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In one line. This is a curated, verified directory of the 20 most useful Right to Information (RTI) websites in India — five official central portals, seven state portals, five civil-society resources, and three legal research archives. Each entry carries the direct URL, what it does, and who should use it.
How this list was built.
Did you know? The RTI Act, 2005 was passed by Parliament on 15 June 2005 and came into force on 12 October 2005. Twenty years on, the Central Information Commission receives more than 30,000 second appeals a year, and the central filing portal alone processes ~4 lakh applications annually.
For twenty years, the Right to Information Act, 2005, has been India's quietest and most persistent democracy tool. Getting the right information to file a good RTI used to require trips to a Public Information Officer's counter. Today, most of the filing — and all of the research — can be done online.
This guide curates the 20 websites every Indian citizen should know. Each one is independently verifiable and plays a specific role. Some are for filing an RTI; others are for research on the Act, the case law, or the Commissions; a few are for support when a reply is denied or delayed.
Use this simple decision rule:
URL. rtionline.gov.in
What it does. The Government of India's primary online portal for filing RTI applications, First Appeals, and paying the Rs. 10 fee — for Central ministries and Central public authorities. Supports more than 2,000 offices on the central side.
Key features.
Who should use it. Every citizen filing to a Central ministry, PSU, regulator, or central-government office. Students for UPSC / SSC / CBSE queries. Tax-payers with Income Tax / CBIC matters.
Pro tip. Save the Registration Number the moment you file. Mark Day 30 on your calendar. When the reply arrives on e-mail, download and store a PDF immediately — portal records are purged after the retention period.
URL. cic.gov.in
What it does. The statutory Commission set up under Section 12 of the RTI Act. Final appellate authority for all central public authorities. Publishes orders, case law, annual reports, and the register of pending appeals.
Key features.
Who should use it. Activists, journalists, researchers, and anyone filing a Second Appeal. Also useful for anyone citing CIC precedent in a First Appeal.
Pro tip. When you cite a CIC order in your First Appeal, quote the exact appeal number and date (e.g., “CIC/WB/A/2008/00426 dated 6 January 2009”). The FAA takes it more seriously.
URL. rti.gov.in
What it does. The RTI Portal Gateway maintained by the Department of Personnel and Training (DoPT). Directory of PIOs and First Appellate Authorities, state RTI portal links, proactive-disclosure templates, and RTI Act full text.
Key features.
Who should use it. Anyone unsure whom to file the RTI to. Useful for students and first-time filers.
Pro tip. Before filing, always consult the Section 4 (proactive disclosure) page of the target ministry. Many questions are answered there without an RTI.
URL. dopt.gov.in
What it does. DoPT is the nodal ministry for the RTI Act. It issues Office Memoranda (OMs), procedural clarifications, and policy circulars. Hosts the RTI Master Circular — the consolidated administrative guidance on implementing the Act.
Key features.
Who should use it. PIOs, senior administrators, legal researchers, and RTI activists citing DoPT OMs in appeals.
Pro tip. Many RTI rejections become untenable when the applicant cites a specific DoPT OM in their First Appeal. Read the Master Circular once.
URL. sci.gov.in/right-to-information (main site: sci.gov.in)
What it does. The RTI cell of the Supreme Court of India publishes its PIO list, proactive disclosure under Section 4, and guidelines for filing an RTI application to the Court (Registry, Judges' Offices).
Key features.
Who should use it. Law students, legal researchers, journalists covering the judiciary. Anyone seeking information on Supreme Court administration, case statistics, or the office of the Chief Justice.
Pro tip. After the landmark CPIO, Supreme Court v. Subhash Chandra Agarwal (2020) 5 SCC 481, the SC is a public authority under RTI. Use the SC's own RTI rules, not the central RTI Online portal.
State governments maintain their own online RTI filing systems. The list below covers the most widely used. If your state is not listed, the default is rti.gov.in → State Links.
URL. rtionline.maharashtra.gov.in
What it does. Online filing for Government of Maharashtra departments, zilla parishads, municipal corporations, and state PSUs.
Pro tip. Maharashtra supports English and Marathi. Fee is Rs. 10 (IPO / online). For land-record RTIs, route to the Revenue and Forests department.
URL. rtionline.karnataka.gov.in
What it does. Online filing for all Karnataka state departments. Payment via internet banking; additional payment modes are being added.
Pro tip. Karnataka is leading in digital revenue records (Bhoomi, RTC extracts) — use RTI for what is not already online.
URL. rtionline.delhi.gov.in
What it does. Online filing for all Delhi government departments, including MCD, DDA (via routing), and the Delhi Police.
Pro tip. Delhi HC RTI rules are separate; for Delhi HC matters, see delhihighcourt.nic.in.
URL. rtionline.gujarat.gov.in
What it does. RTI filing for all Gujarat state departments, including revenue, urban development, and industries.
Pro tip. Bi-lingual interface (English / Gujarati). Use the search feature to find your exact department.
URL. rtionline.up.gov.in
What it does. RTI filing for UP state departments, local bodies, and public-sector undertakings.
Pro tip. Uttar Pradesh has one of the highest RTI volumes. Quote the district and specific department code.
URL. tnsic.gov.in
What it does. Tamil Nadu's Information Commission publishes orders, cause lists, and links to the state's RTI filing system (currently through TNSW / Citizen services portal).
Pro tip. Tamil Nadu often waives fee for certain categories; check the current fee schedule.
URL. sic.kerala.gov.in
What it does. Kerala SIC orders, case archives, and PIO directory. Online filing for Kerala is via rti.kerala.gov.in.
Pro tip. Kerala has among the most active SIC portals in India. Reads Section 4 compliance seriously.
URL. humanrightsinitiative.org
What it does. The longest-running independent watchdog on RTI implementation in India. Hosts the Access to Information Programme, annual analysis of CIC reports, policy papers, and training material.
Key features.
Who should use it. Activists, academics, journalists, and senior applicants drafting Second Appeals. Best free data source on RTI implementation quality.
Pro tip. CHRI's annual report on CIC performance is the gold standard. Cite it in appeals.
URL. snsindia.org
What it does. Delhi-based people's collective focused on transparency and accountability. Publishes annual Report Card on State Information Commissions, campaigns on RTI implementation and DPDP-RTI issues.
Key features.
Who should use it. Those engaging with SICs and seeking data on Commission backlogs and disposal.
Pro tip. The annual Report Card ranks SICs by performance. Use it when approaching a sluggish Commission — a low-ranked SIC tends to respond faster under public scrutiny.
URL. adrindia.org
What it does. Election and political-funding transparency organisation. Filed the decisive RTIs on Electoral Bonds. Maintains candidate affidavits database, political-party financial disclosures, and voter resources.
Key features.
Who should use it. Voters, researchers, and journalists working on election-related RTIs.
Pro tip. ADR's data informs most media coverage of candidate criminal records — use it to frame election-related RTIs to the Election Commission.
URL. rtifoundationofindia.com
What it does. Volunteer-run community website offering basic RTI awareness, sample applications, user forums, and news aggregation on major RTI cases.
Key features.
Who should use it. First-time filers looking for a simple community-style explainer.
Pro tip. Community content is helpful but informal. Always cross-check a template with the official rtionline.gov.in format before filing.
URL. mkssindia.org
What it does. The Rajasthan-based movement that pioneered jan sunwais (public hearings of government records) in the 1990s — the grassroots precursor to the RTI Act, 2005.
Key features.
Who should use it. Rural activists, social-audit practitioners, researchers on the origins of India's transparency regime.
Pro tip. MKSS's social-audit playbook still works today. Pair an MGNREGA RTI with a jan-sunwai-style reading in the gram sabha.
URL. indiankanoon.org
What it does. The most-used free legal-judgment search engine in India. Indexes Supreme Court, High Court, CIC, SIC, and tribunal decisions. Full-text search with date and bench filters.
Who should use it. Lawyers, law students, serious RTI users drafting appeals or writ petitions.
Pro tip. Filter by “Central Information Commission” or “Supreme Court” to find citeable RTI precedents. Use exact phrases in quotes.
URL. livelaw.in (with RTI tag / search)
What it does. Legal news portal with a dedicated stream of RTI-related judgments, analysis, and filings. Frequently reports on pending writ petitions involving the RTI Act.
Who should use it. Journalists, researchers, law students, lawyers tracking RTI jurisprudence.
Pro tip. Subscribe to LiveLaw's RTI newsletter — it is one of the few reliable filters on sensational news claims about RTI cases.
URL. scobserver.in
What it does. Independent, not-for-profit tracker of India's Supreme Court cases and judgments. Well-curated archive of RTI-related SC rulings, Constitution Bench matters (including the 2020 RTI judgment on the CJI office and the 2024 Electoral Bonds verdict).
Who should use it. Journalists, citizens, and researchers wanting explanatory coverage of major RTI rulings.
Pro tip. SCO's case summaries are shorter and clearer than direct judgments. Read SCO first, then the full text.
RTI Wiki — righttoinformation.wiki — is the site you are currently on. Unlike the others, it is neither a government portal nor an NGO: it is a working reference on the RTI Act, pillars, templates, case law, and a growing library of civic RTI applications. Free and open. See the beginners' guide and the five pillar hubs to start.
Central public authorities are Central ministries (Finance, Railways, Defence, Education, MEA), their PSUs, banks regulated by RBI, insurance companies regulated by IRDAI, Supreme Court Registry, CBSE, UGC, AICTE, UIDAI, EPFO, and regulatory bodies.
State public authorities are state departments, state PSUs, panchayats, municipal corporations, state universities, state boards, state police, District Collectorate, Tehsildar, state commissions.
Hybrid matters (e.g., Passport — central MEA + state police for PV; Aadhaar — central UIDAI but enrolled at state-level centres) often need parallel RTIs to both levels.
rtionline.gov.in is transferred back to the state — adds 10 days.For full details, see File RTI online — 12-step guide.
Q1. Is rtionline.gov.in safe?
Yes. It is the Government of India's official RTI portal, run by the Department of Personnel & Training. SSL-secured, with payments handled by authorised gateways.
Q2. Do I need to register on each state portal separately?
Yes. Each state portal has its own user account. Your central rtionline.gov.in account does not cascade to state portals.
Q3. Is there a single-stop portal for all RTIs?
No. By design, the RTI Act is federal — central and state authorities are separate. The central portal does not accept state RTIs, and vice versa.
Q4. Are paid RTI-filing sites (like onlinerti.com or fileonlinerti.in) legitimate?
They are commercial intermediaries, not official government portals. The official central portal is free (Rs. 10 statutory fee only). We recommend filing directly on rtionline.gov.in.
Q5. Which website shows CIC second-appeal status?
cic.gov.in → Case Status. Use the appeal number issued at filing.
Q6. Where do I read the RTI Act full text?
On this site at /act, or on rti.gov.in. Both are official and up-to-date.
Q7. Is RTI Wiki (this site) an official government site?
No. RTI Wiki is an independent reference site. It is not affiliated with the Government of India, any state government, or any political party. It references official law, orders, and government resources.
India's digital RTI ecosystem has matured. In 2026, a citizen can file a central RTI in five minutes, track it in real time, read the Commission's order online, cite precedent from Indian Kanoon, and compare CIC performance via CHRI's annual report — all without leaving a smartphone.
Bookmark the five or six sites from this list that match your needs. Use the official portals for filing. Use the civil-society and legal sites for research. Keep a personal RTI folder.
Twenty websites; twenty years of the Act; one citizen with one good question. The tool is in your hands.
rtionline.gov.in — Government of India, DoPTcic.gov.in — Central Information Commissionrti.gov.in — RTI Portal Gateway, DoPTdopt.gov.in — Department of Personnel & Trainingsci.gov.in — Supreme Court of Indiarti.gov.in state-links pagehumanrightsinitiative.org — Commonwealth Human Rights Initiativesnsindia.org — Satark Nagrik Sangathanadrindia.org — Association for Democratic Reformsrtifoundationofindia.com — RTI Foundation of Indiamkssindia.org — Mazdoor Kisan Shakti Sangathanindiankanoon.org — Indian Kanoon legal search enginelivelaw.in — LiveLaw legal-news portalscobserver.in — Supreme Court ObserverAll URLs verified as active and functional in April 2026. Readers are encouraged to confirm the URL by typing it directly, rather than clicking links in forwarded messages.
Last reviewed: 24 April 2026. URLs verified; Government portals are preferred for filing; civil-society resources are preferred for research and analysis.