If you’re writing a cheque for a large amount, just signing and handing it over is no longer enough. Banks have made it mandatory to high-value cheques, usually of Rs 5 lakh and higher, go through the Positive Pay System (PPS) to prevent fraud. If you skip this step, your cheque may get rejected, even if everything else is in order.
What Is the Positive Pay System?
PPS is a security measure introduced by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to reduce fraud in cheque transactions. It requires the issuer of the cheque to share key details, such as cheque number, date, amount, and beneficiary name, with the bank before the cheque is presented for clearing.
The bank then verifies this information with what is presented during the cheque-clearing process. If there’s a mismatch, the cheque is flagged or stopped.
PPS Mandatory for high-value cheques
Most major Indian banks have now made PPS mandatory for cheques of Rs 5 lakh and above. Some banks allow voluntary submission for amounts above Rs 50,000, but mandate it beyond Rs 5 lakh. Here's what top banks say:
State Bank of India: Mandatory for cheques of Rs 5 lakh and above.
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HDFC Bank: Mandatory for cheques above Rs 5 lakh. Can be submitted via inernet banking or mobile App.
Axis Bank: Recommends PPS for cheques above Rs 50,000; mandatory from Rs 5 lakh onwards.
Union Bank of India: PPS mandatory from Rs 5 lakh upwards.
IDBI Bank and Bank of India: Also follow similar thresholds and encourage customers to use PPS proactively.
Cheque fraud often involves:
Alteration of amount or payee name
Cheque theft and misuse
Fake endorsements or cloning
Without PPS, the bank only sees the physical cheque. But with PPS, your pre-shared details act as a second layer of verification.
How to use PPS
Most banks allow submission through:
Internet banking
Mobile apps
Email or SMS (in some cases)
Visiting the branch
Key details to submit:
Cheque number
Cheque date
Payee name
Amount
Account number
Always confirm with your bank’s official communication or customer service for the exact process.
Consequences of skipping PPS
If PPS is mandatory for your cheque amount and you skip it:
Cheque will not be cleared
It will be returned unpaid
You may face delays, bounced cheque charges, and inconvenience to the recipient

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