Direct answer: The proviso to Section 7(1) of the RTI Act mandates that if the information sought concerns the life or personal liberty of a person, the PIO must provide it within 48 hours of receiving the application — not the usual 30 days. This is the fastest legally-enforceable information access right in India.
The standard RTI response time is 30 days. But the law recognises that some situations are urgent — when someone's life or freedom is at stake, waiting a month is not acceptable.
The §7(1) proviso creates a special 48-hour track. If your RTI is about information whose lack could endanger a life or keep someone wrongfully imprisoned, the PIO must respond within two days.
Example 1: A person is in illegal detention in a police lock-up and a family member files an RTI asking for their custody records. This directly concerns personal liberty — 48 hours applies.
Example 2: An RTI is filed asking for the medical treatment protocol of a patient in a government hospital who has been refused life-saving treatment. This concerns life — 48 hours applies.
Example 3: An RTI asking for road repair records after a pothole accident — this is a health/safety issue but does not directly concern an individual's immediate life or liberty. Standard 30 days applies.
Strong candidates for 48-hour filing:
Write at the top: “This application concerns the life/personal liberty of [Name]. As per the proviso to §7(1) of the RTI Act, 2005, a response is required within 48 hours.” The AI RTI Drafter inserts this automatically.
It becomes a deemed refusal at the 48-hour mark. File a First Appeal immediately. In the appeal, explicitly request the FAA to initiate §20 penalty proceedings given the life-or-liberty nature of the matter.
No — the proviso applies to the life or liberty of a living person. For deceased persons' medical records, you can still file under RTI but the standard 30-day window applies.
Last reviewed: May 2026. Part of the RTI Wiki definitions series.