Plain-English summary. If your EPF withdrawal claim has been stuck for more than 20 days with no clear reason, you don't have to keep refreshing the EPFO portal in panic. The Right to Information Act, 2005 lets you ask the EPFO office (called RPFC) for a written explanation — for free — and they have to reply in 30 days. This page tells you exactly what to write, where to send it, and what to do next. No legal jargon. No fees.
Rajesh Kumar, 56, retired postmaster from Kanpur. Filed a Form-19 PF withdrawal in September 2025. The EPFO portal kept showing “Under Process”. After 71 days he was told over WhatsApp by an agent that his “KYC mismatch” had to be fixed — though no notice ever came. He filed an RTI in late November.
“I had given up. The agent in the cyber café wanted ₹3,500 to 'clear my file'. My son told me to try the RTI route — said it costs ₹10. I sent the application by post on 26 November. On 14 December I got a registered envelope from the Kanpur RPFC office. It said two things: (1) my Aadhaar name had a middle initial that wasn't in the EPF record, (2) the date-of-exit my last employer marked was wrong by one day. They told me exactly which form to refile and gave me the dealing assistant's name and phone. By 15 December the money was in my account. The RTI cost me ₹10 plus a registered post stamp. The agent had wanted ₹3,500.”
—Rajesh, December 2025
This is not unusual. Roughly 1 in 7 PF claims gets stuck or rejected silently each year (EPFO annual report 2023-24). The system is built so that PIOs at every regional office must answer in writing within 30 days. Most people just don't know to ask.
You may have already tried EPFO's grievance portal (EPFiGMS) or the UMANG app. These are good — when they work. But they are not legally bound to give you a reasoned answer in a fixed time. An RTI is.
In short: the grievance portal is a request. An RTI is a legal claim on your right to know.
The PF account is held at a specific Regional Provident Fund Commissioner (RPFC) office. This is usually the office in the city/region where your last employer was registered, not where you live now.
Every RPFC office has a Public Information Officer (PIO). By default, this is the Assistant Provident Fund Commissioner (APFC) of the office. You don't need their personal name — the title is enough. The address line is:
The Public Information Officer (Assistant Provident Fund Commissioner) Regional Office of EPFO, [office name] [full postal address]
Most state RPFC offices accept three payment modes:
If you are Below Poverty Line (BPL), the fee is waived — attach a copy of your BPL ration card or income certificate.
Keep your questions specific, factual, and answerable in writing. Don't ask “why is my PF stuck?” — ask “what is the current status, what action is pending, and from whom?”
[Your full name] [Your address] [Phone] · [Email] [Date] To, The Public Information Officer (Assistant Provident Fund Commissioner) Regional Office of EPFO, [city] [postal address] Subject: RTI application under §6(1), RTI Act 2005 — status of EPF claim Sir/Madam, I am a member of the Employees' Provident Fund. I request the following information under §6(1) of the Right to Information Act, 2005, regarding my pending withdrawal claim: UAN: [12-digit UAN] Member ID: [as on EPFO portal] Name as per EPF record: [name] Form filed: [Form 19 / Form 10C / Form 31] Date of online submission: [DD-MM-YYYY] Claim ID (if available): [auto-generated ID from portal] Information sought: 1. The current status of my above-mentioned claim, in writing. 2. If the claim has been rejected, returned, or marked deficient, the **specific reason** with the **specific clause/rule** of the EPF Scheme 1952 invoked. 3. The name and designation of the **dealing assistant** and the **section officer** currently handling the file. 4. The date on which the file was last moved, the action taken on that date, and the next step required. 5. A copy of any internal note, deficiency memo, or query raised by the office on this claim. 6. If any document is required from me to clear the file, the **exact list of documents** with the **exact format** required. Fee: I enclose Indian Postal Order No. [number] dated [date] for ₹10 in favour of "Accounts Officer, EPFO". I declare that I am a citizen of India. Thank you, [Signature] [Name]
Use Registered Post with Acknowledgement Due (AD) — this gives you a tracking number and proof of delivery. Cost: about ₹40-60 depending on weight.
You can also hand-deliver and ask for a stamped acknowledgement on a duplicate copy. Either is valid.
The 30-day clock starts the day the office receives your application (the date on the AD card, not the date you posted).
File a First Appeal — also free, also by registered post, also a 30-day clock.
The First Appellate Authority (FAA) at most RPFC offices is the Regional Provident Fund Commissioner (RPFC) himself/herself — one rank above the PIO. Address it the same way:
To, The First Appellate Authority (Regional Provident Fund Commissioner) Regional Office of EPFO, [city] [address] Subject: First Appeal under §19(1), RTI Act 2005 Sir/Madam, I filed an RTI application dated [original date] (acknowledged by your office on [AD date]). 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, (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. The CIC's online filing portal accepts e-Second Appeals. Hearings are mostly by video conference.
When a PIO replies properly to a PF status RTI, you typically get one of these:
In every case you now have a written, dated, official answer that you can act on. That is the whole point.
Q. Will EPFO blacklist me for filing an RTI?
No. The RTI Act protects you (§4 transparency obligations apply to EPFO; §8 exemptions don't cover ordinary status enquiries about your own account). Lakhs of members file PF RTIs every year. It is a routine administrative process.
Q. I don't have my UAN handy. Can I still file?
Yes — give your name, your last employer's name + PF code, your dates of employment, and your last salary slip's PF deduction shown. The PIO can find your file from those.
Q. My ex-employer won't update my date-of-exit. Can RTI help?
Yes. File a separate RTI to the same RPFC office asking: “What is the procedure when an employer fails to mark date-of-exit, and what action has EPFO taken/can take against the employer for non-compliance?” The reply usually triggers an EPFO-side push to the employer.
Q. I'm overseas — can I file from outside India?
The RTI Act applies to citizens of India regardless of residence. You can post from abroad (international registered post) or have a relative in India send on your behalf with an authorisation letter. The PIO must reply by post or email.
Q. The portal says “settled” but I never got the money.
File an RTI specifically asking: (1) the date and amount actually credited, (2) the bank account and IFSC the money was sent to, (3) any return-bounce notice received by EPFO from your bank. This usually surfaces a wrong-account-number issue.
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The plain-language guide above is enough for almost every stuck-PF case. The section below is for those who want the legal references, case law, and EPFO scheme details — useful if your case is complex, if the PIO has rejected your RTI on a specific exemption, or if you are escalating to the CIC.
If your RTI reply cites a specific paragraph as the basis for rejection, look up:
Some RPFC offices try to refuse RTIs at the counter (“file your grievance on the portal first”). This is a §6(1) violation — the PIO must accept any RTI accompanied by the fee. If refused:
If your PF withdrawal is stuck, you don't need an agent, a tout, or a “consultant”. You need a ₹10 postal order, a registered envelope, and the template above. The RTI Act gives you a 30-day legal answer that the EPFO grievance portal cannot match. Rajesh got his ₹2.4 lakh in 19 days. The same path is open to you.
Don't pay anyone to file an RTI for you. It is a one-page letter, a ten-rupee stamp, and a polite tone. That's it.
Last reviewed on: 23 April 2026 by RTI Wiki editorial team. If you spot an error or an out-of-date phone/address, please post on the Q&A forum or write to [email protected].
Last reviewed: 24 April 2026.