Direct answer: The Central Information Commission (CIC) is the apex quasi-judicial body established under §12 of the RTI Act, 2005 to hear Second Appeals (§19(3)) and Complaints (§18) against central government public authorities. Its orders are binding and enforceable; it can impose penalties and award compensation.
The CIC sits at the top of the central government RTI appeal chain: PIO → FAA → CIC. It is the final adjudicator for RTI matters involving central government ministries, departments, PSUs, constitutional bodies, and other central public authorities.
The CIC is headed by the Chief Information Commissioner and can have up to ten Information Commissioners. It functions like a quasi-judicial court — it conducts hearings, examines evidence, and passes binding orders.
Example: Rajan filed an RTI with the Ministry of Finance about a public contract. The PIO refused under §8(1)(d) (commercial confidence). The FAA upheld the refusal. Rajan files a Second Appeal with the CIC. The CIC holds a hearing, examines the records in camera, finds the refusal unjustified, orders disclosure, and imposes a ₹25,000 penalty on the CPIO.
CIC for central government public authorities (central ministries, PSUs, constitutional bodies). SIC for state government public authorities (state departments, municipalities, state PSUs). If in doubt, check whether the authority receives its budget primarily from the central or state government.
The CIC has a significant backlog. Realistically, Second Appeals take 6-18 months. Expedited hearings are available for life-and-liberty matters.
Yes — parties can appear in person or through an authorised representative. The CIC also conducts many hearings via video conference. You do not need a lawyer.
Last reviewed: May 2026. Part of the RTI Wiki definitions series.