A Guide on Cheque Bounce and Its Legal Impact
Author Updated on Apr 22, 2026
India now considers faster resolution models for high-volume matters, such as cheque bounce cases, where disputes follow clear legal rules. AI tools may take up these routine cases to reduce pendency while judges focus on matters that demand deeper scrutiny.
At the same time, recent court decisions allow victims to file appeals before the Sessions Court under Section 372 Cr.P.C.
This dual shift signals a justice system ready for innovation and bold reforms.
Key Takeaways
- The payee must send a notice within 30 days of dishonour.
- A drawer gets 15 days to clear dues.
- Section 138 mandates a 2-year jail term or a fine of up to twice the cheque value.
- Banks apply cheque bounce charges from ₹100–₹750.
- Frequent dishonour can damage credit score and future banking access.
Understanding Cheque Bounce
Bounce cheque means a situation where the bank refuses to honour a cheque due to financial or non-financial reasons. It happens when the issuer has insufficient funds, the date or signature is incorrect, the cheque expires or a stop payment instruction is placed.
A dishonoured cheque breaks the promise of payment and can lead to bank penalties, legal notices and reputation loss for the issuer, while the payee struggles to recover the owed amount.
Factors that Lead to a Cheque Bounce
A cheque can fail during bank processing for many reasons. When any detail does not meet banking rules, the bank refuses payment and the cheque is treated as dishonoured.
Below are a few of the most common causes behind a cheque bounce:
- The issuer’s account has insufficient funds to cover the cheque amount.
- Signature mismatch between the cheque and bank records.
- Differences in numbers and words written for the amount.
- Overwriting or unclear writing without proper authentication.
- Stale cheque presented after 3 months from the issue date.
- Stop payment request raised by the issuer.
- Closed, frozen or restricted account at the time of deposit.
- Amount exceeds overdraft limit or agreed bank arrangement.
- Insolvency or death of the account holder notified to the bank.
Repercussion of a Bounced Cheque
A bounced cheque can bring serious legal, financial and reputational consequences for the issuer. It shows failure to honour a written promise, which may affect future banking relationships and credibility.
Banks report dishonour through a cheque return memo and the issue can quickly move into legal action if the payment remains unsettled.
Legal Consequences
The payee can file a criminal case under Section 138, which may lead to jail time, a fine or both. A civil suit can claim the cheque amount with interest and damages.
In certain cases, authorities may also apply IPC Sections 420 or 406 for fraud or breach of trust.
Financial and Reputational Impact
Banks charge penalty fees to both parties and frequent dishonour can lower credit scores and affect eligibility for loans or overdrafts.
In business transactions, repeated cheque bounce incidents damage trust and create hesitation among clients, suppliers and financial institutions.
Legal Process Under Section 138 in a Case of Cheque Bounce
Section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act applies when a cheque fails due to the drawer. The cheque must cover a valid due and reach the bank within its validity period.
Before a case of cheque bounce moves to court, the payee must issue a legal notice.
Conditions That Trigger Section 138
The cheque must settle a lawful debt. The payee must present the cheque within 3 months. The drawer’s account must show no balance for the amount.
The payee must send a notice within 30 days of dishonour. These conditions allow a valid claim under Section 138.
Step-by-Step Legal Action
The bank returns the cheque with a memo. The drawer gets 15 days to pay dues. No repayment may lead to a complaint within 30 days of the notice period.
The court checks facts, hears both sides and passes an order. A Section 138 case may run for 12-18 months based on court dates and complexity. The law mandates a fine up to twice the cheque value or jail for up to 2 years.
Precautions to Avoid Cheque Bounce
Avoiding cheque bounce starts with 2 simple habits that protect your payments from rejection. First, maintain enough balance before issuing any cheque. Second, verify the date, amount and signature to avoid errors.
Other factors to keep in mind are:
- Track post-dated cheques and ensure funds stay available.
- Issue a crossed cheque for safer account-to-account transfer.
- Reconcile your bank account regularly to know the real balance.
- Avoid issuing stale cheques close to the expiry period.
- Use digital options like UPI or IMPS when funds are uncertain.
Final Word
A cheque bounce can lead to legal and financial trouble, so timely action and careful cheque handling matter. Along with legal risk, cheque bounce charges add extra cost for both the issuer and receiver.
Banks usually apply fees between ₹100 - ₹750 based on their policy and cheque value. If the dispute reaches court, additional legal expenses may arise. This increases the overall burden on the drawer.
Frequently Asked Questions
Open your FD now with Shivalik Bank for up to 8.3% interest

Shivalik SF Bank
Investment amount
₹1,00,000
Compounding
Quarterly
- FD rate applicable
- 7.8%
- FD tenure
- 1Y 10M
- Maturity amount
- ₹0
- Interest earned
₹0

