Reviewed on: 2026-06-19.
Direct answer. Section 6(1) of the RTI Act 2005 lets you apply “in writing or through electronic means.” Use rtionline.gov.in for central government public authorities only; use your state's portal or postal route for state authorities. No universal online option exists for all states.
Section 6(1) of the Right to Information Act, 2005 says a person may make a request “in writing or through electronic means.” That single clause creates two legally equal routes: online (electronic) and offline (written, by post or by hand). Neither is superior by law, the correct choice depends on which public authority you are targeting and whether a working online portal exists for it.
The biggest mistake applicants make is filing at the wrong portal. Here is how the landscape divides:
| Route | Covers | Portal / Address |
|---|---|---|
| rtionline.gov.in (central portal) | All central government ministries, departments, and central public authorities (e.g. EPFO central office, DOPT, Income Tax, Railways, AIR, DDA) | rtionline.gov.in |
| State RTI portal | Public authorities under a state government (e.g. state health dept, municipal corporation, state electricity board) | Each state runs its own portal, check your state government website; not all states have one |
| By post or by hand (offline) | Any public authority, central or state, where no online portal exists or you prefer a paper trail | Address the envelope to the CPIO, the concerned public authority |
Critical rule: rtionline.gov.in explicitly warns: “Please do not file RTI applications through this portal for public authorities under the State Governments, including the Government of NCT Delhi.” Filing a central-portal application for a state authority wastes your 30 days and achieves nothing.
[Your grievance / query]
|
v
Is the public authority under Central Govt?
|
yes | no
v v
rtionline.gov.in Is a state RTI portal available?
Pay Rs 10 online |
(net banking/UPI/card) yes | no
Get registration no. v v
| State portal By post/hand to CPIO
| + state fee + Rs 10 IPO/DD/court-fee
| | stamp (varies by state)
+<----------------+<-------+
|
Reply due in 30 days (s.7)
(21 days if life/liberty)
|
No reply / unsatisfactory reply?
|
First Appeal to FAA (s.19(1))
within 30 days of deadline
|
Second Appeal to CIC/SIC (s.19(3))
Online filing is your best choice when:
Offline, sending your application by registered post with acknowledgement due (RPAD), is the right choice when:
Hand-delivery is also offline and carries the same legal effect, ask the receiving clerk to stamp your copy with the date and their seal.
| Item | Central portal (rtionline.gov.in) | Offline / postal |
|---|---|---|
| Application fee | Rs 10, paid online (net banking / UPI / card) | Rs 10 by Indian Postal Order, demand draft, or court-fee stamp (mode varies by state rules) |
| BPL exemption | Yes, attach BPL card copy at filing | Yes, attach BPL card copy with application letter |
| Additional copies | Rs 2 per page (payable on demand) | Rs 2 per page (payable on demand, mode as above) |
| Inspection of records | First hour free; Rs 5 per 15 min after | First hour free; Rs 5 per 15 min after |
State fees and accepted payment modes vary, check the specific state's RTI Rules or the state RTI portal for exact amounts.
Online (central portal): You receive a registration number immediately on successful submission. You can track the status at rtionline.gov.in under “View Status.” The CIC second-appeal section is also integrated into the portal, so appeal details auto-populate.
Offline: There is no central tracking. Keep your RPAD receipt from the post office, it is your only proof of dispatch. The date of postmark counts as the date of receipt for the 30-day reply clock (s.7).
India does not have one unified online portal for all state authorities. As of 2026:
Hedge: state portal availability changes. Verify on the relevant state government website before filing.
Before filing an RTI, check whether a faster alternative exists. For money not credited under a central scheme, a DBT grievance on the scheme portal often resolves the matter in 7-15 days, quicker than waiting for a 30-day RTI reply. For government service delays, a CPGRAMS complaint can get an acknowledgement and escalation the same day. For status of a specific scheme, a direct status check is faster than RTI.
RTI works best when you need specific documents, data, or file notings that are not available through these faster channels, or when those channels have failed.
Yes, if your state has its own online RTI portal. You cannot use rtionline.gov.in for state authorities, that portal is for central government public authorities only. Check your state government's official website for its RTI portal.
Yes. Section 6(1) of the RTI Act 2005 explicitly recognises “electronic means” alongside “writing.” An online submission has the same legal standing as a paper application.
Your RPAD (registered post with acknowledgement due) receipt from the post office. Keep it safely, it is your evidence of the date of posting and delivery. There is no online tracking for postal RTI applications.
File by post or by hand to the CPIO of that public authority. Not every central-government body is listed in the portal's drop-down. If you are unsure of the CPIO's address, check the public authority's official website, it must publish its PIO details under s.4(1)(b) of the RTI Act.
For central public authorities, yes, Rs 10 either way. The payment mode differs: online you pay by UPI/card/net banking; offline you pay by Indian Postal Order or demand draft or court-fee stamp. State fees and payment modes may differ under state RTI rules, verify on your state's RTI portal.
Under s.7 of the RTI Act, the clock starts from the date the PIO “receives” the application. For postal filing, receipt is typically the delivery date on the RPAD acknowledgement. For online filing, the registration timestamp on the portal is the receipt date.
Persons below the poverty line are fully exempt from the application fee under RTI Rules 2012, Rule 3. Include a self-attested copy of your BPL or ration card with your application (postal) or attach a scan (online, where the portal permits uploads).
Yes. If your original RTI was to a central public authority, you can file the second appeal with the Central Information Commission (CIC) online at rtionline.gov.in, even if you originally filed by post. You will need to enter your earlier registration or reference number.
File an RTI to: the CPIO of the concerned public authority.
Ask:
→ Use our free AI RTI Drafter to generate a complete Section 6(1) application.
By Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak