Short version. Every government office in India is required to publish a Citizen Charter specifying time-bound service delivery (passport: 30 days; PAN: 15 days; ration card: 30 days; etc.). When the office misses its own promised timeline, a one-page RTI to the PIO of that office with ₹10 fee legally forces a written reply within 30 days under §7(1) RTI Act 2005 — citing the office's own Citizen Charter as the binding standard. Several states have additional Public Service Guarantee Acts (Delhi, Madhya Pradesh, Bihar, Karnataka, etc.) imposing personal penalty on the defaulting officer.
Pooja's PAN card application was delayed beyond the 15-day Citizen Charter timeline of the Income Tax Department. She filed an RTI to the PAN Cell PIO specifically citing the Citizen Charter.
Eighteen days later the IT Department replied: PAN was actually generated on day 12; printing/dispatch via NSDL was the bottleneck. Reply included tracking number + dispatch confirmation. PAN delivered four days later.
The Citizen Charter is one of the most under-used enforcement levers in Indian governance. Born of the Sevottam framework (Department of Administrative Reforms & Public Grievances — DARPG), every PSE / Ministry / Department / Statutory Body publishes one. The RTI Act §4(1)(b) requires Citizen Charter publication; missing it is itself a §4 violation.
To,
The Public Information Officer (PIO),
[Name of Public Authority — e.g. Income Tax PAN Cell / Passport
Seva Kendra / Tehsildar Office / Municipal Corporation Birth
& Death Section]
Subject: §6(1) RTI Act 2005 — non-compliance with Citizen Charter
timeline for service delivery
Sir/Madam,
Under §6(1) RTI Act 2005, please provide:
1. The Citizen Charter currently in force for this office,
with the publication date.
2. Specific service: [e.g. PAN card issuance / passport renewal /
ration card] — Citizen Charter committed timeline: [e.g. 15 days].
3. My application reference: [Number, date].
4. Current status of my application as on date of disposal of
this RTI; days elapsed since application = [N].
5. Reason for non-compliance with the Citizen Charter timeline.
6. Total applications under this service in the last 12 months
that crossed the Citizen Charter timeline (number + percentage).
7. Whether any disciplinary / departmental action has been taken
against the dealing officer for Citizen Charter breaches in
the last 12 months.
8. Under [State Public Service Guarantee Act, year] (if applicable),
the compensation / penalty due to me as a delayed-service
applicant, and the procedure to receive it.
9. Name + designation of the dealing officer holding my file.
I am a citizen of India.
Fee: ₹10 IPO/DD enclosed.
Yours faithfully,
[Name + address + signature + date]
Big violation of §4(1)(b). File RTI specifically asking for publication date + content + draft if not published. CIC has fined PIOs for non-publication.
Cite the official source of the timeline (gazette / DARPG circular / ministry notification).
Ask for the specific reason for non-compliance + total breach percentage in the office.
Cite the Act + the penalty schedule + the appellate authority.
File RTI to the IT Dept. They can compel NSDL/UTIITSL to disclose.
Bigger violation — file RTI asking for the publication of the Charter (mandatory under §4(1)(b) RTI Act).
Varies by state — typically ₹250/day capped at ₹5,000-10,000. Plus the service is delivered.
PSG Act allows departmental penalty. Civil suit for negligence is possible but slow. RTI + PSG Act is faster.
RTI + Citizen Charter still works (CIC has consistently enforced). DARPG's Sevottam framework is your reference.
Ask for the revision history + current applicable version. CIC has held that outdated Charter doesn't excuse non-delivery.
The Citizen Charter is the office's own commitment to you. RTI + PSG Act (where available) makes that commitment legally enforceable. ₹10.
File the RTI.
Last reviewed: 24 April 2026.