal or grievance officer first. If the bank does not resolve it within 30 days, you can escalate free of cost to the RBI Ombudsman under the Reserve Bank Integrated Ombudsman Scheme (RB-IOS), 2021, online at cms.rbi.org.in. Mind the 30-day rule: filing with the Ombudsman before giving the bank 30 days to respond can get your complaint rejected as premature, so lodge the bank complaint first and keep the acknowledgement.
A warning: fraudsters impersonate police in freeze cases
A second scam often chases the first. Criminals posing as police, CBI, or RBI officials contact people whose accounts are frozen and demand money to a personal account or UPI ID to "release" the account, sometimes over a fake "digital arrest" video call. The I4C's March 2025 advisory on digital-arrest scams and repeated MHA warnings are clear: genuine investigators never ask you to transfer money to a personal account to lift a freeze or settle a case. Verify any "officer" by calling the official police station number you look up yourself, never a number they send you, and never pay anyone privately. If this happens to you, it is itself a crime worth reporting (see how to report cybercrime in India).
If your account has been frozen or you have lost money to a scam, you are not alone. See our country-by-country cybercrime help hub for step-by-step reporting and recovery guides, and report the fraud on the national portal at cybercrime.gov.in or by calling 1930.
Sources
- Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre (I4C), NCRP / 1930 / CFCFRMS, MHA
- LiveLaw: reading the MHA's 2026 account-freeze SOP (lien limited to disputed sum)
- Gujarat High Court, Arjun Kuruveetil Peethambaran v. The Police Inspector, 2026:GUJHC:32081
- PIB: BNSS, 2023 in force from 1 July 2024
- RBI FAQ: Reserve Bank Integrated Ombudsman Scheme (RB-IOS), 2021 and the 30-day rule
- I4C / MHA advisories, including the "Digital Arrest" advisory (6 March 2025)