Direct answer: No. Under §7(5) of the RTI Act, 2005, persons belonging to the Below Poverty Line (BPL) category are completely exempt from paying any RTI fee — application fee, copy fee, and inspection fee. Attach a copy of your BPL ration card or BPL certificate with your RTI application to claim the waiver.
The RTI Act recognises that a ₹10 fee — small as it is — can be a barrier for India's poorest citizens. §7(5) addresses this by exempting BPL applicants from every fee connected to an RTI request.
This means: no ₹10 application fee, no ₹2/page copy fee, no ₹5/15-minute inspection fee. Zero. The information is free.
Example: Govind is a daily-wage labourer with a BPL ration card. He wants to file an RTI about his MGNREGA payment. He writes his RTI application, attaches a photocopy of his BPL ration card, and sends it. He does not include any IPO or cash. The PIO must accept it and respond within 30 days.
For online RTI (rtionline.gov.in): select “Below Poverty Line” in the applicant details section and upload a scan of your BPL document.
Yes — §7(5) of the RTI Act is central legislation that applies uniformly across all public authorities in all states. State RTI rules cannot override this exemption.
It is still valid as proof of BPL status. The address on the card does not need to match your current address for the fee waiver. The BPL status is what matters.
The waiver applies to current BPL status. If you have been delisted from BPL, you are no longer eligible. However, many citizens who were listed at the time of application are not challenged — the PIO's obligation is to accept the BPL document on face value.
Last reviewed: May 2026. Part of the RTI Wiki definitions series.