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NSP scholarship not credited in 2026? Use RTI to find out exactly where it is stuck

NSP scholarship not credited — RTI Wiki guide

⚠️ DPDP Rules, 2025 (14 Nov 2025) amended Section 8(1)(j) of the RTI Act — public-interest override now under Section 8(2). Read the note →

· 2026/04/19 05:02

Plain-English summary. If the National Scholarship Portal (NSP) shows your Pre-Matric, Post-Matric, Merit-cum-Means, Top Class or Central Sector scholarship as “Approved” or “Released to PFMS” but the money has not landed in your bank account, you don't have to keep calling the helpline that never picks up. The Right to Information Act, 2005 lets you ask the institute, the district welfare officer, the state nodal, or the Ministry — for free — and they have to reply in 30 days. This page tells you exactly what to write, where to send it, and how to unblock the file. No legal jargon. No middlemen. No fees beyond ₹10.

Ankit's story — "₹23,000 in my account 9 days after the RTI reply"

Ankit Kumar Gautam, 19, B.Tech (Civil) 2nd year SC student at a government engineering college in Lucknow. Filed his NSP Post-Matric Scholarship application for AY 2024-25 in October 2024 — institute verification done in December, district verification in January 2025. The portal updated to “Released to PFMS” on 11 April 2025. Helpline 0120-6619540 told him to “wait” and then to “follow up with your bank”. He filed an RTI on 7 May 2025.

“I waited the whole month of April. The portal status didn't change. The hostel warden in Lucknow said this happens, ask the bank. SBI counter said 'no instruction came'. I called the NSP helpline three times — once they said wait, once they said the file was at PFMS, once the call cut. My elder cousin works at a panchayat office and told me to send a one-page RTI to the Ministry of Social Justice. I sent it by post on 7 May with a ₹10 IPO. The reply came on 1 June — typed, signed, two pages. It said the PFMS had rejected the credit on 14 April because my Aadhaar-bank link in the NPCI mapper was de-active. They even gave me the rejection-code. I went to SBI Hazratganj the next day with my Aadhaar, asked for re-active NPCI seeding. Nine days later, on 10 June 2025, the full ₹23,000 was in my account. The agent in the cyber café outside the college had wanted ₹2,000 to 'follow up'. The RTI cost me ₹10 and one envelope.

—Ankit, June 2025

This is the rule, not the exception. The NSP-PFMS pipeline rejects roughly 8-12% of all approved scholarships every year for technical reasons — usually NPCI seeding, name mismatch, or beneficiary-type flag flips. None of these errors are visible to the student on the portal. The PIO at the relevant institute, district, state or central office must put the reason in writing within 30 days.

Why an RTI works (when the NSP helpline and grievance ticket don't)

You may have already tried the NSP grievance module (“Lodge Complaint”) or called 0120-6619540. Both can work — when they work. But neither is legally bound to give you a reasoned answer in a fixed time. An RTI is.

In short: the NSP grievance module is a request. An RTI is a legal claim on your right to know.

The 8 steps, in order

Step 1 — Identify which scheme you applied under

The “NSP” is an umbrella portal. Your scholarship actually belongs to one of five Ministries, and the PIO who can answer is in that Ministry's chain. Check your NSP application screen — it will say one of:

The Ministry name decides which Bhawan in Delhi (or in MoMA's case, Maulana Azad Education Foundation, New Delhi) your top-level RTI goes to.

Step 2 — Find the right "stuck stage"

The NSP file moves through four verification gates. Before you write the RTI, find out which gate is blocking. Open https://scholarships.gov.in → “Login” → “Application Status”. You will see one of:

You can file at multiple levels at once. There is no rule against parallel RTIs.

Step 3 — Identify the PIO at each level

Step 4 — Pay the ₹10 fee

For central RTIs (Ministry-level), the fee is ₹10, payable through:

For state and district RTIs, the fee varies (₹10 in most states, ₹20-50 in a few — see RTI fee calculator). Court fee stamp is accepted in some states.

If you are Below Poverty Line (BPL), the fee is waived under §7(5) — attach a copy of your BPL ration card or income certificate.

Step 5 — Write the RTI (use this exact template)

Keep questions specific, factual, and answerable in writing. Don't ask “why is my scholarship stuck?” — ask for verification dates, PFMS file numbers, rejection codes, and the dealing assistant's name.

[Your full name]
[Your address]
[Phone] · [Email]
[Date]

To,
The Public Information Officer
[Designation — e.g., Registrar / DSWO / Director Social Welfare / Under Secretary]
[Office name]
[Full postal address]

Subject: RTI application under §6(1), RTI Act 2005 — status of NSP scholarship

Sir/Madam,

I am a student-applicant on the National Scholarship Portal. I request the following information under §6(1) of the Right to Information Act, 2005, regarding my pending scholarship for Academic Year [AY 20XX-XX]:

NSP Application ID: [17-digit Application ID]
Scheme name: [e.g., Post-Matric Scholarship for SC Students]
Sponsoring Ministry: [MoSJE / MoMA / MoTA / DEPwD / MoE]
Name as per NSP record: [name]
Aadhaar last 4 digits: [XXXX]
Bank account last 4 digits: [XXXX]
IFSC: [IFSC]
Institute / AISHE code: [code]
Course: [course + year]
Date of online submission: [DD-MM-YYYY]
Current portal status as of [date]: [e.g., "Released to PFMS"]

Information sought:

1. The current status of my above-mentioned application, in writing, with the date of the latest action.
2. The dates on which **Institute Verification (INO)**, **District Verification (DNO)** and **State Verification (SNO)** were completed (or, if pending, the reason for pendency and the official responsible).
3. If the application has been forwarded to PFMS, the **PFMS file number / batch number** and the date of forwarding.
4. If PFMS has rejected or returned the credit, the **exact rejection-code and reason** as received from PFMS / NPCI / sponsor bank.
5. The name and designation of the **dealing assistant** and the **section officer** currently handling the file.
6. A copy of any internal note, deficiency memo, or query raised on this application.
7. If any document or correction is required from me, the **exact list with the exact format** required.

Fee: I enclose Indian Postal Order No. [number] dated [date] for ₹10.

I declare that I am a citizen of India.

Thank you,

[Signature]
[Name]

Step 6 — Send by registered post (or file online for central RTIs)

For Ministry-level RTIs, the easiest route is https://rtionline.gov.in — pick the Ministry, paste the body of the template above, pay ₹10 by UPI/net-banking, done. You get an instant registration number.

For institute, district, or state RTIs, use Registered Post with Acknowledgement Due (AD) — gives you a tracking number and proof of delivery. Cost: about ₹40-60.

You can also hand-deliver and ask for a stamped acknowledgement on a duplicate copy.

Step 7 — Mark the deadline on your calendar

The 30-day clock starts the day the office receives your application (the date on the AD card or the rtionline registration timestamp).

Step 8 — If they don't reply (or the reply is vague)

File a First Appeal under §19(1) — also free, also a 30-day window for the FAA to decide.

The First Appellate Authority is normally one rank above the PIO:

To,
The First Appellate Authority
[Designation]
[Office name]
[Address]

Subject: First Appeal under §19(1), RTI Act 2005

Sir/Madam,

I filed an RTI application dated [original date] (acknowledged on [AD date / rtionline number]). The 30-day reply window under §7(1) ended on [day 30]. I have received [no reply / a vague reply not addressing my questions]. I therefore file a First Appeal under §19(1) of the RTI Act 2005.

I attach: (a) copy of the original RTI, (b) postal AD acknowledgement / rtionline receipt, (c) the PIO's reply if any.

I request that the FAA direct the PIO to provide the information sought, and pass any further orders the FAA deems fit including action under §20 for the deemed refusal.

[Signature]

If the FAA also fails to respond in 45 days (the §19(6) cap), you go to the Central Information Commission (CIC) at https://cic.gov.in for central RTIs, or your State Information Commission (SIC) for state/district RTIs. The CIC's online filing portal accepts e-Second Appeals; hearings are mostly by video conference.

What the reply usually looks like

When a PIO replies properly to an NSP status RTI, you typically get one of these:

  1. “INO/DNO/SNO pending — moved on [date], deadline [date].” — chase the named officer; show them the RTI reply.
  2. “PFMS rejected on [date], code R03 — Aadhaar inactive in NPCI mapper.” — go to your bank, ask for “NPCI seeding active for DBT” — done in 1 day at most banks.
  3. “PFMS rejected — name mismatch between Aadhaar and bank.” — get name corrected at bank; refile.
  4. “Beneficiary type mismatch — re-apply as 'Renewal' instead of 'Fresh'.” — institute correction needed.
  5. “AISHE code mismatch — institute not approved on portal.” — institute INO must update on NSP backend.
  6. “Course-fee structure not approved at state level — pending with State Directorate.” — escalate RTI to State Directorate.

In every case you now have a written, dated, official answer that you can act on. That is the whole point.

Common rejections / excuses you may hear

Common reasons NSP scholarships get stuck (so you know what to ask)

After-filing escalation map

  1. Day 0: RTI filed (post / rtionline)
  2. Day 30: PIO reply due. Silence = §7(2) deemed refusal.
  3. Day 31: File §19(1) First Appeal to FAA.
  4. Day 76 (max): FAA decision due (§19(6): 30 days, extendable to 45).
  5. Day 77 onwards: File §19(3) Second Appeal to CIC (central) or SIC (state). 90-day window.
  6. Hearing: mostly by video conference. Carry IPO/AD copies + PIO reply (if any) + FAA decision.

Last reviewed: 26 April 2026.