Direct answer. The RTI Act, 2005 (§7(1) read with Central RTI Rules, 2012 Rule 3) sets the filing fee at ₹10 for central government public authorities. BPL applicants pay zero. Most states match ₹10; four charge ₹20–50. No other payment to any person or service is legally required.
The ₹10 fee is one of the best-kept open secrets of Indian democracy. Millions of citizens either do not know it exists or do not know it is this small — which is exactly how paid RTI services make their money. This page gives you the complete statutory fee schedule, every accepted payment mode, state-level variations, and exactly where your money goes.
The RTI Act, 2005 does not set the fee amount directly. Instead, Section 27(2)(b) empowers the Central and State Governments to make rules specifying the fee. Under this power:
The 2012 rules replaced the 2005 rules. The ₹10 figure has not changed since 2005.
| What | Amount | Legal basis |
|---|---|---|
| Application fee | ₹10 | Central RTI Rules 2012, Rule 3(1) |
| Per page (A4/A3) — photocopy | ₹2 | Rule 4(1)(a) |
| Per page — larger formats | ₹5 | Rule 4(1)(b) |
| Floppy/diskette/CD | ₹50 | Rule 4(1)© |
| Sample/model | Actual cost | Rule 4(1)(d) |
| Inspection of records (first hour) | Free | Rule 4(2) |
| Inspection of records (each further hour) | ₹5 | Rule 4(2) |
| BPL applicant — all fees | ₹0 | RTI Act §7(5) |
| Overseas applicant | US $5 equivalent | Rule 5 |
The Central RTI Rules, 2012 (Rule 3(1)) specify three modes:
States may set their own fees under their own RTI rules. The range in India is ₹0 (BPL) to ₹50.
| State | Application Fee | Per-page fee | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Central Government | ₹10 | ₹2/page | rtionline.gov.in portal available |
| Maharashtra | ₹10 | ₹2/page | IPO/DD/cash + MahaOnline portal |
| Delhi | ₹10 | ₹2/page | DD/IPO/cash; online via CM Helpline app |
| Karnataka | ₹10 | ₹2/page | IPO/DD |
| Tamil Nadu | ₹10 | ₹2/page | DD drawn in favour of Appellate Authority |
| Gujarat | ₹20 | ₹2/page | IPO/DD only; cash rarely accepted |
| Punjab | ₹10 | ₹2/page | Court fee stamp also accepted |
| Haryana | ₹10 | ₹2/page | IPO/DD/cash |
| Uttar Pradesh | ₹10 | ₹2/page | Court fee stamps accepted |
| Rajasthan | ₹10 | ₹2/page | IPO/DD |
| West Bengal | ₹10 | ₹2/page | IPO/DD |
| Telangana | ₹10 | ₹2/page | Online portal available |
| Andhra Pradesh | ₹10 | ₹2/page | IPO/DD |
| Bihar | ₹10 | ₹2/page | IPO/DD |
| Madhya Pradesh | ₹10 | ₹2/page | Treasury challan also accepted |
For a state-by-state breakdown including appeal fees, see the State RTI Rules guide.
The IPO or DD is made out to the Accounts Officer of the public authority. Under the RTI Rules, the application fee credited to the Consolidated Fund of India (for central authorities) or the relevant State Consolidated Fund. It does not go to the CPIO personally, and it does not fund the RTI Act's administration separately — it is simply general government revenue.
This is why there is no legal mechanism for a CPIO to keep or personally benefit from RTI fees — an important assurance against corruption.
You pay nothing if:
“You sent the wrong amount.” If the CPIO says your IPO is for the wrong amount or made out to the wrong payee, they must return it to you and specify the correct details. They cannot simply reject the application. Cite Central RTI Rules 2012, Rule 3(2): the CPIO must intimate the deficiency and give the applicant a chance to correct it.
“We don't accept IPO.” The Rules mandate IPO as a valid mode. A refusal to accept IPO is a violation. File a complaint with the CIC/SIC under Section 18.
“You must pay ₹500 as security deposit for inspection.” No such provision exists in the RTI Act or Rules. This is an illegal demand. Refuse it in writing; escalate to the first appellate authority.
“Our state charges ₹100.” No state may charge more than what its own notified RTI rules specify. Check the official state gazette notification for the exact figure. If the demand exceeds the notified amount, it is ultra vires.
Ritu Sharma, Jaipur, Rajasthan (2023)
Ritu wanted her land mutation file records from the tehsildar's office. A neighbour told her it would cost ₹2,000 to get “someone to file it.” She visited the CPIO herself with a ₹10 IPO (bought at the local post office for ₹11 including commission), submitted her application by hand, and received 18 pages of mutation records 28 days later — paying ₹36 in per-page charges for the copies. Total cost: ₹47. No lawyer, no agent.
Yes. The Central RTI Rules, 2012 apply uniformly to all central government public authorities — ministries, departments, PSUs, banks, universities funded by the Centre, etc. The fee is ₹10 everywhere.
No. Under Central RTI Rules 2012, Rule 3(2), the CPIO must intimate the deficiency and allow you to resubmit with the correct payee. Outright rejection without intimation is a procedural violation you can raise in a first appeal.
On rtionline.gov.in, the application is not submitted until payment is confirmed. If the payment gateway fails mid-transaction, the portal holds the draft — you can return and complete payment within 48 hours before the draft expires.
No. Section 6(2) gives you the right to submit your application in any official language, and per-page rates apply uniformly regardless of the language of the documents provided.
No statutory refund mechanism exists. If the CPIO says information is not available, your ₹10 is not refunded. However, if you believe the refusal is false, you can file a first appeal and a complaint — which may result in the CIC directing the authority to provide information.