A Section 18 complaint is the only RTI weapon that can put Rs 250 a day on a Public Information Officer who ignored you, capped at Rs 25000 under Section 20. But it comes with a sharp catch that costs thousands of applicants their information every year: the Information Commission hearing a Section 18 complaint cannot order the PIO to hand over the records you asked for. That power lives in the second appeal under Section 19. Choose the wrong door and you win a penalty but still go home empty-handed.
Quick answer: Section 18 of the RTI Act 2005 lets you complain directly to the Central or State Information Commission when a PIO has no officer, refuses your application, misses the deadline, overcharges, or gives false information. The Commission can fine and discipline the PIO but generally cannot order disclosure. To actually get the information, file a Section 19 second appeal instead.
A Section 18 complaint is a direct grievance to the Information Commission about how a public authority handled your RTI request. Unlike an appeal, it needs no prior first appeal. Its purpose is supervisory and penal: the Commission inquires into PIO misconduct, can summon witnesses, impose penalty, and recommend disciplinary action against the officer at fault.
The grounds, Section 18(1). The Information Commission has a duty to receive and inquire into a complaint from any person who:
The penalty, Section 20. Where the Commission finds the PIO refused an application without reasonable cause, did not furnish information within time, malafidely denied a request, knowingly gave incorrect or misleading information, or destroyed records, it imposes a penalty of Rs 250 each day the default continues, subject to a total ceiling of Rs 25000. For persistent default the Commission also recommends disciplinary action under the officer service rules. The PIO gets a reasonable opportunity to be heard, and the burden of justifying the conduct is on the PIO.
Why Section 18 will not get you the file. This is the heart of the matter. In Chief Information Commr. v. State of Manipur (Supreme Court, 12 December 2011, AIR 2012 SC 864), the Court held that a Commission entertaining a complaint under Section 18 has no jurisdiction to pass an order providing access to the information. The power under Section 18 is supervisory in character. A person refused information must seek redress through the appellate procedure under Section 19, which is the route to obtain disclosure. Treat this as settled law.
The contrast with Section 19. A second appeal under Section 19 follows a first appeal: you first appeal to the officer senior in rank to the PIO within 30 days, then appeal to the Commission within 90 days. Under Section 19(8) the Commission can direct the public authority to provide the information in a particular form, appoint PIOs, and even award compensation under Section 19(8)(b) for any loss or detriment suffered. Under Section 19(5) the onus to prove that a denial was justified rests on the PIO. So Section 19 both gets you the record and can compensate you; Section 18 punishes the officer.
| Question | Section 18 complaint | Section 19 second appeal |
|---|---|---|
| First appeal needed first? | No, file straight to the Commission | Yes, second appeal follows a first appeal |
| Can it order the information be given? | No, supervisory only | Yes, under Section 19(8)(a) |
| Penalty on the PIO? | Yes, up to Rs 25000 under Section 20 | Yes, Commission can also penalise in appeal |
| Compensation to you? | No | Yes, under Section 19(8)(b) |
| Best when | PIO misconduct, no PIO, false info, gross delay and you want accountability | You simply want the records you were denied |
| Time limit to file | No fixed statutory limit, file promptly | 90 days from first appeal decision |
Rule of thumb: if your goal is the information, file the Section 19 second appeal. File a Section 18 complaint when the wrong is the officer conduct itself, or use both in parallel: appeal to get the file, complain to penalise. Our second appeal guide covers the appeal route in full.
Real-life example. Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak of Ranchi district filed an RTI on 4 February 2026 asking the municipal body for road-repair tender records. The PIO neither replied within 30 days nor acknowledged the application. On 20 March 2026 he filed a Section 18 complaint to the State Information Commission citing no response within time and refusal to accept his application, attaching the speed-post receipt. At the hearing the PIO offered no reasonable cause. The Commission imposed a penalty under Section 20 of Rs 11250 on the PIO for 45 days of default and recommended a note in the officer record. Crucially, Dr. Pathak had also filed a first appeal and then a Section 19 second appeal, and it was the appeal, not the complaint, that produced an order directing the municipality to hand over the tender file. Names and figures are illustrative.
To,
The Registrar
State Information Commission / Central Information Commission
[address]
Subject: Complaint under Section 18 of the Right to Information Act, 2005
Respected Sir or Madam,
1. I, Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak, resident of [address], filed an
application under Section 6(1) of the RTI Act, 2005 dated
04.02.2026 (dispatch no. [____]) with the PIO, [public authority],
along with the prescribed fee of Rs 10.
2. As on the date of this complaint, no response has been received
within the period fixed under Section 7(1) of the Act, and the
PIO also declined to accept or forward my application.
3. This complaint is made under Section 18(1) of the RTI Act, 2005
on the following grounds:
(a) failure to respond within the time limit specified;
(b) refusal to accept the application by the PIO;
(c) the information furnished, if any, was incomplete or misleading.
4. I therefore request the Hon ble Commission to:
(i) inquire into this complaint under Section 18;
(ii) impose penalty on the PIO under Section 20 at Rs 250 per day
of default, subject to the ceiling of Rs 25000;
(iii) recommend disciplinary action against the PIO; and
(iv) pass any further order the Commission deems fit.
Enclosures: copy of RTI application, dispatch proof, fee receipt,
PIO correspondence if any.
Place: [____] Yours faithfully,
Date: [____] Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak
[signature and contact]
No. A Section 18 complaint goes directly to the Information Commission and needs no prior first appeal. Only a Section 19 second appeal requires a first appeal first.
Generally no. In State of Manipur (AIR 2012 SC 864) the Supreme Court held the Commission has no jurisdiction under Section 18 to order access. To obtain the record, file a Section 19 second appeal.
Under Section 20, Rs 250 for each day of default, up to a maximum of Rs 25000, plus a recommendation of disciplinary action where the default is persistent.
The Act fixes no specific limitation period for a Section 18 complaint, but file promptly and keep the daily-penalty window clear with dated proof. The 90-day clock applies to second appeals, not complaints.
The burden is on the PIO. In appeal proceedings Section 19(5) places the onus to justify a denial on the PIO, and in a Section 18 penalty inquiry the PIO must show reasonable cause for the default.
Yes, and often you should. Run the Section 19 appeal to get the information and the compensation under Section 19(8)(b), and the Section 18 complaint to penalise the officer conduct.
To the Central Information Commission at cic.gov.in for central public authorities, or to the relevant State Information Commission for state bodies. Many accept online, email and postal filing.
No. Compensation for loss or detriment is awarded under Section 19(8)(b) in appeal proceedings, not in a Section 18 complaint.