SEBI resolves 5,037 investor complaints via SCORES in June 2025
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) resolved 5,037 investor complaints through its online grievance redressal platform SCORES in June 2025, matching the 5,035 fresh complaints received during the same period, according to data released by the capital markets regulator. The near-perfect disposal rate nudged the total pending complaints count marginally lower.
Complaint Volume and Pending Cases
The number of pending complaints on the SCORES platform declined to 5,524 as of 30 June, down from 5,537 at the close of May. Notably, only 17 complaints involving listed entities and intermediaries remained pending for more than three months at the end of June — a figure that underscores the platform's improving turnaround.
Among the entities with long-pending complaints were Aditya Birla Money Ltd, Finolex Industries, and HBL Power Systems, according to the regulator's disclosure.
Resolution Timelines
Entities took an average of four days to submit Action Taken Reports (ATRs) on investor complaints during June. The average resolution time for first-level review complaints stood at eight days — both figures reflecting a relatively swift response cycle under the SCORES 2.0 framework.
SEBI also clarified that the pending complaints tally includes cases where entities have submitted ATRs within the prescribed timeline, but investors have exercised their right to seek a review if dissatisfied with the response. This means the pending count does not solely reflect regulatory inaction.
How SCORES 2.0 Works
Under the SCORES 2.0 framework, investor complaints are automatically routed to the concerned entity, which must submit an ATR within 21 days. If the investor remains unsatisfied, a first-level review can be sought within 15 days, after which a designated body examines the complaint and submits its own ATR.
Investors may further escalate to a second-level review within another 15 days, at which point SEBI directly examines the matter. Complaints are also treated as disposed of when investors opt for the Online Dispute Resolution (ODR) mechanism — an alternative channel that has been gaining traction.
What This Signals for Investor Protection
The June data continues a broader trend of SEBI tightening its grievance infrastructure. The SCORES 2.0 upgrade, which introduced automated forwarding and structured escalation timelines, was designed precisely to reduce the backlog that had historically plagued the platform. The fact that only 17 complaints crossed the three-month mark is a meaningful operational benchmark, even as the absolute pending count of over 5,500 indicates sustained investor activity and ongoing market participation disputes.
With the ODR mechanism increasingly being used as a parallel resolution route, SEBI's next challenge will be ensuring consistent quality of ATRs from entities — not just speed of submission.