Reviewed on: 2026-06-12.
When you change jobs, your old PF account should move to the new one. If your old employer is dragging its feet over “transfer documents”, do these things first, in order. Most of the time you do not need any paper from them.
EPFO has moved much of PF transfer to an automatic and online process. When you join a new job and link the same UAN, eligible past balances can transfer with minimal paperwork. The old employer cannot block the move simply by withholding “documents”, because the online Form 13 does not depend on their paper.
It is not for a withdrawal blocked by a name or DOB mismatch; for that see UAN name, DOB and joining-date mismatch.
The older PF transfer needed a paper Form 13 signed by the previous employer. The online claim replaced most of that. Today you raise the transfer on the member portal under one UAN, and approval flows through an employer's digital login. So an old employer's refusal to provide a paper form rarely stops you, as long as your KYC is seeded, your UAN is the same across jobs, and your date of exit is recorded. The block is almost always one of those three, not a missing signature.
| Document | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| UAN and completed KYC (Aadhaar, PAN, bank) | Required to raise and approve the online transfer |
| EPF passbook of the old account | Shows the balance to be moved and last contribution |
| Date of exit on the old account | A transfer needs the exit recorded |
| Online transfer claim ID / screenshot | Proves you raised the request and the date |
| Relieving letter / last salary slip | Backup proof of your last working month |
| Email to the employer asking for approval | Needed if you escalate to EPFiGMS |
| Stage | Use when | Where |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Transfer not raised yet | Member e-Sewa portal, online Form 13 |
| 2 | Approval pending with old employer | Email with claim ID; route via present employer if possible |
| 3 | Approval stalls | EPFiGMS grievance against establishment and EPFO office |
| 4 | Grievance not resolved | Regional PF Commissioner / field office, in writing |
| 5 | Status and reasons needed | RTI to the EPFO PIO |
To, The HR / PF Section, [Company Name], [Address] Subject: Approval of online PF transfer (Form 13), UAN [your UAN], Claim ID [transfer claim ID] Dear Sir / Madam, I have raised an online PF transfer request (Form 13) on the EPFO member portal, Claim ID [ID], to move my balance from member ID [old member ID] to my present account. The request is pending your digital approval in the EPFO employer login. I request you to approve it within [10] days and confirm to me. No physical document is required, as the transfer is processed online. If approval is not given, I will route it through my present employer and, if needed, file an EPFiGMS grievance. Yours sincerely, [Your full name], UAN [your UAN], [mobile, email]
EPFO is a public authority under the RTI Act, 2005. You can ask the Public Information Officer of the relevant EPFO office for the status of your transfer claim, the reasons recorded for any delay, the officer handling it, and your contribution record across both accounts. This is useful where the field office is sitting on a transfer or where you suspect the old employer did not deposit contributions. See how to file an RTI online and first and second appeals.
A private employer is not a public authority, so you cannot file an RTI against the company itself to force it to approve a transfer. File the RTI with EPFO. RTI gives you information and pressure; the transfer is completed through the online claim and EPFO's approval, not through RTI. Where the old employer simply will not attest, the practical answer is to route approval through the present employer and escalate on EPFiGMS.
Usually not. The online transfer claim (Form 13) on the member portal replaced the paper form. Approval flows through an employer's digital login, and you can often route it through your present employer if the old one is unhelpful. As long as your UAN is the same, KYC is verified, and the date of exit is recorded, a refusal to hand over paper documents rarely stops the transfer.
In many cases yes. The online Form 13 lets you select whether the previous or the present employer attests the transfer. If the old employer is unresponsive, choosing the present employer, who usually has a live EPF login, is the practical way forward. Quote the claim ID when you ask them to approve.
The block is almost always one of three things: a missing or wrong date of exit on the old account, unverified KYC, or the same balance being under different UANs. It is rarely a missing signature. Check the date of exit and KYC first, then chase approval, then escalate on EPFiGMS if it still does not move.
You can still transfer. Route approval through your present employer, and if that is not possible, file an EPFiGMS grievance asking the EPFO field office to process the transfer based on your records. RTI to EPFO can confirm the contribution history if there is any doubt about deposits.
RTI is filed with EPFO, a public authority, not the private company. You can ask the EPFO PIO for the status of your transfer claim, the reasons for delay, and your contribution record. This adds pressure and surfaces the facts, but the transfer itself completes through the online claim and EPFO's approval.
Transfer keeps your service continuous and your interest accruing, which often suits you better than withdrawing. The online Form 13 makes transfer simple. Withdraw only where you genuinely need the funds and meet the conditions. Either way, fix the date of exit and KYC first.
Official links: EPFO, Member e-Sewa (UAN login), EPFiGMS grievance portal.
Download the PF transfer checklist (PDF).