If your child's school is charging a steep bus fee, refusing to refund transport money after you stopped the service, or running an unsafe bus, you have real options. This guide shows you how to get the transport circular and payment trail in order, raise a written complaint, escalate to the RTO and education department, and know exactly where RTI and the consumer commission can — and cannot — help.
Reviewed on: 2026-05-29.
Quick answer
Transport is usually a separate, optional service from school tuition. Start by collecting the transport circular or agreement, your fee receipts, and any notice you gave to stop the bus. Put your refund or safety complaint to the school in writing by email and paper letter. For unsafe buses, complain to your district Regional Transport Office (RTO) and traffic police. For unfair refund denial, the consumer commission treats it as deficiency in service. RTI works against government or aided schools, the education department, and the RTO — not directly against a purely private school. Keep paying compulsory dues under protest so your child is never penalised.
This guide is for parents and guardians in India who are stuck in a dispute about their child's school transport. It covers three closely related problems that often arrive together:
It applies whether your child studies in a government school, a government-aided school, or a private unaided school. The route you take depends heavily on which type of school it is, because that decides whether RTI and the education department can directly help, or whether you must rely on the school's own grievance system, the transport regulator, and the consumer commission.
If your wider problem is a tuition fee refund after withdrawal, see the companion guide on private school admission fee refunds after withdrawal. If the school is also blocking your transfer certificate, read school fee refund and TC blocked.
Pull together every document the school gave you about transport. The most important one is the transport circular or transport agreement — the page or notice that states the bus fee, the routes, the payment schedule, the notice period to discontinue, and the refund terms. Schools usually issue this at admission or at the start of the academic year, often on the school app, by email, or as a printed circular in the diary. Find it, scan it, and save it as a PDF.
Next, gather all your fee receipts and payment proof for transport. If transport was billed separately, the receipt will name it; if it was bundled, note that, because a bundled fee is itself a point you can question. Save bank statements or UPI records that match each payment.
Write a short, dated note of what actually went wrong: the date you asked to stop the bus, the date of a safety incident, or the date a fee was hiked. A clear timeline written while it is fresh is worth a great deal later.
If your complaint is about safety, collect evidence calmly and without confronting the driver. Note the bus registration number, the route number, the usual arrival and departure times, and whether there is an attendant on board. If it is safe and lawful to do so, take photographs of overcrowding, a missing first-aid box, or a missing fire extinguisher from outside the bus. Talk to other parents on the same route — a complaint signed by several families carries far more weight than one alone.
If your complaint is about a refund, re-read the refund clause in the transport circular. Work out the exact amount you believe is due: the months or terms you paid for minus the months the bus actually carried your child, adjusted for any genuine notice period the agreement allows. Put this calculation on one page so your request is specific, not vague.
Draft your written complaint to the school using the template later in this guide. Keep it factual and polite. Address it to the Principal and copy the transport in-charge if the school names one.
Decide your escalation path before Monday. For a safety problem, look up your district Regional Transport Office (RTO) and the state transport department, and find the traffic police or transport helpline for your city. For a fee or refund problem at a government or aided school, identify the District Education Officer or the equivalent education authority in your state.
Prepare two copies of your complaint letter — one to hand in and one to keep stamped as received. If you will email it, set up a clear subject line and attach your evidence as a single PDF. Where your state has a school fee regulatory committee or a fee grievance redressal mechanism, note its name so you can escalate there if the school does not respond.
Finally, plan to keep paying any compulsory dues on time, under written protest, so your child's attendance, exams, and transfer certificate are never put at risk while the dispute runs.
| Document | What it proves | Where to get it |
|---|---|---|
| Transport circular / transport agreement | The bus fee, routes, payment schedule, notice period and refund terms | School app, admission file, school office, or the printed circular in the diary |
| Admission form and fee schedule | Whether transport was optional or bundled with tuition | Your admission file / school office |
| Transport fee receipts | How much you paid and for which period | School fee counter / school app / email receipts |
| Bank / UPI statements | Independent proof of each payment date and amount | Your bank's net-banking or UPI app history |
| Written request to discontinue the bus | The date you stopped using transport (key for refund) | Your email / letter copy / school app message |
| Bus registration number and route details | Identifies the exact vehicle for an RTO complaint | Observe at pick-up/drop, or from the transport circular |
| Photographs of safety concerns | Overcrowding, missing first-aid box or extinguisher, poor condition | Taken safely from outside the bus; never obstruct or endanger |
| Notes of any incident | Date, time, route, what happened, who witnessed it | Your own contemporaneous diary / phone notes |
| Names of co-parents on the route | A joint complaint carries more weight | Class or route parent group (with their consent) |
| Any prior written replies from the school | Shows the school's stated position and any admissions | Your email thread / school app messages |
Everything starts with the transport circular or agreement. Read it for four things: the fee and how it is calculated, the notice period to stop the bus, the refund formula, and any safety or service promises the school made. If the document says transport is optional, the school generally cannot force your child onto the bus when you can arrange safe transport yourself. If the fee was raised mid-year without the notice the circular itself promised, that is a contractual point in your favour. Write down, in plain words, what the document entitles you to.
The three problems use different forums. A pure fee or refund dispute is mainly a contract and consumer matter, and at government or aided schools also an education-department matter. A safety problem about the vehicle, driver, or permit is a transport-regulation matter for the RTO and the traffic police, regardless of school type. Many real cases are a mix — for example, you stopped a bus because it was unsafe and now want a refund. Separate the strands so each goes to the right place.
Always start with the school itself. Email the Principal, and copy the transport in-charge, the bus contractor's contact if the school uses one, and the parent-teacher body if there is one. State the facts, attach your evidence, and ask for one specific outcome — a refund of a stated amount, a corrected fee, or a named safety fix — with a reasonable deadline to reply. Keep the tone calm and businesslike. A documented written complaint is the foundation of every later step; verbal complaints leave no trail.
School buses are governed by motor-vehicle safety rules and by Supreme Court directions on school transport. If the school does not act on a genuine safety concern, complain to your district Regional Transport Office (RTO) and to the traffic police, giving the bus registration number, route, and dates. The RTO can check the vehicle's fitness certificate, permit, registration, and whether mandatory features such as GPS or a speed governor are present where your state requires them. For an immediate danger to a child, call 112, and the child helpline 1098 for child-protection concerns. See our detailed guide on school bus fee, safety and GPS complaints for what each authority can do.
For a government or government-aided school, escalate to the District Education Officer or the equivalent education authority in your state; these schools answer to the department, and many states cap or regulate fees. For a private unaided school, the education department's reach is narrower, so use the school's grievance committee, any state school fee regulatory committee where one exists, and then the consumer commission. Where your state runs a fee grievance redressal mechanism, file there in the prescribed manner. Our guide on using RTI for a school fee structure explains what records you can seek when the school is government or aided.
If the school ignores a fair refund request, or keeps charging for a service it did not deliver, the next step is a written legal notice followed, if necessary, by a complaint to the consumer commission. Transport that you paid for is a service, and unfair denial of a refund or failure to provide the promised safe service can be a deficiency in service. Frame your complaint around the paid transport service, your payment proof, and the broken promise — not around school administration in general, which commissions sometimes keep outside their scope. For high-value or complex disputes, consult a qualified lawyer before filing.
Never let a transport dispute spill over into your child's attendance, examinations, or transfer certificate. Continue paying any compulsory tuition and examination dues on time, but pay the disputed transport amount, if you choose to pay it at all, expressly under protest. State in writing that you pay “without prejudice” to your refund claim or safety complaint. This keeps your child safe from any pressure tactic and preserves your right to recover the disputed amount later.
Maintain one folder, physical or digital, with every letter, reply, receipt, and acknowledgement, in date order. Note the date you complained, the deadline you gave, and the date any reply arrived. If you have escalated to the RTO, education department, or a grievance portal, save the complaint reference number. A clean, dated trail is what wins at the consumer commission or in any appeal, and it is exactly what the RTI and complaint templates below are designed to build.
| Stage | Action | Forum / Destination | Target timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Written complaint or refund request with evidence | School Principal and transport in-charge | Give a reasonable written deadline (commonly 7–15 days) |
| 2 | Escalate within the school | School management / grievance committee / parent-teacher body | After the first deadline lapses |
| 3 | Safety complaint about the vehicle or driver | District RTO, state transport department, traffic police (helpline 112) | Varies; note complaint reference number |
| 4 | Fee/refund escalation (government or aided school) | District Education Officer / state fee regulatory committee where one exists | As prescribed by your state |
| 5 | RTI application for records (see RTI section below) | PIO of the education department or RTO; or government/aided school | Generally 30 days under the RTI Act |
| 6 | Legal notice, then consumer complaint for refund / deficiency in service | District / State Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission | Within the limitation period; consult a lawyer |
Replace the text in square brackets with your own details before sending. Send by email and keep a stamped paper copy.
To, The Principal [Name of School] [Address of School]
Copy to: The Transport In-charge / School Management Committee
Date: [DD/MM/YYYY]
Subject: Complaint regarding school transport — [fee / refund / safety]
for [Child's Name], Class [____], Admission/Roll No. [____]
Respected Sir / Madam,
1. My child [Child's Name] studies in Class [] (Admission/Roll
No. [____]) and uses / used the school transport service on route [Route No./Name], bus registration number [____].
2. I wish to bring the following matter to your notice:
[State the problem plainly. For example:
- "The transport fee of Rs [____] was increased mid-year without
the notice promised in the transport circular dated [DD/MM/YYYY]."
- "We discontinued the bus from [DD/MM/YYYY] after written notice,
and request a refund of the unused transport fee of Rs [____]."
- "On [DD/MM/YYYY] the bus on our route was found [overcrowded /
without an attendant / without a first-aid box / speeding], which
is a serious safety concern for the children."]
3. As per the transport circular / agreement dated [DD/MM/YYYY], the
relevant terms are: [quote the fee / notice period / refund clause / safety promise you are relying on]. Copies of my fee receipts and supporting documents are attached (Annexures A to [__]).
4. I therefore request the school to [state the exact outcome you want:
refund Rs [____] / correct the fee to Rs [____] / fix the named safety issue] and to confirm in writing within [number] days of this letter.
5. Please note that any compulsory dues are being paid under protest and
without prejudice to this complaint, solely to protect my child's continuity of education.
I look forward to a written response. If I do not hear from the school within the time stated, I will be constrained to escalate this matter to the [RTO / District Education Officer / consumer commission] as appropriate.
Yours faithfully,
[Your Full Name] Parent / Guardian of [Child's Name] [Mobile Number] [Email Address] [Residential Address]
Enclosures: A — Transport circular / agreement dated [DD/MM/YYYY] B — Transport fee receipts C — Bank / UPI payment proof D — Written request to discontinue the bus [if applicable] E — Photographs / notes of the safety concern [if applicable]
The Right to Information Act, 2005 applies to public authorities — government schools, government-aided schools, the education department, and the Regional Transport Office. Where one of these holds the records you need, RTI is a powerful, low-cost tool in a transport dispute:
To file an RTI online with a Central public authority, see our step-by-step RTI filing guide; the PIO must normally respond within 30 days. If your application is ignored or wrongly refused, use our guide to filing a first appeal under Section 19, and for the full route through appeals read the first and second appeal guide. For complaints that need both information and grievance redress against a government department, see how to use CPGRAMS with RTI. For deeper strategy, The RTI Playbook covers using RTI in service and safety disputes.
RTI has clear limits in a school transport dispute:
If the school responds by withholding documents your child needs, our guide on getting a school transfer certificate sets out how to push back. And because school payment and safety scams are common, parents should also read school WhatsApp group fraud and safety and the child online safety guide for parents.
Transport is usually an optional service charged separately from tuition. Most schools cannot force a child to use the school bus if you arrange safe transport yourself, though some bind it through the admission contract. Read the admission form and transport circular carefully — your rights flow from what you actually signed and from any state fee regulation that applies.
First check the transport circular or agreement for the refund and notice terms. Send a written refund request by email and a paper letter, attaching your payment proof and the date you stopped using the bus. If the school ignores it or keeps a fee for a service not delivered, you can approach the consumer commission, which treats unfair refund denial as a deficiency in service.
Complain first to the school in writing. For vehicle fitness, permit, speed, GPS, speed governor, or driver issues, complain to the Regional Transport Office (RTO) of your district and to the traffic police. School buses must follow Supreme Court and state safety norms. For a child-safety emergency or a crime, call 112 or the child helpline 1098.
It depends on who holds the records. RTI applies to government and government-aided schools, the education department, and the RTO. You can ask the RTO for the bus's fitness, permit, and registration records, and ask the education department for any approved fee structure. RTI does not apply directly to a purely private unaided school, so for that you use the school's own grievance process, the regulator, or the consumer commission.
Indian school-bus norms generally require the bus to be painted in the prescribed colour, marked 'School Bus', and carry a first-aid box, a fire extinguisher, and an attendant, with a valid fitness certificate and permit. Many states also require GPS, speed governors, and CCTV. Exact requirements vary by state and change over time — confirm the current rules with your RTO or state transport department.
Where you have paid for transport as a service, a refusal to refund or a failure to provide the promised safe service can be treated as a deficiency in service by the consumer commission. Routine internal academic decisions are often kept outside its scope, so frame your complaint around the paid transport service, your payment proof, and the unfair denial — not around school administration generally.
Do not stop paying compulsory dues that could affect your child's attendance, exams, or transfer certificate while you contest a separate charge. Pay under written protest, stating clearly that payment is made without prejudice to your refund or safety complaint. This protects your child and preserves your right to claim the disputed amount back later.