Quick answer: Any business owner, director or partner can file RTI as an individual citizen to trace a stuck GST refund file, a licence application, post-award tender records, EPFO compliance or unpaid government bills. Fee is ₹10 for central departments, reply due in 30 days under §7(1).
Your GST refund has been “under process” for five months. Your trade licence renewal is sitting in someone's drawer. A government department owes your firm payment and no one replies to emails. For each of these, one tool makes the department answer in writing within 30 days: the Right to Information Act, 2005.
RTI lets a citizen demand copies of government records: file notings, inspection reports, payment approvals, tender evaluations and licence processing status. For a business, it converts “we are looking into it” into a named officer, a dated file movement and a legal deadline. It costs ₹10 and needs no lawyer.
Section 3 of the RTI Act gives the right to citizens. A company, LLP or firm is not a citizen, so an application in the company's name can be rejected. File in your own name as an individual. You never have to say why you want the information: §6(2) bars the department from asking your reasons. See the full eligibility explainer: Who can file RTI in India.
| Provision | What it gives you |
|---|---|
| §2(f) | “Information” covers records, documents, emails, opinions on file, contracts, reports and samples held by a public authority |
| §6(1) | The application itself: plain paper or online, with the fee |
| §6(3) | Wrong office? They must transfer your application within 5 days |
| §7(1) | Reply due in 30 days (35 if filed via an APIO) |
| §8(1)(d) | Exemption for commercial confidence and trade secrets, unless the competent authority finds larger public interest in disclosure |
| §19(1) | First appeal within 30 days of the reply or the missed deadline |
The Supreme Court held in Reserve Bank of India v. Jayantilal N. Mistry, (2016) 3 SCC 525, that a regulator cannot hide behind “fiduciary relationship” to refuse regulatory records about the entities it supervises. That logic protects business applicants asking regulators for inspection norms, penalty records and compliance data.
| # | Situation | Where to file | What to ask for |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | GST refund stuck | Jurisdictional GST office / CBIC | Present status of refund application ARN, file notings, name of officer holding the file, reasons for delay |
| 2 | Licence or approval pending | Municipality, FSSAI, state department | Date-wise movement of your application file, checklist of pending objections, average processing time |
| 3 | Lost a government tender | The tendering department | Post-award: evaluation committee minutes, technical scores, the winning bid's compliance sheet (§8(1)(d) may redact price internals) |
| 4 | Government department owes you money | The buyer department | Status of your invoice on file, payment approval notings, reasons for non-payment |
| 5 | EPFO or ESIC dispute | EPFO / ESIC regional office | Your establishment's compliance records, inspection reports, calculation sheets behind a demand notice |
| 6 | Property due diligence | Sub-registrar, revenue department, urban body | Encumbrance details, land-use classification, approved layout copies, acquisition notifications on a survey number |
| 7 | Arbitrary inspection or penalty | The inspecting department | Copy of the inspection report, the officer's authorisation, the norms applied |
For unpaid MSME invoices, RTI reveals where your payment file is stuck; the recovery remedy itself is separate: the MSMED Act, 2006 (§§15-16) entitles registered MSMEs to interest on delayed payments through the MSME Samadhaan portal. Use both together: RTI for evidence, Samadhaan for recovery.
A small exporter's IGST refund of about ₹6 lakh showed “processing” for months. An RTI to the jurisdictional GST office asking for the file notings and the name of the officer holding the refund file produced a reply in four weeks; the file had a mismatch flag no one had communicated. The exporter fixed the mismatch and the refund followed. Pattern shown is illustrative of routine outcomes; verify your own file's status before drawing conclusions.
To: The Central Public Information Officer [Jurisdictional GST Commissionerate address] Subject: Application under Section 6(1), RTI Act 2005 1. Kindly provide the current status of GST refund application ARN [number] dated [date] filed by [firm name], GSTIN [number]. 2. Provide copies of all file notings and correspondence on this refund application from [date] to the date of this reply. 3. State the designation of the officer with whom the file is currently pending, and since which date. 4. If any deficiency memo or query was raised, provide a copy and state the date it was communicated to the applicant. If any part of this information is exempt, kindly sever it and supply the remainder under Section 10. If this office is not the custodian, kindly transfer under Section 6(3) within five days. Reply is requested within 30 days under Section 7(1). If refused, kindly state the grounds and the first appellate authority's details under Section 19(1). Applicant: [Your name, individual citizen] Address: [Address] | Fee: ₹10 paid via [mode]
Draft yours in minutes with the AI RTI Drafter, and test a weak reply with the PIO Reply Checker.
No. Section 3 grants the right to citizens. The director, partner or any employee files in their own individual name instead. The information received serves the business just the same.
Post-award, evaluation records and comparative scores are generally accessible, but price internals and trade secrets can be withheld as commercial confidence under §8(1)(d). Ask for the evaluation committee minutes and compliance sheets rather than the rival's costing.
Private banks are not public authorities, so you cannot RTI them directly. But the RBI holds regulatory records about them, and after RBI v. Jayantilal N. Mistry (2016) 3 SCC 525, “fiduciary relationship” is no shield for the regulator's records.
Both. RTI produces the file's real status and notings in 30 days; a CPGRAMS grievance pushes for action. The RTI reply often gives you the exact defect to fix.
Your name and address go on the application, so anonymity is not possible. Many owners have a manager or advocate file as an individual citizen.
₹10 application fee for central departments, plus ₹2 per page for copies. States charge similar amounts under their own rules. First appeals to central authorities carry no fee.
File a first appeal under §19(1) within 30 days arguing severability (§10): exempt lines can be blacked out while the rest is supplied. Blanket refusals rarely survive appeal.
Editorial guide · reviewed 11 July 2026. Verify time-sensitive fees and portal behaviour on the official sites before filing.