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Paid RTI services vs DIY — honest comparison for 2026

Paid RTI services compared — RTI Wiki

Direct answer. Paid RTI services charge ₹399–1,500 per application for drafting and filing work that free tools at rtionline.gov.in and this site now replicate in under 10 minutes. For routine citizen RTIs (ration card, EPF, passport, scheme status), DIY is unambiguously better. Paid services have a legitimate niche for volume filers, journalists, and activists — we explain exactly where that line is.

When the RTI Act was passed in 2005, navigating the right public authority, drafting a legally-precise application, and posting it correctly was genuinely confusing. A small industry grew up to fill that gap. In 2026, with AI drafting tools, a government e-filing portal, and free step-by-step guides, the calculus has changed — but paid services haven't always updated their marketing to reflect it. This comparison is built on publicly available pricing and service descriptions, reviewed as of May 2026.

Side-by-side comparison

Service Price (per application) What they do DIY equivalent Verdict
OnlineRTI.com ₹399 + 18% GST (~₹471) Drafts application from your description, identifies correct CPIO, files by post or online, basic tracking AI Drafter + rtionline.gov.in (₹10 + 10 min) Overpriced for standard RTIs
RTIwala.com ₹459 (basic) – ₹999 (with appeal) Same as above + first appeal if no response AI Drafter + First Appeal Builder (both free) Appeal upsell inflates cost unnecessarily
Vakilsearch ₹499–1,499 (varies; not publicly listed) Legal drafting framing, CPIO identification, filing Same free tools Expensive; “legal” branding overstated for routine RTIs
Lawrato / IndiaFilings Hidden pricing; contact-form gate Lawyer-drafted application, consultation Appropriate if you need a lawyer (see below) Not suitable for routine citizen RTIs; not transparent on pricing
rtionline.gov.in (DIY) ₹10 + payment gateway You draft and file; central govt authorities only Best for most citizens
Postal DIY (IPO) ₹10 IPO + ₹30–50 Speed Post You draft, print, post Best for state authority RTIs
This site's free tools ₹0 AI drafting, first appeal, outcome predictor, voice tool Full parity with paid services

What paid services actually do — step by step

The core workflow of every paid RTI service is:

  1. You fill in a short form describing what you want.
  2. A staff member (or increasingly, an AI) converts it to a formal RTI application.
  3. They identify the CPIO and public authority.
  4. They file via rtionline.gov.in or post an IPO.
  5. They track delivery and forward the response to you.

Every one of these steps is now replicable for free:

Where paid services still add value

We are not dismissing paid services entirely. There is a genuine use case:

Where paid services are a waste of money

Do not pay a service for:

These are routine citizen RTIs — exactly the 90% use-case the free tools handle perfectly.

A word on "lawyer-drafted RTI" services

Services that promise “lawyer-drafted” RTI applications are conflating two different things. An RTI application under §6(1) is intentionally non-technical — the Act explicitly says you need not give reasons, and the application just needs to identify the information sought. A lawyer-drafted RTI is not legally superior to a citizen-drafted one. Lawyers become genuinely useful at the second appeal and adjudication stage — not at drafting. See when hiring a lawyer is actually worth it for the honest breakdown.

The hidden cost of paid services: speed

One counter-intuitive point: paid services are sometimes slower than self-filing. When you file at rtionline.gov.in yourself, the CPIO receives the application the same day. When you use a service, they typically batch-process daily — meaning your application may sit 12–24 hours before being filed, then the clock starts. For time-sensitive RTIs (e.g., information about a pending auction, a pending court proceeding, a tender deadline), direct filing is always faster.

Real-life example

Priya Iyer, Chennai, Tamil Nadu (2024)

Priya paid ₹599 to OnlineRTI for an application about her pending EPF transfer. She waited 8 days for the service to file it. A colleague in the same office used the RTI Wiki AI Drafter, filed on rtionline.gov.in himself in 12 minutes, and received his information 3 days before Priya's application was even submitted. Both RTIs produced the same result — the EPF status records.

Free tools to use right now

FAQ

Is OnlineRTI a government portal?

No. OnlineRTI.com and RTIwala are private commercial services. The only government portal for filing RTI applications online is rtionline.gov.in, which is operated by the Department of Personnel and Training, Government of India. Always confirm you are using the correct portal.

Can a paid service guarantee I get information?

No. No service — paid or free — can guarantee the CPIO's response. The RTI Act gives you the right to information, but whether the public authority complies depends on the CPIO and the nature of the request. A paid service that “guarantees results” is making a misleading claim.

Do paid services file first appeals for free?

Most charge extra for first appeals — ₹299–599 on top of the original fee. First appeals under §19(1) are free to file yourself. The First Appeal Builder on this site generates the document for free in 2 minutes.

If I've already paid a service and they got the RTI wrong, what do I do?

The RTI application is filed in your name, so the first appeal is also yours to file. Use the First Appeal Builder to draft the appeal yourself. You do not need to go back to the paid service.

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