National Consumer Day is observed in India every year on December 24 to underline the importance of consumer rights, protection, and awareness. This day marks a historic milestone in India’s legal framework as it was on 24 December 1986 that the Consumer Protection Act, 1986 when the assent of the president has been received. For the 2025, National Consumer Day is guided by the theme ‘Efficient and Speedy Disposal through Digital Justice’ which is reflecting India’s growing reliance on technology driven solutions to ensure accessible, transparent, and timely consumer grievance redressal.
Theme Of The 2025 Day
- This year in 2025 the day will be observed around this theme “Efficient and Speedy Disposal through Digital Justice”
- Focuses on the Delays in resolving complaints can lower consumer confidence, but digital platforms like e-Jagriti speed up grievance redressal by reducing backlogs.
- Technology including automation, online case tracking, and virtual hearings, ensures efficient case management.
- Accessibility features such as multilingual support, voice-to-text, and AI assistance help senior citizens, persons with disabilities, and NRIs file and monitor complaints anytime, anywhere. Transparency is maintained through SMS and email updates, while tools like the Jago Grahak Jago App and CCPA dashboards track progress and enforce accountability.
Evolution of Consumer Protection in India
India’s consumer protection framework has evolved significantly over the years. The Consumer Protection Act, 1986 laid the foundation for the recognizing key consumer rights such as,
- The right to safety
- The right to be informed
- The right to choose
- The right to be heard
- The right to seek redressal
- The right to consumer education
This framework was comprehensively updated with the enactment of the Consumer Protection Act, 2019, which came into force in July 2020. The new law strengthened consumer safeguards in a modern, digital marketplace and introduced faster and more effective dispute resolution mechanisms.
Three Tier Consumer Dispute Redressal System
The Consumer Protection Act, 2019 provides a three tier adjudicatory structure to resolve consumer disputes efficiently,
- District Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission for claims up to ₹50 lakh
- State Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission for claims between ₹50 lakh and ₹2 crore
- National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission (NCDRC) for claims above ₹2 crore
In July 2025 ten States and the NCDRC achieved a case disposal rate exceeding 100%, meaning more cases were resolved than newly filed, a strong indicator of improving efficiency.
Role of the Central Consumer Protection Authority (CCPA)
The Central Consumer Protection Authority (CCPA) was established in July 2020 to safeguard consumer interests as a collective. Its key functions include,
- Preventing unfair trade practices
- Regulating misleading advertisements
- Ordering recall of unsafe goods
- Imposing penalties and prosecution where required
The CCPA has played a crucial role in addressing emerging challenges such as false online advertising and dark patterns in digital commerce.
e-Jagriti: A Digital Revolution in Consumer Justice
A major highlight of National Consumer Day 2025 is the success of e-Jagriti, launched on 1 January 2025. It is a unified digital platform that integrates earlier systems such as e-Daakhil, CONFONET, and NCDRC CMS.
The platform allows consumers to,
- File complaints online
- Pay fees digitally
- Attend virtual hearings
- Track case progress in real time
With multilingual interfaces, chatbot assistance, and voice-to-text features, e-Jagriti ensures inclusivity for senior citizens, persons with disabilities, and NRIs.
By mid-November 2025, e-Jagriti had enabled,
- Over 1.35 lakh case filings
- Disposal of more than 1.31 lakh cases
- Registration of 2.81 lakh users, including NRIs
National Consumer Helpline 2.0
The National Consumer Helpline (NCH) has been upgraded to AI enabled NCH 2.0, offering support in 17 languages. Consumers can register grievances through,
- Toll-free number 1915
- WhatsApp, SMS, email
- NCH App, web portal, and UMANG App
In 2024, the helpline handled over 1.55 lakh calls in December alone and now resolves over 12 lakh complaints annually, many within 21 days. Between April and October 2025, it facilitated refunds worth ₹27.61 crore to consumers.
Strengthening Quality and Standards
- Institutions like the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) and the National Test House (NTH) play a vital role in consumer protection by ensuring quality assurance, standardization, and product safety.
- With over 22,300 Indian Standards, most aligned with international norms, BIS certification and hallmarking initiatives help consumers make informed purchasing decisions.
Legal Metrology Reforms 2025
Recent amendments to Legal Metrology Rules (2025) have improved transparency by,
- Updating labelling norms for medical devices
- Mandating clearer price disclosures
- Proposing country-of-origin filters for e-commerce platforms
- These reforms strengthen accountability and empower consumers in both physical and digital marketplaces.
Key Takeaways
- National Consumer Day is observed on December 24
- Theme 2025: Efficient and Speedy Disposal through Digital Justice
- Consumer Protection Act, 2019 replaced the 1986 Act
- CCPA regulates unfair trade practices and misleading ads
- e-Jagriti launched on 1 January 2025 for digital grievance redressal
- NCH 2.0 offers AI-enabled, multilingual consumer support
- BIS and NTH strengthen quality assurance and standards
Question
Q. What is the theme of National Consumer Day 2025?
A. Consumer Rights for All
B. Digital Consumers, Strong India
C. Efficient and Speedy Disposal through Digital Justice
D. Technology for Consumer Empowerment


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