Summary of this article
PAN misuse rising, enabling fraudulent loans and identity-based financial fraud
Fake loans damage credit score, affecting future borrowing and interest rates
Credit report monitoring helps detect unauthorised loans linked to PAN early
Treat PAN as sensitive data to prevent misuse and financial identity theft
It usually begins with confusion.
A loan application gets rejected, or a recovery call comes in out of nowhere. Somewhere in the conversation, a detail surfaces that makes no sense: a loan exists in your name, but you have no memory of taking it.
This is not an isolated glitch. Cases of PAN misuse are beginning to show up more frequently, and the fallout is messy.
The Permanent Account Number (PAN) has, over time, become far more than a tax document. It now sits at the centre of most financial transactions, banking, investments, and credit. That convenience has come at a cost. Once compromised, it can be used to build an entirely false financial trail.
How It Slips Through
There is rarely a single point of failure.
Sometimes it starts with a document shared casually over email or messaging apps. Sometimes it is a phishing link that looks convincing enough. In other cases, data leaks do the job quietly in the background.
Once PAN details are out, creating a borrower profile is not particularly difficult. Loans can be applied for across platforms that rely heavily on digital verification. If approvals come through, the money is withdrawn, and the trail leads back to the original PAN holder, according to a recent report by The Economic Times.
The person whose identity is used often has no clue this is happening.
The Credit Score Shock
The first real sign of trouble tends to be a damaged credit score.
Loans taken in your name, even fraudulent ones, get recorded like any other borrowing. When repayments stop, the credit history reflects that behaviour. The score drops, sometimes steeply.
What follows is a chain reaction. Fresh loan applications become harder. Interest rates, if credit is approved at all, are higher. Even routine financial plans get disrupted.
There is also the uncomfortable possibility of questions around income and transactions, since PAN links directly to tax records.
Why People Find Out Late
Most people don’t check their credit reports unless there is a reason to.
That delay works in favour of fraudsters. In some cases, repayments are made initially to keep the account looking normal. By the time defaults begin, the account has already aged enough to escape early scrutiny.
When the issue finally surfaces, it is rarely just one entry. There may be multiple loans or enquiries tied to the same PAN.
Picking Up The Signals
There are usually signs, but they are easy to miss.
An unfamiliar lender name. A loan you do not recognise. A spike in credit enquiries over a short period. None of these should be ignored.
A periodic check of your credit report is often the only way to catch this early. It is not something most people are used to doing, but that is changing.
Cleaning It Up Takes Time
Fixing the problem is not immediate.
The lender has to be informed. The credit bureau needs a formal dispute. In most cases, a police complaint becomes necessary to establish that the loan was not taken out by you.
Documents have to be submitted. Explanations have to be repeated across institutions. The correction, when it happens, can take weeks.
In the meantime, your credit profile remains affected.
A Shift In How PAN Needs To Be Treated
There was a time when sharing a PAN copy did not feel like a risk. That assumption no longer holds.
It is now closer to a financial password than a simple identifier. Where and how it is shared matters.
Avoid sending it casually. Be careful about platforms where documents are uploaded. And pay attention to messages or calls that ask for personal details, even if they appear routine.
More importantly, keep an eye on your credit history. It may not feel urgent until the day it suddenly is.














