Guest
Guest
Jun 30, 2026
2:26 AM
|
If you're at the point where EMIs feel impossible to manage, loan settlement (also called a one-time settlement or OTS) is worth understanding before you panic-call your bank.
Basically, it's an agreement where your lender accepts a reduced lump-sum payment instead of the full outstanding balance, and marks the loan as "settled" rather than chasing the entire amount through recovery or legal action. It's usually only an option once you've missed several payments and can show genuine financial hardship, not something banks offer as a first resort.
The process generally goes: you assess what you can realistically pay as a lump sum, contact the lender to formally request a settlement, negotiate the amount, get it in writing (a Full & Final Settlement letter), make the payment, and then request a No Dues Certificate once it clears.
The catch most people don't think about upfront: a "settled" status on your credit report is different from "closed" or "paid in full," and it can hurt your CIBIL score and future loan eligibility for a while. So it's worth weighing against restructuring or rescheduling EMIs if there's any way to make that work instead.
I found this breakdown pretty thorough if you want the full step-by-step plus the documents you'll need: loan settlement
|