Table of Contents

Information Commissioner Tenure and Salaries

explanations / commissioner-tenure-salaries — RTI Wiki

Did you know? Until 2019, the Chief Information Commissioner drew a salary equal to the Chief Election Commissioner — which was tied by statute to a Supreme Court Judge's salary. The 2019 amendment cut that link. The Central Government now fixes the salary by rule.

In one line. The Right to Information (Amendment) Act, 2019 (No. 24 of 2019, effective 24 October 2019) substituted Sections 13, 15, and 16 of the RTI Act, 2005. Tenure, salary, and service conditions of every Information Commissioner in India are now determined by the Central Government by rule, not by statute.

What that means in practice.

  • Tenure: Fixed term of three years (previously: until sixty-five years of age, or five-year term, whichever was earlier).
  • Salary: Fixed by the Central Government by rule — no longer statutorily linked to a Supreme Court or Election Commissioner's salary.
  • Service conditions: Central Government notifies allowances, leave, and other terms.
  • Scope: The amendment covers the Central Information Commission and every State Information Commission.

What the Act said before 2019

The Right to Information Act, 2005, as originally enacted, fixed the tenure, salary, and service conditions of Information Commissioners by statute:

The statutory link was deliberate. The drafters of 2005 tied Commissioners' status to constitutional officers so that their salary, pension, and service conditions could not be varied by executive rule. This was a protection for institutional independence.

Commissioner tenure under the pre-2019 Act was five years or age 65, whichever was earlier.

What the 2019 Amendment did

The Right to Information (Amendment) Act, 2019 substituted the relevant sub-sections:

Section 13 — Central Information Commission

Section 15 — State Information Commission

Section 16 — State Information Commissioners

Parliament supplemented the substituted statutory text with the Right to Information (Term of Office, Salaries, Allowances and Other Terms and Conditions of Service of Chief Information Commissioner, Information Commissioners in the Central Information Commission, State Chief Information Commissioner and State Information Commissioners in the State Information Commission) Rules, 2019 — commonly called the RTI Rules, 2019, notified on 24 October 2019.

Under the 2019 Rules:

Why it matters

The 2019 amendment was described by the Government as an exercise in administrative rationalisation — aligning tenure and pay of the Information Commissions with those of other statutory bodies. Critics, including a broad coalition of civil-society organisations and 120 Opposition Members of Parliament, argued that the amendment:

The 2019 amendment was challenged before the Supreme Court in Anjali Bhardwaj and Ors. v. Union of India. The Court declined to strike down the amendment but issued detailed directions on the process of appointments, emphasising the need for transparency, timely filling of vacancies, and publication of the reasons for selection. Those directions have become the anchoring framework for every subsequent appointment.

What the current position means for applicants

The tenure-and-salary changes do not alter the rights of an RTI applicant. The Act's substantive right under Section 3, the procedure under Sections 6 and 7, and the appeal ladder under Sections 19 and 20 are unchanged. What applicants notice, indirectly, is:

Status as of April 2026

The RTI (Amendment) Act, 2019 is in force. The RTI Rules, 2019 continue to govern tenure and salaries. The DPDP Rules, 2025 substitution of Section 8(1)(j) (see the DPDP amendment analysis) operates on a different axis — it is about what can be disclosed, not who orders the disclosure. The two reforms are analytically distinct.

Sources

  1. The Right to Information Act, 2005 (No. 22 of 2005), Sections 13, 15, 16 (pre- and post-2019 text).
  2. The Right to Information (Amendment) Act, 2019 (No. 24 of 2019), notified 24 October 2019.
  3. The Right to Information (Term of Office, Salaries, Allowances and Other Terms and Conditions of Service of Chief Information Commissioner, Information Commissioners) Rules, 2019.
  4. Anjali Bhardwaj and Ors. v. Union of India, Supreme Court of India, with subsequent directions on appointment transparency.
  5. Parliamentary debates on the RTI (Amendment) Bill, 2019 (Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha).

Last reviewed on: 20 April 2026 — RTI Wiki editorial team.