Thousands of users across India hit snags with UPI payments on Wednesday evening, February 11, as popular apps like PhonePe, Google Pay, and Paytm showed failed transactions and delays. Complaints poured into Downdetector starting around 7 PM, peaking at over 23,000 reports in under an hour, forcing many to scramble for cash or cards at shops and eateries.
Massive Downtime Hits Major Cities:
The malfunction affected cities across the country, from Delhi and Mumbai to Chennai, Kolkata, Hyderabad, and Bengaluru, causing QR scans, financial transfers, and bill payments to fail. Social media erupted with frustration; “UPI down again?” “Tried three apps, nothing works,” one user said on X, while another said, “Paid for groceries with cash after GPay failed twice.”
Downdetector charts climbed sharply after 7 p.m., with 80 percent of issues caused by payment failures and the remainder to fund transfer troubles. PhonePe received the most complaints (40%), followed by Google Pay (30%) and Paytm (20%), matching previous breakdowns. Users switching banks or apps reported little relief, indicating a core UPI network issue rather than specific app difficulties. Small businesses suffered the burden, turning away digital payments during peak hours as queues formed.
NPCI Provides a Fast Fix:
The National Payments Corporation of India confirmed the mess around 8 PM, blaming “intermittent technical issues” for partial declines. “NPCI is currently facing intermittent technical issues, leading to partial UPI transaction declines. We are working to resolve the issue,” it posted on X, promising updates. By 8:30 PM, services stabilized for most, with NPCI declaring “the same has been addressed now, and the system has stabilised. Regret the inconvenience.” Full normalcy returned within 90 minutes, though stragglers reported lags into the night.
This is the fourth UPI disruption in recent weeks, following March 26’s 23,000-report surge, April 2’s bank rushes, and April 12’s five-hour nightmare due to unchecked status questions. The NPCI blamed the long wait on banks overloading “Check transaction” APIs with more than three requests spaced 90 seconds apart.
Root Causes Behind Recurring Glitches:
Network latency frequently causes these delays at sponsor banks decrease success rates, snowballing the load until transactions fail. NPCI relies on banks self-throttling requests, which lack built-in limitations, resulting in single failure spots that fintech analysts view as dangerous. Financial year-ends increase problems, as businesses flood systems to close accounts, according to previous NPCI reports. Peak evening hours worsen the situation, with millions scanning QRs for dinner runs or rides clashing with the tracks.
Experts call for comprehensive controls, not simply partner policing. “Relying on banks to self-regulate API calls invites overload,” one consultant told reporters, urging the NPCI to include safeguards amid UPI’s 21.6 billion December record. Previous solutions included tighter standards following the April tragedy, but Wednesday’s attack indicates that loopholes remain. Kotak and HDFC servers were detected alongside apps, indicating multipoint pressure.
Impact and Lessons for Digital India:
Every glitch shows how UPI supports the daily grind: 84 percent of digital volumes, but a low-value focus makes downtime painful for the majority. Street carts to chains come to a halt, and cash kings briefly return, highlighting the importance of backup plans. Users complained online that “India’s payment king fails when needed most,” sparking calls for redundancy. NPCI’s quick reaction softens blows compared to five-hour waits, but frequency bothers as usage approaches billions per month.
The government promotes UPI globally via NPCI International to the UAE, Singapore, and now Peru, but domestic difficulties dampen the shine. As volumes increase by 30% every year, infra must scale smoothly. Outage trackers, such as Downdetector, are essential for quickly gathering truths. Wednesday’s rapid fix shows resilience, but calls for unbreakable rails to meet the scale of UPI increase because India’s financial sector cannot afford errors.




