Direct answer. RTI information is free of cost in two situations: (1) Section 7(5) - the applicant holds a Below Poverty Line (BPL) card, and (2) Section 7(6) - the PIO has missed the 30-day reply deadline (or the 48-hour life-or-liberty window). In Section 7(6) cases the supply must be free even if the applicant did not pay the original Rs 10. Claim the exemption by writing one paragraph at the start of your application or first appeal. The PIO must record the reason if rejecting the claim.
For the master citizen guide, see Guide for applicants.
Section 7(5) of the RTI Act, 2005, reads:
This exempts the applicant from:
Attach a photocopy of the BPL card to the application, and add this line to the fee block:
Fee: I am a Below Poverty Line cardholder, BPL card no. [number] issued by [issuing authority] on [date]. I claim exemption from the application fee and from the cost of supplying information under Section 7(5) of the RTI Act, 2005. A photocopy of the BPL card is enclosed.
The PIO cannot ask for additional proof beyond a valid BPL card. If the PIO insists on the Rs 10 IPO and rejects the application as defective, that is a ground for first appeal under Section 19(1) and a complaint under Section 18.
Section 7(6) reads:
This is a hard rule. The instant the PIO misses the 30-day deadline (or the 48-hour life-or-liberty deadline, or the 40-day third-party deadline), the information must be supplied free. The Rs 10 application fee is also refundable in such cases by Commission practice, although the Act does not expressly say so.
If the PIO replies on day 35 with a demand for Rs 200 in photocopy charges, the applicant can refuse to pay and demand free supply by citing Section 7(6).
In the application itself, before the deadline expires, you cannot claim it (the deadline has not passed). You claim it only when:
Ground 1: The PIO of [public authority] received the application on [date] and was bound to dispose of it within 30 days under Section 7(1). 30 days expired on [date + 30]. The PIO has [not replied / replied on date X demanding Rs Y in photocopy charges]. Under Section 7(6), the information must now be supplied free of cost. The First Appellate Authority is requested to direct the PIO to supply the information free of cost and within 7 days. Prayer 1: Direct the PIO to supply the information sought in the application dated [date], free of cost under Section 7(6) of the RTI Act, 2005. Prayer 2: Direct the PIO to refund the Rs 10 application fee paid vide IPO no. [number]. Prayer 3: Make a recommendation under Section 19(8)(b) for compensation to the appellant for the loss caused by the delay.
The 30-day period is counted from the date of receipt by the PIO, not the date of posting by the applicant. The PIO's diary entry (or the rtionline.gov.in registration date) is the reference point. The Speed Post tracking date is the applicant's evidence.
If the application was first received by the public authority's general dak section and routed to the PIO three days later, the 30-day clock runs from the date of receipt by the public authority, not from the date the PIO opened the file. This is settled by Commission practice and by the Master Circular of DoPT.
If the PIO calculates the deadline wrongly and replies late, the applicant can challenge the calculation in the first appeal.
For BPL applicants, paste this in place of the fee line in the standard format:
Fee: I am a Below Poverty Line cardholder, BPL card no. RJ/JPR/2024/01234 issued by the Tehsildar, Jaipur, on 12 March 2024. I claim exemption from the application fee and from the cost of supplying information under Section 7(5) of the Right to Information Act, 2005. A photocopy of the BPL card is enclosed as Annexure 1.
For non-BPL applicants who anticipate that the PIO will miss 30 days (this is rare but useful in urgent matters), add this paragraph:
Note on Section 7(6): The information sought is required urgently. If the Public Information Officer is unable to dispose of this application within the 30-day limit prescribed under Section 7(1), I will be entitled to free supply of the information under Section 7(6). I am ready to inspect the records and take notes under Section 2(j)(i) at any time, to expedite the disposal.
Yes. Section 7(5) does not restrict the issuing State. A BPL card from any State Government or Union Territory is accepted by every public authority across India.
AAY is a deeper category of BPL under the Public Distribution System and most public authorities accept AAY cards under Section 7(5). Some State Rules expressly include AAY cardholders. Add the AAY card number in place of the BPL card number.
No. Section 7(5) makes both the application fee and the further charges zero. You do not pay the Rs 10.
The Act does not say so expressly, but the Commission has consistently held that the fee is refundable when the deadline is missed. Add a prayer for refund in your first appeal.
If the reply was within 30 days and was substantive (even if “no information available” with reasons under Section 8 / Section 10 cited), Section 7(6) does not trigger. If the reply is non-substantive (“file under examination”, “kindly approach another department” without invoking Section 6(3)), the Commission has held that 7(6) still applies.
No. The BPL card itself is the only proof contemplated by Section 7(5). Asking for additional documents is a violation and a complaint under Section 18 lies.
File a first appeal under Section 19(1). The FAA can direct free supply. If the FAA also rejects, file a second appeal under Section 19(3) and a complaint under Section 18.
Yes, where Section 7(6) has triggered. Once the deadline is missed, the entire supply (including inspection, photocopies, certified copies, and electronic media) becomes free of cost.
Reply within 30 days with a fee demand for copies, or supply on inspection. Once 30 days are crossed without a substantive reply, the PIO has lost the right to charge.
Use the AI RTI Drafter. It produces a Section 19(1) draft with the Section 7(6) claim built in if you tell it the PIO is silent past 30 days.
Last reviewed: 9 May 2026.