CCPA Cracks Down on 27 Restaurants Over Illegal Mandatory Service Charges

The Central Consumer Protection Authority has taken action against 27 restaurants across India for mandatorily levying service charges, declaring it a violation of consumer rights. This follows a Delhi High Court judgment upholding CCPA guidelines that deem such mandatory charges unlawful. Specific cases include Cafe Blue Bottle in Patna being fined and ordered to refund customers, and China Gate in Mumbai being fined and told to modify its billing software. The CCPA will continue monitoring complaints and taking strict action against non-compliant establishments.

Key Points: CCPA Acts Against 27 Restaurants for Illegal Service Charges

  • Action against 27 restaurants
  • Violation of Consumer Protection Act
  • Fines and refunds ordered
  • Delhi High Court upheld guidelines
2 min read

CCPA cracks down on restaurants for illegal service charges, takes action against 27 establishments

CCPA takes action against 27 restaurants for mandatory service charges, a violation of consumer rights. Fines issued, refunds ordered.

"mandatory collection of service charges by restaurants is unlawful - Delhi High Court"

New Delhi, January 10

The Central Consumer Protection Authority has initiated action against 27 restaurants across India for mandatorily levying service charges, declaring the practice a violation of consumer rights and an unfair trade practice under the Consumer Protection Act, 2019.

The action follows the judgment of the Delhi High Court Delhi dated 28 March 2025, which upheld the Guidelines issued by CCPA on the levy of service charge. The Court held that mandatory collection of service charges by restaurants is unlawful and noted that all restaurant establishments must comply with the CCPA guidelines.

The Court further affirmed that CCPA is fully empowered to enforce its guidelines in accordance with the law.

According to the CCPA, investigations triggered by consumer complaints received through the National Consumer Helpline (NCH) revealed that several restaurants were automatically adding service charges, often around 10 per cent, to food bills without customer consent. Such practices directly contravene the CCPA's 2022 guidelines, which state that service charges must be voluntary and not added by default or subject to GST.

Among the cases cited, Cafe Blue Bottle in Patna was directed to refund the service charge collected from consumers, discontinue the practice immediately, and pay a penalty of Rs 30,000.

China Gate Restaurant Private Limited (Bora Bora) in Mumbai was fined Rs 50,000 and instructed to modify its billing software to remove the default addition of service charges and to ensure an active grievance redressal mechanism.

The CCPA said it will continue to closely monitor complaints related to service charges and take strict action against non-compliant establishments to protect consumer interests and curb unfair trade practices.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Good step, but will it really stop? These fines (Rs 30k, 50k) are pocket change for big restaurants. They'll just treat it as a cost of doing business. The penalty needs to be a percentage of turnover to have any real deterrent effect.
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Aman W
As someone who worked in hospitality, I have a slightly different take. While forced charges are wrong, I hope customers who refuse the charge still tip the staff directly if service was good. Many waitstaff rely on that income. The system needs fairness for workers too.
S
Sarah B
Visiting from the US, I found this practice very confusing in Mumbai. At home, tips are voluntary and based on service. Here, it was just added and they got defensive if questioned. Clear guidelines and enforcement are needed for tourists and locals alike.
V
Vikram M
The real issue is the GST on top of the service charge! We were paying tax on a forced "tip." That's daylight robbery. Hope the CCPA action includes ensuring no tax is levied on any voluntary service charge paid by the customer.
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Kriti O
More power to the National Consumer Helpline! It shows that when we complain through proper channels, action can be taken. We need to be more aware of our rights as consumers. Jago Grahak Jago!

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