Direct answer: A State Information Commission (SIC) is the apex quasi-judicial body constituted under §15 of the RTI Act, 2005 in each state and UT, equivalent to the CIC at the state level. It hears Second Appeals (§19(3)) and Complaints (§18) against state public authorities — state government departments, municipalities, state PSUs, and state-funded bodies.
India has one CIC at the national level and 28 SICs (one for each state/UT that has set one up). The SIC is for RTI matters involving state governments — everything from your local municipal corporation to the state police, state education department, or state-level PSU.
The SIC is headed by the State Chief Information Commissioner and can have multiple State Information Commissioners. It functions like the CIC — a quasi-judicial body with binding powers, penalty authority, and the ability to award compensation.
Example: Deepa files an RTI with the Tamil Nadu Health Department about a government hospital's drug procurement. The PIO refuses. The FAA upholds the refusal. Deepa files a Second Appeal with the Tamil Nadu SIC. The SIC orders disclosure and imposes a penalty on the PIO.
| Feature | CIC | SIC |
| Jurisdiction | Central public authorities | State public authorities |
| Constituted under | §12 RTI Act | §15 RTI Act |
| Filing portal | cic.gov.in | State-specific (varies) |
| Backlog | High nationally | Varies — some states very backlogged |
Each state has its own SIC portal. The State RTI Portals Directory lists all 28 active SIC portals with direct filing links.
This is a known constitutional issue. You can file a writ petition in the relevant High Court for a mandamus directing the state government to fill SIC vacancies. Civil society organisations have successfully obtained such orders in multiple states.
Yes — to the relevant High Court under Article 226 of the Constitution, and ultimately to the Supreme Court. SIC orders are quasi-judicial and are subject to judicial review.
Last reviewed: May 2026. Part of the RTI Wiki definitions series.