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Your Card's MITC Document: The 4-Page Contract You Should Read

Your Card's MITC Document: The 4-Page Contract You Should Read

Most Important Terms and Conditions: the bank's binding contract with you. What to look for.

Isha Patel

Tax-and-billing specialist. Writes about GST on annual fees, late fees, and EMI conversions.

9 June 2026
4 min read

What the MITC is

The MITC (Most Important Terms and Conditions) is the bank's binding contract with you, the cardholder. The RBI requires every bank to issue an MITC at card activation and to make it available on the bank's website. The document is typically 4 pages long and covers the fees, charges, and dispute resolution rules.

Most cardholders never read the MITC. That's a mistake — the MITC is where the bank lists every fee that can be charged, every reason the bank can close your account, and every rule you must follow to keep your account in good standing.

What the MITC covers

Fees and charges

A complete fee schedule, including:

  • Annual fee / renewal fee
  • Joining fee (if separate)
  • Add-on card fee
  • Finance charge (interest rate, in monthly and annual terms)
  • Late fee
  • Over-limit fee
  • Cash advance fee
  • Cash advance interest rate
  • EMI processing fee
  • Card replacement fee
  • Foreign currency markup
  • Cheque return / dishonour fee
  • Reward redemption fee (if any)
  • Duplicate statement fee
  • PIN regeneration fee

Each fee should have a clear number. If the MITC lists "up to ₹1,000", the actual fee may vary.

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Interest rates

  • Finance charge: typically 3.5%–4.25% per month (42%–51% per annum).
  • Cash advance interest: typically 2.5%–3.5% per month from day one (no grace period).
  • EMI interest: typically 12%–24% per annum.

The MITC must specify the rate, the calculation method (daily reducing balance vs monthly), and the compounding frequency.

Reward programme terms

  • Earn rate (points per rupee spent, or cashback percentage).
  • Cap on earn (per cycle, per year).
  • Redemption value (statement credit at 1:1, vouchers at lower rates).
  • Expiry rule (12 months, 24 months, 36 months, no expiry).
  • Inactivity clause (if points lapse after a period of no earn/redeem).

The MITC also lists what counts as eligible spend (and what doesn't — wallet loads, fuel, rent, government payments).

Billing and payments

  • Statement date and payment due date.
  • Grace period (typically 18–25 days).
  • Minimum amount due calculation (5% of balance or ₹200–₹500, whichever is higher).
  • Late fee threshold and amount.
  • Auto-debit enrolment process.

Cardholder obligations

  • Notify the bank within 24 hours of card loss or theft.
  • Keep your PIN secure.
  • Don't share OTP with anyone.
  • Pay the minimum amount due by the due date.
  • Don't exceed the credit limit without prior approval.
  • Don't use the card for illegal transactions.

Bank's rights

  • Block the card for suspicious activity.
  • Close the account for breach of terms.
  • Change the credit limit unilaterally (with notice).
  • Change fees with 30 days' notice.

Dispute resolution

  • Customer care number.
  • Nodal Officer contact details.
  • RBI Banking Ombudsman contact.
  • Maximum dispute resolution timeline (typically 90 days).

How to find your MITC

Three places:

  1. Welcome kit: the MITC is included in the welcome envelope when your card is delivered.
  2. Bank website: every bank publishes the MITC in a dedicated "Cards > Important Documents" section.
  3. Customer care: call and request the MITC. The bank will email it within 24 hours.

What to look for

When you read the MITC, focus on:

The fees that matter to you

If you travel internationally, focus on the foreign currency markup. If you carry balances, focus on the finance charge. If you take cash advances, focus on the cash advance fee.

The reward terms

Look for the expiry clause and the inactivity clause. These are the rules that determine whether your points survive.

The dispute resolution rules

Confirm the bank's commitment to the RBI's 90-day dispute timeline. If the MITC is silent on this, file a complaint.

The bank's rights

What triggers account closure? The MITC will list the bank's discretion. Some banks list "any breach of these terms" as a reason for closure.

The hidden clauses

Some MITCs include clauses that are surprising:

  • Cross-default: if you default on any other product with the same bank, the bank may close your card.
  • Set-off rights: the bank may set off your card balance against your deposits with the bank.
  • Currency conversion at bank's discretion: some banks use the "bank's posted rate", not the network's posted rate. The bank's rate may be less favourable.
  • Reward forfeiture on closure: closing your card may forfeit unused rewards. Check before you close.

How to use the MITC in a dispute

If you dispute a fee with the bank, the MITC is your reference. If the bank charged a fee not in the MITC, the charge is invalid. If the bank changed a fee without 30 days' notice, the change is invalid.

A common dispute scenario: a bank charges a "service fee" not in the MITC. The dispute is straightforward — quote the MITC's fee schedule, point out the missing line item, and request reversal.

The bottom line

The MITC is the contract. Read it once when you activate the card, and re-read it when the bank sends you a "change in terms" notice (typically via SMS or email). Most disputes are resolved by referring to the MITC. The bank cannot charge fees not in the MITC; the bank cannot unilaterally change fees without notice. Knowing your MITC is the cheapest legal protection you have.

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