New Delhi: Banks in India cannot see, record or inspect the valuables customers store in bank lockers, Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman told the Lok Sabha during Question Hour on 30 March 2026. She said this would violate banking regulations and customer privacy, and ruled out the possibility of differential insurance coverage based on the contents of lockers.
Under the current framework, standard insurance compensation for locker loss is capped at 100 times the annual locker rent, and banks are not allowed to appraise or catalogue the items held inside lockers. The clarification follows renewed parliamentary attention on locker safety and compensation norms, and highlights the persistent gap between perceived protection and legal liability for locker holders.
Locker Privacy and Insurance Rules
Answering a supplementary question from Congress MP Namdeo Dasaram Kirsan during Question Hour, Finance Minister Sitharaman emphasised that banks have no legal authority to inspect or record locker contents. “Sitting and watching the disclosure of a client of what valuables he is going to keep in the locker is a breach of banking rules, and banks wouldn’t do that, so that cannot be a measure for me to decide whether there should be differential coverage,” she said in Parliament, making clear that such practices would run afoul of regulatory safeguards and customer privacy protections.
Sitharaman reiterated that standard insurance coverage for any loss whether due to theft, burglary, fire or similar events remains fixed at 100 times the annual locker rent. She noted that the absence of any mechanism for banks to inspect or value locker contents made content‑based insurance practically unworkable under current rules.
Officials in the banking sector broadly welcomed the clarification, noting it aligns with the longstanding regulatory framework that treats locker rental as a secure storage arrangement, not an insurance policy for valuables’ market value. However, consumer advocates say this approach highlights the gap between what depositors assume and what is contractually enforceable a gap that becomes especially obvious when high‑value items are stored.
RBI Locker Rules, Consumer Concerns
The debate around locker safety and compensation is not new. In 2021, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) issued revised locker guidelines that capped banks’ liability for losses at 100 times a locker’s annual rent, limiting compensation to that figure even when the value of stored items is far greater. These instructions, effective from January 1, 2022, sought to balance banks’ responsibility to safeguard locker infrastructure with the practical difficulty of knowing what is inside each locker.
Under these guidelines, banks must establish board‑approved policies for locker safety and compensation, maintain security measures such as CCTV and access logs, and ensure transparent allocation and operation protocols. But crucially, they do not and legally cannot maintain an inventory of locker contents or appraise their value. This means that the compensation cap is often a small fraction of the actual value of jewellery, documents or other valuables kept inside.
Personal finance experts and consumer guides stress that a bank locker is best understood as a space‑rental service with limited liability, not a full insurance solution. The 100 times cap typically leaves owners of high‑value assets under‑protected unless they purchase separate insurance coverage for the items inside their lockers. Such policies can cover jewellery, heirlooms and other valuables against a broader range of risks, including theft, fire and accidental loss.
Legal analysts also note that banks’ liability arises only when loss is proven to result from a bank’s negligence, fraud by staff, or similar failings; it does not extend to “acts of God”, such as natural disasters, in the absence of demonstrable negligence. This context underscores the difference between physical security and financial protection a distinction many locker holders misunderstand.
Several high‑profile consumer disputes in past years have illustrated this reality. For example, social media posts from locker users recount situations where valuables believed to be missing were hard to quantify or prove, precisely because banks do not record or verify what customers place inside. These anecdotes further illuminate why the compensation cap, though legally binding, may feel inadequate to depositors.
The Logical Indian’s Perspective
The government’s reaffirmation of privacy protections and regulatory limits on banks’ interaction with locker contents is fundamentally important it ensures customers’ personal belongings are not subject to undue scrutiny or documentation. At the same time, it exposes a clear imbalance between perceived safety and actual financial protection for locker holders.
This distinction matters: many households, especially in India where gold and heirlooms are often stored for generations, place deep emotional and financial significance on locker contents. The current framework leaves them exposed unless they take separate insurance steps to close this protection gap.
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