A vague or voluminous RTI is not an excuse for refusal. The RTI Act 2005 gives a PIO four legitimate tools: Section 7(9) (form in which information is provided), Section 2(j) (right to inspect), Section 6(3) (transfer to right office) and Section 7(3) (further fee on cost intimation). PIOs who reject vague RTIs without using these tools regularly lose appeals and face Section 20 penalty. The right approach is to engage with the applicant, narrow the scope, offer inspection, transfer multi-subject limbs, and produce what is reasonably possible.
Use this guide when an RTI request is (a) vague (eg “send all information about my case”); (b) voluminous (eg “all noting on every file in your section for the last 10 years”); © multi-subject (eg one application asking for records held in 8 different ministries); (d) in a different language or script than your office uses; (e) without a fee or with an inadequate fee; (f) addressed to your office but the records are held by another public authority.
The CIC has held in Sumati Singh v MCD (CIC, 2007), Anand Saxena v MEA (CIC, 2018) and several follow-on decisions that vague or voluminous RTIs cannot be summarily rejected; the PIO must use Section 7(9) and Section 2(j) creatively.
A PIO faced with a difficult RTI should follow this sequence.
Sample reply for a vague request.
Sub: Your RTI application dated [DD/MM/YYYY] under Section 6 of the RTI Act, 2005 Sir / Madam, Your application has been received in this office on [date]. To enable a complete and timely reply, the queries at point [number(s)] need clarification, as they presently do not specify the scope (period, subject, file reference). I request you to: 1. Specify the period for which the information is sought. 2. Identify the subject or file reference, where known. 3. Indicate the form of supply (certified copy / inspection / electronic). Time taken in this clarification will be governed by the relevant CIC guidance and the principle of fairness. The 30-day clock will resume on receipt of your clarification. Yours faithfully, [PIO]
Sample reply for a voluminous request.
Sub: Your RTI application dated [DD/MM/YYYY] Sir / Madam, The information requested at point [number] requires retrieval and certification of approximately [number] pages spread across [period]. Providing it in the form sought would disproportionately divert the resources of this public authority within the meaning of Section 7(9) of the RTI Act, 2005. Accordingly, this office offers you the following alternatives: (a) Inspection under Section 2(j) at this office on [proposed date and time]. After inspection, you may identify the specific pages required, and certified copies will be supplied at the prescribed fee under Section 7(5). (b) A representative sample for [period] is enclosed. (c) If you wish to receive certified copies of the entire set, the cost intimation under Section 7(3) is approximately Rs. [amount] for [number] pages. Please confirm and remit; the time between this intimation and your payment is excluded from the 30-day clock under Section 7(3). Yours faithfully, [PIO]
Sample transfer under Section 6(3).
Sub: Your RTI application dated [DD/MM/YYYY], partial transfer under Section 6(3) Sir / Madam, Your queries at point [list] relate to records that are held by [other public authority and address]. Under Section 6(3) of the RTI Act, 2005, those queries are being transferred to that office today, and the said authority will respond directly to you. The remaining queries at point [list] are being processed by this office and will be replied within 30 days. Yours faithfully, [PIO]
Not on those grounds alone. The PIO must use Section 7(9), inspection and clarification first.
A factual judgment. Compiling several thousand pages from physical files, or extracting records from non-digitised registers, may qualify. The CIC tests it case by case.
The first hour is free; subsequent hours are charged at the prescribed rate (Rs 5 per 15 minutes for central; state may differ).
Record the no-show and reschedule once. After two no-shows, you may treat the inspection limb as withdrawn.
Yes, but only after a genuine search and recorded reasons. Section 2(f) covers only information held by the authority.
You may invite a translation, but cannot reject. Most public authorities arrange in-house translation for short queries.
The CIC has accepted reasonable clarification time as excluded; but excessive delay will be reckoned against the PIO. Issue clarification within five days; do not loop multiple times.
Last reviewed: 9 May 2026.