RTI fee rationalisation — the 2024-25 debate, and what 2026 looks like
Currently: Rs. 10 application fee + Rs. 2/page. DoPT's 2024 OM proposed Rs. 50 + Rs. 20/page, citing inflation and processing costs.
Why DoPT proposed it
- Rs. 10 unchanged since 2005 (~5x inflation).
- “Vexatious applicants” filing 50+ RTIs per month.
- Processing-cost study placed average per-application cost at ~Rs. 380.
Why activists pushed back
- Fee is a barrier to access — particularly rural, low-income.
- Vexatious-applicant data thin — most applicants file 1-2 RTIs lifetime.
- §7(5) BPL exemption doesn't cover lower-middle-class.
- Article 19(1)(a) chilling-effect concern.
Where 2026 stands
- Central rule — Rs. 10 + Rs. 2/page stands (DoPT deferred indefinitely).
- State rules vary — UP Rs. 10; Maharashtra Rs. 25; Delhi Rs. 10.
- HC orders in 2025 reaffirmed reasonableness as standard.
Practical takeaways
- Always file via RTI Online Portal (Rs. 10 secure payment).
- For BPL, attach certificate copy and invoke §7(5).
- For state portal fees > Rs. 50, challenge under Article 19(1)(a) reasonableness.
Sources
- DoPT OM 1/2/2024-IR.
- Anjali Bhardwaj v. UoI (2019) on RTI accessibility.
Last reviewed: 25 April 2026.
Why this matters for citizens
This blog post is part of RTI Wiki's editorial coverage of India's information-rights ecosystem under the Right to Information Act, 2005. We track court rulings, policy changes, RTI activist work, and citizen success stories monthly. Subscribe to the monthly newsletter for a curated digest.
Citizen action steps
- File a free RTI on a related issue using the AI RTI Drafter.
- Track deadlines with the Timeline Tracker (Day 30 + Day 60 alerts).
- If your reply is evasive, paste it into the PIO Reply Checker.
- For voice input in 11 Indian languages, use AwaazRTI.
Citations and sources
- Right to Information Act, 2005 — full text
- CPIO Supreme Court v. Subhash Chandra Agarwal (2020) 5 SCC 481 — Constitution Bench
- Anjali Bhardwaj v. UoI (2019) 9 SCC 199 — IC accountability
- DPDP Act 2023 + DPDP Rules 2025 (in force 14 Nov 2025)
