The Shocking Status in Your CIBIL Report
You check your CIBIL report and suddenly see the words:
👉 “Written Off” next to one of your loans or credit cards.
Your mind goes blank. “Does this mean my loan is gone? Did the bank forgive me? Or will I never get a loan again?”
The truth is: “Written Off” doesn’t mean what most people think.
In this blog, we’ll explain exactly what it means, why banks mark it, how it affects you, and what you can do to fix it.
1. What Does “Written Off” Mean in CIBIL?
When a bank marks your account as “Written Off”, it means:
✔ You defaulted on the loan (didn’t pay for 180+ days).
✔ The bank decided to stop treating it as an active asset.
✔ They “write it off” from their books for accounting purposes.
👉 But this doesn’t mean your loan is forgiven.
You still owe the money. The bank may still recover it through agents or legal action.
2. Why Do Banks Write Off Loans?
Banks follow RBI rules. If a borrower doesn’t pay for more than 90–180 days:
The loan is classified as NPA (Non-Performing Asset).
The bank writes off the amount in its books to clean balance sheets.
But recovery efforts continue through collection agencies or settlement.
👉 “Write off” = Bank cleans its books, not your debt.
3. Impact of “Written Off” on Your CIBIL
When your loan is “Written Off”:
❌ Negative Mark on Credit Report
Shows lenders that you defaulted.
Remains on report for minimum 7 years.
❌ Loan Approvals Become Hard
Banks see you as high risk.
New loans/credit cards may get rejected.
❌ Higher Interest Rates
Even if approved, you’ll get loans at much higher interest.
👉 In short: “Written Off” status damages your financial reputation.
4. Myths vs. Reality About “Written Off”
| ❌ Myth | ✅ Reality |
|---|---|
| “Written Off” means loan forgiven. | Wrong. You still legally owe the amount. |
| Bank can’t recover once it’s written off. | Wrong. Banks can still hire agents or file cases. |
| “Written Off” disappears quickly. | Wrong. It stays on CIBIL for 7 years. |
| Nothing can be done about it. | Wrong. You can still settle/close and start repairing your score. |
5. Options If Your Loan Is “Written Off”
✅ 1. Negotiate a Settlement
Banks are often willing to settle for a reduced amount once loan is written off.
Example: Loan outstanding ₹5 lakh → Final settlement ₹1.8 lakh.
✅ 2. Pay & Get “Closed” Status
After settlement or repayment, request a Closure Letter/NOC.
Bank updates CIBIL from “Written Off” → “Settled” or “Closed.”
✅ 3. Start Rebuilding CIBIL
Use secured credit cards (FD-backed).
Maintain perfect EMI history on small loans.
Within 12–18 months, your score begins to recover.
6. Real-Life Example
Case: Manish, 38, Bangalore
Credit card dues: ₹3.5 lakh.
Couldn’t pay for 8 months → Bank marked account as “Written Off.”
Harassed daily by agents, score dropped to 520.
With Lawfully Finance:
We negotiated a settlement of ₹1.2 lakh.
Bank updated account to “Settled.”
We guided Manish with a CIBIL repair plan.
Within 1 year, score improved to 670+.
👉 “Written Off” didn’t mean end of the road—it meant start of recovery with the right help.
7. How Lawfully Finance Helps Borrowers
At Lawfully Finance, we specialize in handling cases marked “Written Off.”
✔ Negotiate with banks for lowest settlement.
✔ Stop harassment from recovery agents.
✔ Ensure written closure documents (NOC, Settlement Letter).
✔ Guide you on credit score repair.
Our goal: Turn “Written Off” into “Debt-Free & Rebuilding.”
Conclusion: Don’t Fear “Written Off,” Fix It
So, what does “Written Off” mean in CIBIL?
👉 It means the bank declared your loan as defaulted, but you still owe money.
✔ It damages your credit score.
✔ It makes future loans harder.
✔ But it’s not permanent doom.
With the right settlement and credit repair plan, you can bounce back—just like thousands of others have.
📌 Lawfully Finance is here to help.
Don’t let a “Written Off” status define your financial future.
Book your confidential consultation today:
