Direct answer. If your Voter ID (EPIC) has not been delivered after Form 6, 8 or 8A submission, or your name is missing from the electoral roll, file a free RTI to the Public Information Officer, Office of the Chief Electoral Officer of your State, with a copy to the District Election Officer. Ask for the receipt status, decision on your form, EPIC despatch date, and reason for any rejection. Reply due in 30 days under Section 7(1) of the RTI Act, 2005. Fee: Rs 10 (BPL: nil).
Under Section 11 of the RTI Act read with Section 8(1)(j), you cannot ask for a third party's voter records (their photograph, address, registration form). Limit the request to your own EPIC, your own application, your own Part of the roll. If you genuinely need the public roll for objection purposes, ask only for the published Part of the roll, which is already in the public domain at electoralsearch.eci.gov.in.
To
The Public Information Officer
Office of the Chief Electoral Officer
[State], [Full Postal Address with PIN]
Subject: Application under Section 6(1) of the Right to Information Act, 2005:
Status of Voter ID / EPIC application, Form [6 / 8 / 8A] reference [XXXX]
Sir / Madam,
1. I, [Full name], a citizen of India residing at [full address with PIN], apply
under Section 6(1) of the Right to Information Act, 2005, for the records below.
2. Particulars for record-identification:
Form type : [Form 6 / Form 8 / Form 8A]
Acknowledgement No. : [XXXXXXXXXX]
Date of submission : [DD/MM/YYYY]
Assembly Constituency: [Number and Name]
Part / Serial No. : [if known]
Mode of submission : Online (voters.eci.gov.in) / Offline at BLO
3. Information sought (please supply certified copies):
(a) Date of receipt of my Form by your office.
(b) Current status as on date of reply, with date of last action.
(c) File noting recording every officer's action on my Form.
(d) Decision taken (accepted / rejected / pending objection) and the
reasons recorded.
(e) If accepted, the EPIC despatch date and the courier or postal tracking
number.
(f) If rejected, the certified copy of the rejection order with grounds.
(g) If a Booth Level Officer field visit was scheduled, the date of visit
and the certified copy of the BLO report.
(h) Name, designation and office address of the officer presently holding
my Form.
4. I enclose the prescribed application fee of Rs 10 by way of Indian Postal
Order in favour of the Accounts Officer, Office of the Chief Electoral
Officer, [State].
5. Please send the reply to the address below by Registered Post.
Yours faithfully,
Signature
Name : ___________________
Address : ___________________
Date : ___________________
To
The First Appellate Authority
Office of the Chief Electoral Officer
[State]
Subject: First appeal under Section 19(1) of the Right to Information Act, 2005:
Non-supply of information on Voter ID / EPIC application
Sir / Madam,
1. I filed RTI application dated [DD/MM/YYYY] (acknowledgement / Speed Post No.
[XXXX]) seeking the records listed therein on Form [6 / 8 / 8A] of [date].
2. The 30-day period under Section 7(1) of the RTI Act, 2005 expired on
[DD/MM/YYYY]. The PIO has either not replied at all (deemed refusal under
Section 7(2)) or has replied incompletely on the following points: [list].
3. I therefore prefer this first appeal under Section 19(1) and pray that the
PIO be directed to supply the records sought within the time fixed by you.
4. I also draw attention to Section 19(8)(a)(i) on costs and Section 20(1) on
penalties for unreasonable delay.
Yours faithfully,
Signature
Name : ___________________
Address : ___________________
Date : ___________________
Thirty days from the date the PIO receives your application, under Section 7(1) of the RTI Act, 2005. Silence past day 30 is a deemed refusal under Section 7(2) and lets you file a first appeal at once.
No. Another voter's photograph, address and Form fall within Section 8(1)(j). The PIO will refuse unless you produce that voter's written consent or a court order. Restrict the request to your own records.
Ask in your RTI for the certified copy of the deletion order, the Form 7 (if any), the BLO field-visit report, and the file noting authorising deletion. If the PIO confirms there was no Form 7 by you, that is strong proof for a revision-officer claim.
Yes, Rs 10 by Indian Postal Order in favour of the Accounts Officer of the Office of the CEO. BPL applicants pay nothing under Section 7(5), on attaching a self-attested BPL card.
Either works because both are public authorities under Section 2(h). For best results, file at the CEO of your State with a copy to the District Election Officer (DEO). The CEO usually transfers the request internally under Section 6(3) within five days.
Central RTIs go through rtionline.gov.in but the CEO offices are State authorities. Most States accept RTI by post or in person at the CEO front-office. A few accept online filing through the State RTI portal. Check your State CEO website.
Last reviewed: 9 May 2026
Sources verified against the Representation of the People Act, 1950, the Registration of Electors Rules, 1960, the RTI Act, 2005, and the Election Commission of India primary portal as on 9 May 2026.