Direct answer. Section 2(j)(i) of the RTI Act, 2005 gives every Indian citizen the right to inspect records, files, and file notings in person at the public authority's office. Under the RTI (Regulation of Fee and Cost) Rules, 2005 that govern Central Government bodies, the first hour of inspection is FREE and each subsequent hour (or any fraction of an hour) costs Rs 5. Certified copies during inspection are Rs 2 per A4 / A3 page under Rule 4(a). State Government rules vary - for example, several state rules round up to the nearest hour, some charge per half-hour, and a few BPL-friendly states waive inspection fees entirely. Inspection is often more revealing than photocopies because you see the full file-noting trail and inter-office correspondence the PIO would never voluntarily copy. If inspection is denied, the remedy is a First Appeal under Section 19(1), then a Section 19(3) Second Appeal to the CIC or SIC.
State-variation warning. The “first hour free, Rs 5 per subsequent hour” rule applies under the Central RTI Fee Rules, 2005. State Governments have notified their own fee rules under Section 28 of the Act. Before paying anything beyond Rs 10 application fee, read your state's RTI Rules - see the state RTI master guide and the state RTI portals directory. Common state variants: Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu follow the Central rate; Kerala has Rs 10 per hour after the first hour; Bihar has waived inspection fees for BPL applicants. Never accept a “Rs 5 per 15 minutes” or any per-minute charge unless your state rule specifically prescribes that figure - under the Central rule, that calculation is wrong.
Section 2(j) of the RTI Act, 2005 defines the right to information to include:
“the right to (i) inspection of work, documents, records; (ii) taking notes, extracts or certified copies of documents or records; (iii) taking certified samples of material; (iv) obtaining information in the form of diskettes, floppies, tapes, video cassettes or in any other electronic mode.”
Three things flow from this for every citizen:
| What | Fee (Central RTI Rules) | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Application fee | Rs 10 (BPL: nil) | Rule 3 |
| First hour of inspection | FREE | Rule 4(b) |
| Each subsequent hour or any part thereof | Rs 5 | Rule 4(b) |
| A4 or A3 photocopy during inspection | Rs 2 per page | Rule 4(a) |
| Larger-than-A3 copy | Actual cost | Rule 4(a) proviso |
| Information on CD / USB | Rs 50 per unit | Rule 4© |
| BPL applicant | NIL at every stage | Section 7(5) |
The Central rule's “Rs 5 per hour or fraction” language means that if you spend 1 hour 10 minutes inspecting, you pay Rs 5 for the second hour (the first is free). It does not mean Rs 5 every fifteen minutes; that figure is not in the Central rules.
To, The Central / State Public Information Officer, [Department / Ministry name], [Full address with PIN code]. Subject: Inspection of records under Section 6 read with Section 2(j)(i) of the Right to Information Act, 2005. Sir / Madam, Under the Right to Information Act, 2005, I request: 1. Permission to INSPECT, in person, the records, files, file notings, and annexures relating to [subject], in particular file number [X] for the period [date range]. 2. Certified copies, at Rs 2 per A4 / A3 page under Rule 4(a) of the RTI (Regulation of Fee and Cost) Rules, 2005, of the pages I identify and mark during the inspection. 3. Before the inspection date is fixed, kindly intimate: (a) the file numbers and page counts of the records to be made available; (b) three alternative date and time slots within the 30-day limit under Section 7(1); (c) the name, designation, and contact number of the officer who will supervise the inspection. I am a citizen of India. I enclose an Indian Postal Order of Rs 10 payable to the Accounts Officer, [department], towards the application fee under Rule 3. Yours faithfully, [Full name and Indian residential address] [Email and phone] Date: Place:
If the 30-day limit is approaching and the PIO has not scheduled the inspection, send a polite reminder before filing a first appeal:
To, The CPIO / SPIO, [department]. Subject: Reminder - inspection request dated [date], please schedule within Section 7(1) limit. Sir / Madam, Reference my application dated [date], registered as RTI no. [X]. Twenty-five days have elapsed and no inspection date has been fixed. Kindly intimate three alternative slots within the next five working days, failing which I will be constrained to treat the matter as a deemed refusal under Section 7(2) and file a First Appeal under Section 19(1). Yours faithfully, [Name]
If the PIO refuses inspection, ignores your application, or insists on photocopies-only, escalate in this order:
The Supreme Court in CBSE and Anr. v. Aditya Bandopadhyay, (2011) 8 SCC 497 held that Section 7(9) permits only a change of form, not refusal. So a PIO cannot refuse inspection by claiming “voluminous” records.
After inspection you have two ways to get certified copies of the marked pages:
If the PIO sends a fee-demand letter, the 30-day clock under Section 7(1) freezes between the date of intimation and the date you remit. So a delay in fee remittance does not put you at fault for any further appeal.
No. The Supreme Court in CBSE v. Aditya Bandopadhyay (2011) held that Section 7(9) allows only a change of form of disclosure, not refusal. “Voluminous” is the classic reason to offer inspection, not to refuse it. Quote that case in your first appeal.
The first-hour-free + Rs 5-per-subsequent-hour rule is from the Central RTI Fee Rules, 2005 and binds Central Government bodies. State Government bodies follow their state's RTI Rules, which vary. Before paying any inspection fee at a state body, check the state RTI master guide for that state.
Record the fact in writing on the spot and ask for the file tracer / FIR / enquiry report about the missing file. The CIC has held in Surinder Kumar Sharma v. Delhi Police (CIC, 2015) that a “missing file” is not an exemption - the public authority must reconstruct or produce secondary records. File a fresh RTI for the file-missing-status records.
Yes. The Department of Personnel and Training's OM No. F.10/2/2008-IR dated 21 October 2008 confirms that file notings are part of the record and inspectable, subject only to the Section 8 / 9 / 11 exemptions and Section 10 severance.
Most public authorities do not permit photography of files during inspection. Take notes and mark pages for certified copies at Rs 2 per page. A few transparency-leaning departments allow phone photos - confirm in writing before the inspection.
No. The first hour is free regardless of how long you actually stay. Only the time beyond sixty minutes attracts the Rs 5-per-subsequent-hour fee under the Central rule.
Yes. Send a notarised authorisation naming the representative and his / her ID details, with a photocopy of your own ID. The CIC has held repeatedly that authorised representatives are entitled to inspect.
Need a one-click inspection-request application that names the file numbers, the period, and the citizenship declaration in the right form? The AI RTI Drafter does it in two minutes - free, no signup.
Last reviewed: 9 May 2026 - RTI Wiki editorial team.
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