Also useful: Check Police Clearance Certificate status online.
If your passport application has been stuck at the police verification stage for weeks, or if a Passport Seva message says your file is on hold because of an adverse police report, you are not alone and you do not need to pay an agent to sort it out. Police verification (PV) under the Passports Act, 1967 and the Passport Rules, 1980 is the slowest, least transparent step in the issue cycle, and it is also the single most common reason passport files are closed without issue. This guide gives you a tight 30 minute action plan, an evidence checklist, the official grievance route, and a tested RTI application you can adapt today to force movement.
If you live abroad: see the NRI passport renewal delay guide for the police verification and embassy escalation path.
A passport file is generated at the Regional Passport Office (RPO) under the MEA. After your PSK appointment, the file enters one of three tracks: pre-PV (default for fresh), post-PV (renewals with valid old passport, government employees with NOC, Aadhaar eKYC clears), or no-PV (narrow re-issue and deputation cases).
In the PV track, the RPO pushes the file to the Special Branch, which sends it to the police station with jurisdiction over your declared current address. A constable verifies residence, identity, and absence of pending cases, fills a verification report (PV report or VR), and routes it back up. The MEA standard is 21 days; in practice 45, 60 or 90 days is routine, and many files never return unless chased.
Six common causes of stalls or adverse reports:
The grievance and RTI routes below tell you exactly where the file is and what the report says.
Before paying any agent, run this checklist in one sitting. Free or under Rs. 30, no legal training needed.
One weekday morning puts your file on the live tracking screen of three authorities (RPO, MEA, state police) and creates a paper trail that protects you if the file is eventually refused.
Keep PDFs under 2 MB each, named with your name and file number. Constable, Special Branch and RPO all ask for the same set. Quick production is the difference between 21 days and 90.
Two warnings. First, never hand originals of Aadhaar or PAN to a constable for “office filing” - allow inspection only. Second, do not pay any “tea expense” or “fast tracking fee” - none exists in Passport Rules, 1980; payment is a bribe under the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988 and the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023.
Three parallel channels exist. Use them in the order below.
First stop, because only this channel directly nudges the RPO. File at portal.passportindia.gov.in (Grievance link). Form asks: File Number, ARN, nature, short description. Use plain factual language; cite the relevant Passport Rules section. Attach application receipt, address proof, and any police communication.
MEA service charter: 5 working days initial response, 15 working days resolution. The first reply is automated; the second is a real instruction from the RPO Public Grievance Officer to the Special Branch. Files usually move within a week of that.
CPGRAMS (pgportal.gov.in) is the central catch-all platform. File the same day, ministry = MEA. Auto-routes to the same RPO PGO, but generates a separate DARPG-monitored ticket. Two grievances on one file trigger an internal flag and faster response.
If both MEA channels have responded with “matter referred to police authorities” and nothing further has moved on Day 21, file a written complaint to the Commissioner of Police, Special Branch in your district, with copies to the Joint Commissioner Police and the local Deputy Commissioner of Police. Most large cities now accept email complaints at the @nic.in or @gov.in address of the Special Branch. Send it from your registered email and ask for an acknowledgement number.
Reference the Passports Act, 1967, Passport Rules, 1980 and MEA standing instructions (21-day despatch). Ask three things: date the file was received at the police station, name/rank of the verifying officer, date the report was despatched to the RPO. With these on record, the file becomes auditable and the report usually follows within days.
Every RPO holds a public grievance day, usually each Wednesday afternoon, when applicants can meet the Public Grievance Officer (PGO) without an appointment. If you have already filed grievances on Passport Seva, CPGRAMS and to the Commissioner of Police, and your file is still stuck after 30 days, attend the grievance day in person with copies of all three grievance numbers. Many files clear in this single 15 minute meeting.
The Right to Information Act, 2005 applies fully to the Ministry of External Affairs, to every Regional Passport Office, and to every state police force. The Passport Seva project itself is a public authority under Section 2(h) of the RTI Act. You have a legal right to ask for and receive the status of your file, the name of the verifying officer, and a copy of the police verification report itself, subject only to the narrow exemptions in Section 8.
For a stuck or adverse passport file, you should file two RTIs in parallel.
Frame your questions as short, specific, factual queries. Avoid asking for opinions or for “the reasons” your file is delayed; those are easier to refuse. Ask for documents and dates instead.
Section 6(1) of the RTI Act requires the application to be in writing. Section 6(2) makes it clear you do not have to give a reason. Section 7(1) requires a reply within 30 days, or within 48 hours if the information concerns the life or liberty of a person, which a passport application arguably does once a foreign travel deadline approaches.
A passport is a right under Article 21. Maneka Gandhi v Union of India (1978) held the right to travel abroad is part of personal liberty under Article 21 and cannot be taken away except by a procedure that is just, fair and reasonable. A 90-day silent sit on a file without specific objection is arbitrary, violating Articles 14 and 21. The RTI route puts that arbitrariness on record - the strongest prelude to an Article 226 writ if needed.
Adapt these to your facts. Keep the language short and factual. Send by Speed Post (India Post tracked) and keep the dispatch receipt.
To, The Public Grievance Officer Regional Passport Office, [city] Subject: Delay in police verification for passport application file number [XXXX] Sir or Madam, I, [Name], a citizen of India, applied for a fresh passport at the Passport Seva Kendra, [city] on [date], with file number [XXXX]. My appointment was completed on the same date and the file was marked for pre-police verification by your office. It has now been [N] days since my application date, and the status on the Passport Seva portal continues to show the file as "pending with police authorities". I have visited the local police station at [name of police station] on [date] and have been informed that the verification has not yet been initiated, or that the report is awaiting despatch. I respectfully request your office to: 1. Issue a written instruction to the Special Branch, [city] to despatch the verification report within 7 days. 2. Confirm to me by email the date on which the report is received by the RPO. 3. Process my file in accordance with the Passports Act, 1967 and the Passport Rules, 1980 without further delay. I am attaching a copy of the application receipt and my Aadhaar (masked). Yours faithfully, [Name] [File number, mobile, email, date]
To, The Central Public Information Officer Regional Passport Office, [city] Subject: Request for information under the Right to Information Act, 2005 Sir or Madam, Under Section 6 of the Right to Information Act, 2005 I request the following information in respect of passport application file number [XXXX] in my name [Name]: 1. The date on which file number [XXXX] was forwarded by the Regional Passport Office to the Special Branch for police verification. 2. The date on which the Special Branch forwarded the file to the jurisdictional police station, with the name of the police station. 3. The name, designation and contact details of the officer who has been assigned to conduct the police verification of the said file. 4. Whether the police verification report has been received by the Regional Passport Office. If yes, the date of receipt and a certified true copy of the report. If no, the reasons for the delay. 5. A copy of the standing instruction, SOP or office order that prescribes the maximum time within which a police verification report must be returned to the Regional Passport Office in respect of fresh passport applications. I am a citizen of India. The application fee of Rs. 10 is enclosed by way of Indian Postal Order number [XXXX] in favour of the Accounts Officer, Regional Passport Office, [city]. I request a reply by post and email within the 30 day period prescribed by Section 7(1) of the Act. Yours faithfully, [Name] [File number, postal address, mobile, email, date]
To, The Central Public Information Officer [Name of Police Station], [district], [state] Subject: Request for information under the Right to Information Act, 2005 Sir or Madam, I am a citizen of India. My passport application file number [XXXX] has been referred to your police station for verification through the Special Branch, [district] on or about [date]. Under Section 6 of the Right to Information Act, 2005 I request the following information: 1. The date on which the file in respect of the above passport application was received at this police station. 2. The name, rank and badge number of the officer assigned to conduct the verification. 3. The date on which the verification visit was conducted, or is scheduled to be conducted. 4. A certified true copy of the verification report, if already completed. 5. The date on which the verification report was, or will be, despatched to the Special Branch or the Regional Passport Office. 6. The total number of passport verification files pending at this police station for more than 30 days as on the date of this application. The prescribed application fee of Rs. 10 is enclosed by way of [court fee stamp or Indian Postal Order, per state rule]. I request a reply within the period prescribed by Section 7(1) of the Act. Yours faithfully, [Name] [Postal address, mobile, email, date]
The most expensive mistake is paying an agent to “expedite” PV. No expedite exists under the Passport Rules, 1980. Tatkaal only fast-tracks booklet printing - it still requires a normal verification (usually post-PV).
Agents do one of three things: file the same grievance you could have filed, pay a small bribe to a constable (making you a co-accused under §7 of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988 and §§195/196 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023), or pocket the money and disappear.
If anyone asks you for cash to clear a PV, decline and immediately report to the Anti-Corruption Bureau or the Central Vigilance Commission complaint portal at cvc.gov.in. The same warning applies to “PSK consultants” who hang around outside passport offices and Aadhaar Seva Kendras. The PSK staff are TCS employees on contract to the MEA; they do not charge any side fee, and complaints against them are taken seriously through the same Passport Seva grievance module.
An adverse PV report is not the end. §6 of the Passports Act, 1967 lists refusal grounds; an adverse character report is one. The RPO must give written notice and a personal hearing before refusing.
On receiving the notice: (1) file an RTI for a certified copy of the PV report (it is not exempt under §8); (2) prepare a written representation answering each adverse remark line by line, with documentary support (employer NOC, gazetted-officer character certificates, FIR closure if a case was wrongly mentioned); (3) attend the personal hearing - legal representation is allowed but rarely needed.
A refusal is appealable under §11 of the Passports Act, 1967 to the Chief Passport Officer, MEA, New Delhi, within 30 days. Beyond that, an Article 226 writ is the standard remedy and well within citizen reach without senior counsel.
The MEA service standard is 21 days from the date the file is forwarded to the Special Branch. Most states meet this for pre-verification cases in metros, but Tier 2 and Tier 3 cities routinely take 30 to 45 days. Anything above 60 days is officially a “delay” that justifies a grievance escalation.
This is a different bottleneck, usually a backlog at the printing centre at IIS Nashik or at the dispatch dak chain. Track it through the Passport Seva portal for 7 more days. If still stuck, file a Passport Seva grievance under “Printing Delay” rather than a PV grievance.
Yes, but the change has to be made through the Passport Seva portal before the file is sent to the police station. If the file is already with the police, you must complete the verification at the original address first and apply for an address change as a re-issue later. Do not abandon the file midway; it will be marked as closed and you forfeit the application fee.
Decline politely. Note the constable's name, badge number and the date and time of the visit. File a complaint on the CVC portal at cvc.gov.in and a parallel grievance on the Passport Seva portal. The CVC takes such complaints seriously and they have led to suspensions in multiple states. You will not be punished for refusing to pay; the system protects honest applicants who report bribery.
No. Landlord cooperation is helpful but not legally required. You can substitute a registered rent agreement, the latest electricity bill, two local references and a self declaration. If the constable insists, escalate through the Special Branch grievance route. The Passport Rules do not list landlord signature as a mandatory document.
Yes. File a fresh application for re-issue (not a duplicate) with the corrected address as soon as the original file is closed. There is no penalty other than the new application fee. Do not try to correct the address while the file is still under verification, because the system will mark both files as pending and slow down both.
A pending case has to be disclosed in column 23 of the application. A case that has ended in acquittal, withdrawal under Section 320 of the BNSS, or compounding under the relevant section is no longer pending, and a certified copy of the closure order from the magistrate should be attached to the verification visit. The RPO is bound by Section 6(2) of the Passports Act, 1967, which only lists currently pending cases as a ground for refusal.
Yes. File the Passport Seva grievance and CPGRAMS grievance from abroad using your registered Indian mobile and email. You can also raise the matter at the Indian Mission (Embassy or Consulate) where you applied. The Mission has a Passport Officer who can directly correspond with the relevant RPO in India. Avoid paying any “agent in India” to follow up; remote agents are particularly difficult to hold accountable.
The verification is done at the address declared as current residential address on the application. Office addresses are not verified separately unless flagged. If you work from home and have declared the same address, the constable may ask for an employer certificate; carry one ready.
The PV report is not displayed on the Passport Seva portal. The only way to see the actual text is to file an RTI to the police station and a parallel RTI to the RPO. Some states have started a partial Police Citizen Portal where the PV status (not the full text) is visible; check your state police website.
Yes, the fee is non refundable once the file has reached the verification stage. However, you can file a re-application immediately under a new file number with corrected details. There is no waiting period and no blacklist; the closure is a procedural event, not a refusal.
Last reviewed 2026-05-16 by the RTI Wiki editorial team. We do not provide legal advice. For specific cases please consult a qualified advocate or contact the Public Grievance Officer at your Regional Passport Office.