Table of Contents

RTI to PMO & Central Ministries 2026

RTI To PMO filing scene

Reviewed on: 2026-06-19.

Direct answer. Any citizen can file an RTI application to the Prime Minister's Office or any central ministry online at rtionline.gov.in for a fee of Rs. 10. The CPIO must reply within 30 days. If the wrong authority is selected, your application is transferred automatically under Section 6(3) of the RTI Act 2005.

Why the PMO and central ministries are different

A retired government servant once sent a postal order to “The PMO, South Block” after being told the RTI fee goes to the authority. The application came back. The correct route: pay online at rtionline.gov.in (the Central RTI Online portal) and the system routes the rest.

Central government bodies (PMO, Cabinet Secretariat, Union Ministries) are governed by the Central Information Commission (CIC), not any State Information Commission. Appeals go to the CIC, not to any state body.

Which authorities are covered

The Central RTI Online portal at rtionline.gov.in covers all Ministries, Departments, and other Public Authorities of the Central Government. This includes:

State government authorities, including Delhi government bodies, are NOT on this portal. Submitting an application for a state authority here will be rejected without fee refund.

How it works, step by step

[You] --> Visit rtionline.gov.in --> Register / Log in
        |
        v
   Select Public Authority (PMO or Ministry)
        |
        v
   Write your request under s.6(1) RTI Act 2005
        |
        v
   Pay Rs. 10 online (BPL applicants: exempt with proof)
        |
        v
   Application received by Nodal Officer
        |
        v
   Correct authority? --YES--> CPIO processes it
        |                           |
       NO                      Reply within 30 days
        |                      (48 hrs if life/liberty)
        v                           |
   Transfer under s.6(3)       Satisfied? --YES--> Done
   (within 5 days)                 |
        |                          NO
        v                          |
   Concerned CPIO replies     First Appeal to FAA
   within 30 days                  |
                              Still unsatisfied?
                                   |
                              Second Appeal to CIC

Step-by-step filing guide

Step 1: Register on the portal

Go to rtionline.gov.in and click Submit Request. First-time users must register with a valid mobile number and email address. Keep your login credentials; you will need them to track replies.

Step 2: Select the correct public authority

The portal shows a searchable list of all central public authorities. Type “Prime Minister” to find the PMO, or search by ministry name (e.g., “Finance”, “Health”). Selecting the right authority at this stage avoids delays.

Tip: If your query spans two ministries, file separate applications to each. Do not club two public authorities in one application.

Step 3: Draft your request under Section 6(1)

Section 6(1) requires only that you describe the information sought; no reasons are needed. Be specific:

Avoid vague requests. Write: “Please provide certified copies of all orders issued by [Ministry] on [Scheme] between 1 April 2024 and 31 March 2025.” Attach a PDF if the text box is insufficient.

Step 4: Pay the fee

Once payment is confirmed, you receive a registration number. Save it. This is your reference for all future tracking, reminders, and appeals.

Step 5: Wait for the CPIO's reply

Under Section 7(1) of the RTI Act 2005, the CPIO must provide information within 30 days of receipt of the application. Where the information relates to the life or liberty of a person, the time limit is 48 hours.

The Nodal Officer routes your application electronically to the CPIO of the relevant Ministry or the PMO. If the authority you selected is not the right one, the Nodal Officer transfers it under Section 6(3) within 5 days to the correct public authority. The 30-day clock for that authority starts from the date of transfer.

You can track your application at rtionline.gov.in using your registration number.

What if the CPIO does not reply or you are unhappy?

First appeal to the First Appellate Authority (FAA)

Under Section 19(1) of the RTI Act 2005, you can file a first appeal:

Second appeal or complaint to the CIC

If the FAA also does not reply, or you are still dissatisfied, file a second appeal or complaint to the Central Information Commission (CIC) at cic.gov.in. The CIC can:

The the Section 6 transfer rule rule

Section 6(3) of the RTI Act 2005 is the transfer provision. If an application is received by a public authority that does not hold the relevant information, it must transfer the application to the correct authority within 5 days and inform the applicant. The receiving authority then has 30 days from the date of transfer to reply.

On the rtionline.gov.in portal, this transfer happens electronically. You will see the new authority reflected in your application status. The portal will also notify you by SMS/email.

Practical note: If your question concerns a scheme jointly administered by two ministries (for example, PM-KISAN, which involves Agriculture Ministry data), address your RTI to the Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare. You can separately track your scheme status via the dedicated PM-KISAN status tool.

Exemptions: what the PMO or a Ministry may withhold

Section 8 of the RTI Act 2005 lists information a CPIO may deny. Common ones for central ministries:

Any denial must be in writing citing the specific sub-section. A refusal without applying the public interest override test under s.8(2) is a ground for your first appeal.

FAQ

Can I file an RTI to the PMO about a matter relating to a specific state?

Yes, if the matter is handled by the PMO or a central ministry. But if the relevant authority is a state government department, the PMO will transfer or reject the application. For state government matters, use the respective state's RTI portal.

Do I need to mention why I want the information?

No. Section 6(2) of the RTI Act 2005 explicitly states that an applicant is not required to give reasons for seeking information. However, stating the context can help the CPIO identify the right records faster.

What if I do not have internet access or a bank account?

You may file by post to the CPIO of the concerned Ministry, with a demand draft or postal order for Rs. 10 payable to the Accounts Officer of that Ministry. For the PMO specifically, address the application to: “The CPIO, Prime Minister's Office, South Block, New Delhi 110 011.” Verify the exact CPIO name and designation on pmindia.gov.in before posting.

My application was transferred twice and I still have no reply. What do I do?

Each s.6(3) transfer starts a fresh 30-day clock for the receiving authority. If that authority also misses the deadline, file a first appeal to its FAA from day 31 via rtionline.gov.in.

Can I file an RTI about PM scheme funds or central allocations to my district?

Yes. Central ministry RTI is the right route for information about fund releases, utilisation certificates, and central allocations. Address to the CPIO of the relevant ministry (e.g., Ministry of Finance for central grants; Ministry of Rural Development for MGNREGS funds). For grievances related to scheme delivery, you can also raise a complaint via CPGRAMS, the Central Government grievance portal.

What is the APIO route?

An APIO (Assistant Public Information Officer) at a sub-divisional post office can accept your written application and forward it to the CPIO. The 30-day clock starts when the CPIO receives it. Use this route if you have no internet access.

Is there a fee for the first appeal?

No. The first appeal to the FAA and the second appeal or complaint to the CIC are both free of charge.

File an RTI

File an RTI to: the CPIO, Prime Minister's Office / the concerned central Ministry

Use our free AI RTI Drafter to generate a complete Section 6(1) application.

Sources

By Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak