Direct answer: A “third-party RTI” situation arises under Section 11 when information requested under the RTI Act concerns a third party — a person or entity other than the applicant — who has provided that information in confidence to the public authority. Before disclosing, the PIO must give the third party written notice and an opportunity to object.
When you ask a government body for information, sometimes that information is not just about the government — it may have been given to the government by a private company, another person, or an organisation, with an expectation of confidentiality. Section 11 is a safeguard: before handing that information to you, the PIO must tell the third party and give them a chance to argue why it should not be disclosed.
Example: You file an RTI asking the Pollution Control Board for the effluent test reports submitted by a private factory under an environmental permit. The factory is the “third party.” Under §11(1), the PIO must notify the factory and invite their objection. The factory may object citing trade secrets (§8(1)(d)). The PIO then decides — and their decision (whether to disclose or refuse) can be appealed by either you or the factory.
1. PIO identifies third-party information in the requested records. 2. PIO notifies the third party in writing within 5 days of receiving the RTI. 3. Third party has 10 days to make a written representation. 4. PIO decides within the overall 40-day extended window. 5. Both the applicant and the third party can appeal the PIO's decision.
Only if that company has provided the information to a public authority — for example, as part of a government licence, tender, subsidy, or regulatory submission. Purely internal private company records are not accessible via RTI.
Up to 10 extra days for the third party's response window. The overall RTI response deadline is extended to 40 days when §11 is invoked (30 + 10). However, many PIOs process §11 notices faster.
Yes. File a First Appeal under §19(1). The FAA must evaluate whether the §8(2) public interest override applies. Many CIC/SIC orders have rejected bare §8(1)(d) confidentiality claims when public money or governance is involved.
Last reviewed: May 2026. Part of the RTI Wiki definitions series.