What Is a Consumer Complaint? Meaning, Types & Your Rights in India

By Lawly · 2026-04-06

What Is a Consumer Complaint?

A consumer complaint is a formal objection raised by a buyer of goods or services against a seller or service provider for a failure to deliver what was promised — whether due to a defect in goods, deficiency in service, unfair trade practice, or restrictive trade practice.

In India, consumer complaints are governed by the Consumer Protection Act, 2019 and the Consumer Protection (E-Commerce) Rules, 2020.

Legal Definition Under the Consumer Protection Act, 2019

Section 2(6) of the Consumer Protection Act, 2019 defines a "complaint" as a written allegation made by a complainant that:

What Is a "Consumer" Under Indian Law?

Section 2(7) of the Consumer Protection Act, 2019 defines a consumer as any person who:

It does NOT include a person who buys goods for resale or for commercial purposes. So a business buying goods to resell is not a consumer — but an individual buying goods for personal use (even expensive goods) is a consumer.

Types of Consumer Complaints in India

Consumer complaints in India fall into these main categories:

1. Defect in Goods

Any fault, imperfection, shortcoming, or inadequacy in quality, quantity, potency, purity, or standard of any goods. Examples: defective electronics, expired food, wrongly labelled products, fake/counterfeit items.

2. Deficiency in Service

Failure, imperfection, shortcoming, or inadequacy in the quality, nature, and manner of performance of a service. Examples: delayed delivery, failed bank transactions, flight cancellation without refund, insurance claim rejection, hospital negligence, builder delay.

3. Unfair Trade Practice

Practices like false advertising, misleading product descriptions, hoarding, black marketing, offering prize schemes without intent to award, or manipulative pricing.

4. Restrictive Trade Practice

Practices that restrict competition or force the consumer to buy additional goods/services against their will (e.g., a bank forcing you to take insurance to get a home loan).

5. Overcharging

Charging more than the MRP, the displayed price, or the agreed price for goods or services.

Where Can You File a Consumer Complaint in India?

You have multiple channels:

  1. Company's Grievance Officer — First step under E-Commerce Rules 2020. Must respond within 48 hours, resolve within 30 days.
  2. National Consumer Helpline (NCH) — Call 1915 (free, 24x7) or file at consumerhelpline.gov.in. Mediates informally.
  3. Legal Notice — A formal legal notice (via Lawly) citing CPA 2019 resolves ~60% of disputes.
  4. EDAAKHIL (Consumer Court) — File formally at edaakhil.nic.in. Filing fee ₹100 for claims up to ₹5 lakh. No lawyer needed.
  5. Sector regulators — RBI Ombudsman (banking), IRDAI Bima Bharosa (insurance), TRAI (telecom), DGCA AirSewa (airlines).

What Can You Get from a Consumer Complaint?

Under Section 39 of the Consumer Protection Act 2019, the Consumer Court can order:

Time Limit to File a Consumer Complaint

Under Section 69 of the Consumer Protection Act 2019, a consumer complaint must be filed within 2 years from the date when the cause of action arose (i.e., when the defect was discovered or the service failure occurred). Delay can be condoned by the Commission if sufficient cause is shown.

Is Filing a Consumer Complaint Free?

Yes. Filing with the National Consumer Helpline is completely free. Filing on EDAAKHIL (the Consumer Court portal) costs only ₹100 for claims up to ₹5 lakh. No lawyer is required under Section 35(1) of the Act. Sector regulators (RBI Ombudsman, IRDAI, TRAI) are also free.

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