What Actually Happens If You Miss a Loan EMI in India: A Day-by-Day Timeline (2026)
It is the 6th of the month. You check your bank balance and realize the auto-debit for your personal loan EMI bounced two days ago. Your phone has three missed calls from an unfamiliar number. You feel a knot in your stomach and a single, sharp question: what happens now?
If you have ever been in this moment, you already know that generic advice ("don't miss your EMI") is useless after the fact. What you need is a clear picture of what happens at each stage, in real days, with real consequences, so you can decide what to do next. This guide walks through the timeline of a missed personal loan EMI in India — from the morning of Day 1 to the legal recovery options that open up six months later — and what you can do at each step to limit the damage.
Day 0: The Moment of Bounce
Your EMI due date arrives. Your bank attempts the auto-debit. If the balance is insufficient, the mandate fails. Three things happen in the next few hours, almost always automatically.
- Your bank charges a cheque/ECS bounce fee — typically ₹250 to ₹750, depending on the bank.
- Your lender's system flags your account as "missed" and queues a late fee.
- An SMS and email reminder are dispatched to you, usually within the same day.
At this stage, nothing has been reported to credit bureaus yet. Your credit score is intact. The damage so far is small and almost entirely fixable if you act in the next 48 hours.
What to do right now: Call your lender's customer service line, not the collection number. Acknowledge the missed payment, confirm the amount due (EMI + late fee + bounce charge), and ask for a fresh payment link or NEFT details. Paying within 24-48 hours of the bounce often avoids any further reporting.
Days 1 to 7: The Grace Window Most Lenders Quietly Offer
Most Indian lenders — banks and NBFCs alike — operate an unwritten grace period of three to seven days. During this window, internal "soft collection" teams call you, but the missed payment is not yet escalated to bureau reporting.
Expect the following during this week:
- Two to four phone calls from your lender's call centre, usually during business hours.
- Late fee accumulating daily — most lenders charge between 2% and 3% per month on the overdue amount, prorated daily.
- WhatsApp or SMS escalation as the week progresses, with payment links.
- No CIBIL impact yet in the standard 30-day reporting cycle.
Comparison aggregators like BankBazaar and Paisabazaar publish lender-wise late fee schedules, which can be useful if you want to estimate the exact penalty for your lender before you call them.
What to do this week: If you genuinely cannot pay the full EMI, call the lender and propose a partial payment plus a date for the rest. Most lenders accept this verbally and document it internally. Verbal commitments matter — they are noted in your account file and can later prevent escalation.
Day 30: The First CIBIL Report
This is the point where a missed EMI stops being a private matter and becomes a public one. On or around the 30th day after the due date, your lender submits its monthly report to the credit information companies — TransUnion CIBIL, CRIF High Mark, Experian India, and Equifax — flagging your account as DPD 30 (Days Past Due 30).
Three concrete consequences follow within days.
- Your credit score typically drops by 50 to 80 points, depending on your previous score. A higher starting score loses more in absolute terms.
- The DPD flag becomes visible to every future lender who pulls your report — for personal loans, credit cards, home loans, even some rental verifications.
- The negative mark stays on your report for up to 24 months, even after you clear the dues.
This is also the point where the lender's tone changes. Polite reminders become firm collection calls. You may be contacted by an external recovery agency, though they must follow the conduct rules laid down in the RBI Fair Practices Code, summarized by mainstream outlets like Moneycontrol and Economic Times.
What to do at Day 30: If you have not paid yet, do not ignore the calls. Even paying the overdue amount now will stop further DPD escalation in the next cycle. You cannot undo the DPD 30 mark, but you can stop it from becoming DPD 60. The difference between those two marks is significant for future loan eligibility.
If I Pay Before the 30th Day, Does the Missed EMI Still Appear on My Bureau Report?
Not as a DPD mark. The 30-day cycle is the window during which lenders submit their monthly bureau update. If you clear the dues before that submission, the lender typically reports your account as current. Some internal lender notes about the bounce may remain in your file with that specific lender, which can affect your future borrowing with them, but the bureau-level damage is avoided.
Can I Dispute a DPD Mark If It Was Reported in Error?
Yes. If you believe you paid on time but the lender failed to record it, you can raise a dispute directly with the credit bureau. Provide payment proof — bank statement, transaction reference, NEFT receipt. The bureau is required to investigate and respond, typically within 30 days. If the dispute is upheld, the DPD mark is removed from your report and your score is reinstated.
Day 60: The Second Cycle and the Real Score Damage
If you have still not paid by the next billing cycle, your lender reports DPD 60. The credit bureaus update your file, and three further things change.
- Your score takes a second drop, usually smaller than the first but cumulative.
- The "current status" on your account changes from "missed payment" to "substandard performance" in many bureau reports.
- Recovery agency involvement intensifies. You may receive visits at your home or office, though again, these are subject to RBI's Fair Practices Code.
At this stage, some lenders will offer you a settlement option — paying a reduced lump sum to close the account. This is tempting but has a long-term cost.
Why settlement is a trap: When you "settle" a loan, your bureau report will read "Settled" instead of "Closed." Future lenders treat "Settled" as a partial default, not a successful repayment. It can block your eligibility for major loans (home, car) for years. Always try to pay the full outstanding before considering settlement.
Can a Recovery Agent Visit My Home or Office Without Warning?
RBI's Fair Practices Code restricts when and how recovery agents can contact you. Visits must be at reasonable hours, agents cannot harass you or your family, and they cannot use threats or abusive language. If any of these rules are violated, you can complain to the lender, the banking ombudsman, or in serious cases the police. Document every visit, call, and message — date, time, name, and what was said.
Will a Missed EMI Affect My Employment Background Check?
Most standard employment checks in India do not pull credit reports. However, roles in banking, financial services, NBFC underwriting, and some government positions do include a CIBIL check as part of onboarding. A recent DPD mark can be a flag in those checks, though it is rarely a single-handed disqualifier. Most employers care about the broader pattern, not one missed payment.
Day 90: NPA Classification
The 90-day mark is the most important threshold in this entire timeline. As per Reserve Bank of India norms, a loan account that remains unpaid for 90 days is classified as a Non-Performing Asset. The technical term is NPA, and once your loan is tagged this way, internally it moves out of "performing assets" into a separate recovery bucket.
Three changes follow, often within the same week.
- Your account is handed over to a specialized recovery team, sometimes a third-party agency under contract.
- You receive a formal notice, often by registered post, citing your loan agreement and demanding full payment.
- The lender records a provision against your loan in its own books — meaning it has internally accepted the risk that it may not recover the money.
For the borrower, the practical reality is that the relationship has fundamentally shifted. Up to Day 90, you were a customer with a problem. From Day 91, you are an account in recovery. The legal options available to the lender expand sharply.
What to do at Day 90: If you have any capacity to pay even a portion, request a written restructuring agreement. The lender may convert the outstanding into a longer-tenure loan with smaller EMIs. This is documented in your bureau report differently from a settlement — it is treated as an active, performing loan again, which protects your future eligibility.
What If You Cannot Pay Due to Job Loss or a Medical Emergency?
Approach your lender in writing as soon as you know. Many lenders have hardship-restructuring programs that pause EMIs for two to six months or extend the tenure without classifying the account as defaulted. The earlier you initiate this conversation — ideally before the first missed EMI — the more options you have. After Day 30, the conversation is harder but still possible; lenders almost always prefer a restructured paying borrower over a defaulted account on their books.
Day 180 and Beyond: Legal Recovery Tools Open Up
Six months after the original missed EMI, the lender's recovery options become considerably more serious. The exact route depends on whether your loan is secured (backed by a tangible asset like property or gold) or unsecured (most personal loans).
For Secured Loans
If your loan is backed by collateral — a property, a vehicle, gold — the lender can invoke the SARFAESI Act, 2002. This allows the lender to take possession of and auction the collateral without going through court, after issuing a 60-day notice.
For Unsecured Loans
For unsecured personal loans, the lender's primary tool is a civil suit for recovery under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908. Larger amounts may go to the Debt Recovery Tribunal. The process is slow — often years — but the resulting decree can attach your bank accounts, salary, or other assets.
Mainstream press, including LiveMint, regularly reports on how lenders increasingly use these legal channels for defaults above ₹5 lakh, though smaller defaults often remain in the negotiation and recovery agency phase.
Important: Even at Day 180, lenders almost always prefer negotiation over court. Court cases tie up their capital for years. If you reach out with a genuine repayment proposal — even a partial one — most lenders will engage. Silence is what triggers the legal route.
What This Timeline Looks Like in One View
| Stage | What happens | Credit impact | Best action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Day 0 | Bounce + ₹250-750 fee + reminder SMS | None | Pay within 48 hours |
| Days 1-7 | Soft collection calls + late fee accruing | None yet | Negotiate partial payment + date |
| Day 30 | DPD 30 reported to bureaus | -50 to -80 points; 24-month mark | Pay to stop DPD 60 escalation |
| Day 60 | DPD 60; settlement offers may begin | Cumulative score drop | Avoid "settled" status; aim for full payment |
| Day 90 | NPA classification; formal notice | Severe; recovery bucket | Request written restructuring |
| Day 180+ | SARFAESI (secured) or civil suit (unsecured) | Long-term impact | Engage with concrete proposal |
How to Stop the Timeline Before It Starts
Most missed EMIs are not caused by sudden financial collapse. They are caused by mismatch — between income flow and EMI due date, or between the EMI size and the borrower's monthly buffer. Two specific habits prevent most of these mismatches.
1. Match Your EMI Date to Your Salary Cycle
Most lenders allow you to choose your EMI date once at loan setup, and many allow a one-time change later. Pick a date that is three to five days after your salary credit, not the same day. This builds a small buffer for delays in salary processing and avoids the bounce risk on the same morning the salary arrives.
2. Right-Size the EMI Before You Borrow
The single largest factor in missed EMIs is borrowing with an EMI-to-income ratio that looks fine on paper but leaves no slack for any real-life expense shock. Before you sign, calculate the EMI carefully using a tool like the step-by-step EMI calculation guide, and consider whether choosing a longer tenure — discussed in the 12 vs 24 vs 36 month tenure trade-off — would give you a safer monthly EMI even at the cost of slightly higher total interest.
Rule of thumb: Your total EMI obligations (across all loans, including credit card minimums) should stay below 40% of your take-home salary. Anything above 50% is the zone where a single unexpected expense triggers a missed EMI.
How Long Does It Take to Rebuild a CIBIL Score After a 30-Day DPD?
The DPD mark stays on your report for up to 24 months. The score impact, however, lessens over time as you make consistent on-time payments on your other obligations — credit cards, utility bills, other loans. Most borrowers see meaningful score recovery within 12 to 18 months of the missed payment, provided no further DPDs occur. The rebuild curve is shallow at first and accelerates after the 12-month mark, when more recent positive payment data starts to outweigh the older negative entry.
A Final Thought
The day you miss an EMI feels like the worst day, but the actual damage from a missed payment is not in that single day — it is in the silence that follows it. Every stage of this timeline has a "best action" attached for a reason: lenders, even in recovery mode, prefer borrowers who communicate. The DPD mark is permanent for two years, but the relationship with your lender is not, and neither is your credit score in the long term.
If you are reading this before your first missed EMI: the best protection is matching your EMI date to your cash flow and keeping your EMI ratio reasonable. If you are reading this after: pay what you can, call your lender today, and document every conversation. The timeline above can be paused at almost any stage, but only by you taking the next step.


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