Sunday, 19 August 2018

Customer Rights Policy

Customer Rights Policy
The Customer Rights Policy enshrines basic rights of the customers of the banks regulated by
the Reserve Bank of India. It spells out the rights of the customer and also the responsibilities
of the bank. The Policy applies to all products and services offered by the bank or its agents,
whether provided across the counter, over phone, by post, through interactive electronic
devices, on internet or by any other method.
1. Right to Fair Treatment
Both the customer and the financial services provider have a right to be treated
with courtesy. The customer should not be unfairly discriminated against on
grounds such as gender, age, religion, caste and physical ability when offering
and delivering financial products.
In pursuance of the above Right, bank will –
i) Promote good and fair banking practices by setting minimum standards in all dealings with
the customers;
ii) Promote a fair and equitable relationship between the bank and the customer;
iii) Train bank staff attending to the customers, adequately and appropriately;
iv) Ensure that staff members attend to customers and their business promptly and
courteously;
v) Treat all customers fairly and not discriminate against any customer on grounds such as
gender, age, religion, caste, literacy, economic status physical ability, etc. Bank may,
however, have special schemes or products which are specifically designed for members
of a target market group or may use defensible, commercially acceptable economic
rationale for customer differentiation. Bank may also have schemes or products as part of
an affirmative action such as for women or backward classes. Such schemes / products will
not tantamount to unfair discrimination. The rationale for such special schemes or terms
will be explained by bank wherever required;
vi) Ensure that the above principle is applied while offering all products and services;
vii) Ensure that the products and services offered are in accordance with relevant laws and
regulations;
While it shall be the endeavour of the bank to provide their customers with hassle free and fair
treatment, bank would expect their customers to behave courteously and honestly in their
dealings with the bank.
It shall also be the bank’s endeavour to encourage their customers to approach the bank’s
internal grievance redressal machinery and approach alternate fora after exhausting all their
remedies under bank’s internal grievance mechanism.

2. Right to Transparency, Fair and Honest Dealing
The financial services provider should make every effort to ensure that the
contracts or agreements it frames are transparent, easily understood by and well
communicated to, the common person. The product’s price, the associated risks,
the terms and conditions that govern use over the product’s life cycle and the
responsibilities of the customer and financial service provider, should be clearly
disclosed. The customer should not be subject to unfair business or marketing
practices, coercive contractual terms or misleading representations. Over the
course of their relationship, the financial services provider cannot threaten the
customer with physical harm, exert undue influence, or engage in blatant
harassment.
In pursuance of the above Right, the bank will –
i) Ensure complete transparency so that the customer can have a better understanding of
what he or she can reasonably / fairly expect from the bank;
ii) Ensure that the bank’s dealings with the customer rest on ethical principles of equity,
integrity and transparency;
iii) Provide customers with clear information about its products and services, terms and
conditions, and the interest rates / service charges in simple and easily understandable
language, and with sufficient information so that the customer could be reasonably
expected to make an appropriate and informed choice of product;
iv) Ensure that all terms and conditions are fair and set out the respective rights, liabilities and
obligations clearly and as far as possible in plain and simple language;
v) Make known the key risks associated with the product as well as any features that may
especially disadvantage the customer to him/her. Most Important Terms and Conditions
(MITC) associated with the product or service will be clearly brought to the notice of the
customer while offering the product. In general, it will be ensured that such terms will not
inhibit a customer’s future choice.
vi) Provide information on interest rates, fees and charges either on the Notice Board in the
branches or website or through help-lines or help-desk and where appropriate the customer
will be informed directly;
vii)Display the tariff Schedule on their website and a copy of it will be made available at every
branch for customer’s perusal. Also will display in its branches a notice about the availability
of the Tariff Schedule at the branch;
viii) Give details, in their Tariff Schedule, of all charges, if any, applicable to the products and
services chosen by customer;
ix) Inform the customer of any change in the terms and conditions through a letter or
Statement of Account, SMS, email or display at branch notice board/website at least one
month prior to the revised terms and conditions becoming effective;
x) Ensure that such changes are made only with prospective effect after giving notice of one
month. If the bank has made any change without giving such notice which is favorable to
the customer, it will notify the change within 30 days of such change. If the change is
adverse to the customer, prior notice of minimum 30 days will be provided and the
customer may be provided options, to close the account or switch to any other eligible
account without having to pay the revised charge or interest within 60 days of such notice;
xi) Provide information about the penalties leviable in case of non-observance / breach of any
of the terms and conditions governing the product / services chosen by the customer;

xii)Display on public domain the Banks’ Policies on Deposits, Cheque Collection, Grievance
Redressal, Compensation and Collection of Dues and Security Repossession;
xiii)Make every effort to ensure that staff dealing in a particular product is properly trained to
provide relevant information to customers fully, correctly and honestly;
xiv)Ensure to communicate to the applicant within a reasonable time period as decided by the
bank about the acceptance / non-acceptance of applications submitted for availing a
product / service and convey in writing the reasons for not accepting / declining the
application. Such period will be notified in the bank’s website and also in the application of
the particular product or service
xv)Communicate unambiguously the information about –
a. discontinuation of particular products,
b. relocation of their offices
c. changes in working hours
d. change in telephone numbers
e. closure of any office or branch
with advance notice of at least 30 days. Also affirms that disclosure of information is an ongoing
process through the life-cycle of the product / relationship and will be diligently
followed by them. Ensure to use all possible channels of communication, including website,
to ensure that information on all changes are made known to the customer upfront;
xvi)Advise the customer at the time of selling the product of the rights and obligations
embedded in law and/or banking regulation including the need to report any critical
incidents that the customer suspect, discover or encounter;
xvii) The bank’s staff members shall, when approached by the customer for availing a product
or service, provide all relevant information related to the product/service and also provide
direction to informational resources on similar products available in the market with a view
to enable the customer to make an informed decision;
xviii)Not terminate a customer relationship without giving reasonable or contractual prior notice
to the customer;
xix) Assist the customer in all available ways for managing his/her account, financial
relationship by providing regular inputs in the bank’s realms such as account
statements/passbooks, alerts, timely information about the product’s performance, term
deposits maturity etc.;
xx) Ensure that all marketing and promotional material is clear and not misleading;
xxi)Not threaten the customer with physical harm, exert influence or engage in behavior that
would reasonably be construed as unwarranted harassment. Ensure adherence only to the
normal appropriate business practices.
xxii)Ensure that the fees and charges on products/services and its structure are not
unreasonable to the customer
3. Right to Suitability
The products offered should be appropriate to the needs of the customer and
based on an assessment of the customer’s financial circumstances and
understanding.
In pursuance of the above Right, the bank will –
i) Ensure that it has a Board approved policy for assessing suitability of products for
customers prior to sale;

ii) Endeavour to make sure that the product or service sold or offered is appropriate to the
customer’s needs and not inappropriate to the customer’s financial standing and
understanding based on the assessment made by it. Such assessment will be appropriately
documented in the it’s records
iii) Sell third party products only if it is authorized to do so, after putting in place a Board
approved policy for marketing and distributing third party financial products;
iv) Not compel a customer to subscribe to any third party products as a quid-pro-quo for any
service availed from the bank;
v) Ensure that the products being sold or service being offered, including third party products,
are in accordance with extant rules and regulations;
vi) Inform the customer about his responsibility to promptly and honestly provide all relevant
and reasonable information that is sought by bank to enable them to determine the
suitability of the product to the customer.
4. Right to Privacy
Customers’ personal information should be kept confidential unless they have
offered specific consent to the financial services provider or such information is
required to be provided under the law or it is provided for a mandated business
purpose (for example, to credit information companies). The customer should be
informed upfront about likely mandated business purposes. Customers have the
right to protection from all kinds of communications, electronic or otherwise,
which infringe upon their privacy.
In pursuance of the above Right, bank will –
i) Treat customer's personal information as private and confidential (even when the customer
is no longer banking with us), and, as a general rule, not disclose such information to any
other individual/institutions including it’s subsidiaries/associates, tie-up institutions etc. for
any purpose unless:
a. The customer has authorized such disclosure explicitly in writing
b. Disclosure is compelled by law/regulation;
c. Bank has a duty to the public to disclose i.e. in public interest
d. Bank has to protect its interests through disclosure
e. It is for a regulatorily mandated business purpose such as disclosure of default to credit
information companies or debt collection agencies
ii) Ensure such likely mandated disclosures be communicated immediately to the customer in
writing
iii) Shall not use or share customer’s personal information for marketing purpose, unless the
customer has specifically authorized it;
iv) Shall adhere to Telecom Commercial Communications Customer Preference Regulations,
2010 (National Customer Preference Registry) issued by Telecom Regulatory Authority of
India, while communicating with customers.
5. Right to Grievance Redress and Compensation
The customer has a right to hold the financial services provider accountable for the
products offered and to have a clear and easy way to have any valid grievances
redressed. The provider should also facilitate redress of grievances stemming from
its sale of third party products. The financial services provider must communicate

its policy for compensating mistakes, lapses in conduct, as well as nonperformance
or delays in performance, whether caused by the provider or
otherwise. The policy must lay out the rights and duties of the customer when
such events occur.
In pursuance of the above Right, bank will –
i) deal sympathetically and expeditiously with all things that go wrong;
ii) correct mistakes promptly;
iii) cancel any charge that has been applied wrongly and by mistake;
iv) compensate the customer for any direct financial loss that might have been incurred by
the customer due to its lapses.
The bank will also –
i) Place in public domain its Customer Grievance Redressal Policy, including the grievance
redressal procedure available for the customer;
ii) Place in public domain the compensation policy for delays / lapses in conducting /
settling customer transactions within the stipulated time and in accordance with the
agreed terms of contract;
iii) Ensure to have a robust and responsive grievance redressal procedure and clearly
indicate the grievance resolution authority who shall be approached by the customer;
iv) Make grievance redressal mechanism easily accessible to customers;
v) Advise the customer about how to make a complaint, to whom such a complaint is to be
made, when to expect a reply and what to do if the customer is not satisfied with the
outcome;
vi) Display name, address and contact details of the Grievance Redressal Authority/Nodal
Officer. The time limit for resolution of complaints will be clearly displayed/accessible at
all service delivery locations;
vii)Inform the complainant of the option to escalate his complaint to the Banking
Ombudsman if the complaint is not redressed within the pre-set time;
viii) Place in public domain information about Banking Ombudsman Scheme;
ix) Display at customer contact points the name and contact details of the Banking
Ombudsman under whose jurisdiction the bank’s branch falls.
Further, the bank will –
i) Acknowledge all formal complaints (including complaints lodged through electronic means)
within three working days and work to resolve it within a reasonable period, not exceeding
30 days (including the time for escalation and examination of the complaint by the highest
ranking internal official responsible for grievance redressal). The 30 day period will be
reckoned after all the necessary information sought from the customer is received;
ii) Provide aggrieved customers with the details of the Banking Ombudsman Scheme for
resolution of a complaint if the customer is not satisfied with the resolution of a dispute, or
with the outcome of a dispute handling process;
In addition, the bank will a) clearly spell out, at the time of establishing a customer
relationship, the liability for losses, as well as the rights and responsibilities of all parties, in
the event of products not performing as per specifications or things going wrong. However,
the bank will not be liable for any losses caused by extraneous circumstances that are

beyond its reasonable control (such as market changes, performance of the product due to
market variables, etc.). b) Ensure the customer is refunded without delay and demur, if it
cannot show beyond reasonable doubt to the customer on any disputed transaction (along
with interest/charges).

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