In one line: Rules made under Section 27 (Central and State Governments) and Section 28 (Supreme Court, High Courts, Legislatures) of the Right to Information Act, 2005, plus the Digital Personal Data Protection Rules, 2025 that amended Section 8(1)(j) on 14 November 2025. For fees and online filing links, see the prominent guide at RTI Fees by State and Online Portal Directory.
Competent authorities under Section 28 frame their own rules.
Each State Government has framed its own rules on fee structure, application format, and first-appeal procedure. The full index of State pages on this site follows. For fees and direct online-filing links, see RTI Fees by State (2026).
The Digital Personal Data Protection Rules, 2025 were notified on 14 November 2025. These rules are not made under the RTI Act. However, Section 44(3) of the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023, which became operational on notification of these rules, substituted the proviso to Section 8(1)(j) of the RTI Act.
The RTI (Amendment) Act, 2019 (Act No. 24 of 2019, commenced 24 October 2019) replaced Sections 13(1), 13(2), 13(5), 16(1), 16(2), 16(5), and parts of Section 27 of the RTI Act.
| Jurisdiction | Fee | Online portal (if any) |
| Central (Ministries, PSUs) | Rs 10 | rtionline.gov.in |
| Most States and UTs | Rs 10 | See Fees by State table |
| Haryana, Punjab, Tamil Nadu | Rs 50 | See Fees by State table |
| Gujarat | Rs 20 | rti.gujarat.gov.in |
| BPL applicants | Nil (Section 7(5)) | - |
| Inspection, first hour | Free | - |
| Inspection, subsequent hour | Rs 5 per hour | - |
| A4/A3 certified copy | Rs 2 per page | - |
| Diskette or CD | Rs 50 | - |
No. The Central fee is Rs 10 under Central Rules. States have their own rules under Section 27; most charge Rs 10, a few charge Rs 50 or Rs 20 (see the fees page above). A State can never waive the Section 7(5) BPL exemption.
Most States follow Rs 2 per A4 page. A higher charge needs a State notification. If a department demands an unjustified higher rate, refuse and include the refusal as a ground in your first appeal.
Yes, for judicial-side records. Administrative-side records of these institutions follow Central-aligned procedures. See the separate rules linked above.
Last reviewed on: 20 April 2026