Like cracks spreading beneath a polished surface, the hidden strain in the banking system is becoming harder to ignore.
A Decade of Rising Defaults
The scale of wilful defaults in India’s banking system has surged dramatically over the past decade. As of March 2025, outstanding dues have climbed to ₹3.83 lakh crore—more than triple the ₹39,369 crore recorded in 2014. The number of wilful defaulters has similarly risen from 5,076 to 18,318, according to data shared in Parliament.

Responding in the Lok Sabha, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman cited figures compiled by the Reserve Bank of India, based on data from TransUnion CIBIL. The data includes loan accounts of ₹25 lakh and above, highlighting a sharp expansion in unpaid debts linked to borrowers who have the capacity to repay but choose not to.
Among the most prominent defaulters are companies like ABG Shipyard Ltd and Gitanjali Gems Ltd, which have repeatedly appeared at the top of the list. As of March 2025, ABG Shipyard leads, followed by Gitanjali Gems and Beta Napthol Ltd.
Recovery Measures and Tightening Restrictions
Addressing recovery strategies, Sitharaman noted that banks are permitted to pursue compromise settlements to maximise recoveries without prolonging resolution. However, such agreements require board-level approval and do not halt ongoing criminal proceedings against defaulters.
Under the RBI’s stressed asset resolution framework, these settlements are allowed but come with conditions, including a mandatory cooling-off period before any future lending. At the same time, wilful defaulters face strict penalties—ranging from denial of additional credit to restrictions on raising funds through capital markets.
The government has also directed banks to avoid extending fresh credit to defaulters or entities linked to them. Companies with wilful defaulters as promoters or directors are barred from accessing market financing, reinforcing efforts to curb systemic risks.
The data paints a stark picture: while mechanisms for recovery and deterrence exist, the growing volume of defaults underscores deeper challenges in credit discipline and financial accountability.
In the balance between trust and liability, every unpaid debt leaves a mark that lingers far beyond numbers.
Summary
Wilful defaults in India have tripled over a decade, reaching ₹3.83 lakh crore by March 2025, with defaulters rising to over 18,000. Data shared in Parliament highlights major offenders and stricter recovery measures. While banks can pursue settlements, defaulters face credit restrictions and legal action, underscoring growing concerns over financial discipline and systemic risk.
