Reviewed on: 2026-06-12.
Quick answer. If your test report is ready but the lab portal, app, SMS link, or email will not let you open it, you do not need to keep retrying the website. You have a right to your own report. Send the lab one written request, quoting your sample ID and registration number, asking for the report by email or a printed copy, and asking why the online copy failed. Most labs release it the same day once you ask in writing. If they stall, escalate to the National Consumer Helpline and, for a paid service, the consumer commission. RTI applies only if the lab is a government hospital.
This guide is about access, not accuracy or speed. The report exists and is correct; you simply cannot reach it through the digital channel. That is a service and access problem, and it is usually quick to fix once you stop relying on the broken link.
Knowing which one it is decides what you ask for. A login problem needs the number on file corrected. A dead link needs a fresh copy by email. A payment lock needs the bill resolved first.
If your report is not late but plain wrong, see wrong lab report: retest and refund. If it is late and treatment is stuck, see delayed report holding up treatment.
To: The Customer Care / Lab Manager, [Lab name]
Subject: Report ready but not accessible online, Sample ID [____]
I gave a sample for [test] on [date]. Registration / UHID No.: [____].
Sample ID / barcode: [____].
Your system shows the report is ready, but I am unable to access it
because [the OTP does not arrive on my number / the link has expired /
the report is locked / my details do not match]. I have tried [steps].
Please:
(a) email me the signed report at [email], or keep a printed copy ready
for collection at [centre];
(b) correct the mobile number / email on my record to [____]; and
(c) tell me why the online copy could not be accessed.
This is my own diagnostic record and I am entitled to a copy.
[Name, mobile, date]
A private diagnostic lab is not a public authority. RTI cannot force a private lab to fix its portal or hand over your report. For a private lab, a written request and, if needed, the consumer route are the real tools.
RTI does apply to a government hospital or government laboratory. If the test was done at a public facility and you cannot get the report, you can file an RTI for a copy of your own report, the date it was ready, and the reason it was not made available. You can also use RTI for the status of a complaint you filed with a state health authority. RTI gives information, not a working login, so use it to obtain the record and to expose government-side delay. See how to file RTI online and, if there is no reply, the first appeal route.
Email or message the lab quoting your sample ID and registration number and ask for a fresh copy by email or a printed copy at the counter. Report links often have a short validity, so a fresh signed copy from the lab is more reliable than the old link.
Usually the lab registered a different mobile number than the one you are using. Confirm the exact number on your collection slip, and if it is wrong, ask the lab in writing to correct your contact number and then resend the report.
Keep the access and the billing issues separate. You can pay under protest in writing or dispute the bill, but ask for the report to be released because it is your own record. If the lab refuses to hand over a paid-for report, that is a service deficiency you can escalate.
Yes. You can ask for a printed signed copy at the collection centre with your ID and the collection slip. The online copy is a convenience, not the only way to get your own report.
Yes. A government hospital is a public authority, so you can file an RTI for a copy of your own report and the reason it was not made available online. For a private lab, RTI does not apply; use a written request and the consumer route.
It depends on whether the lab is integrated with the digital health network. If it is, your report may appear in your ABHA-linked records. If it is not, you must get the copy from the lab directly.
Download the report-access checklist (PDF).