₹142 crore for Aadhaar ads — what an RTI found at UIDAI — citizen guide 2026

Aadhaar publicity RTI case study — RTI Wiki

Direct answer. An RTI application to the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI) produced data showing over ₹142 crore spent on advertising and publicity for the Aadhaar programme. The disclosure was reported widely, triggered parliamentary scrutiny, and became part of a broader public debate about the cost of mandatory identification scheme promotion.

Aadhaar — India's biometric identification system — is among the largest identity programmes in the world, covering over 1.3 billion residents. Its rollout required a massive public awareness campaign: television, radio, print, outdoor, and digital advertising to persuade citizens to enrol. What did that campaign cost?

An RTI to UIDAI produced an answer that surprised many observers.

Who filed

An RTI applicant — whose name as published in reporting was not always carried in full — filed to UIDAI (the Unique Identification Authority of India, under the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology) seeking expenditure data on the Aadhaar publicity and advertising programme. The application and response were reported by multiple news outlets. The precise filing year was approximately 2016–2018 (the period when UIDAI's large-scale advertising spend was at its peak). Readers should verify the specific figures via Factly's documentation at factly.in, which carries the primary sourcing.

What they asked

The RTI application to UIDAI, as reported, sought:

  1. The total amount spent by UIDAI on advertising and publicity from inception to the date of the application, broken down by year.
  2. The names of advertising agencies contracted by UIDAI for Aadhaar campaign work and the contract values.
  3. Copies of any UIDAI circulars or board decisions authorising the advertising budget.
  4. Year-wise expenditure on: television advertising, print advertising, radio, outdoor/OOH, digital/online, and public events.

What the authority replied

UIDAI's response disclosed expenditure data that multiple news outlets reported as exceeding ₹142 crore on advertising and publicity for the Aadhaar programme. The disclosure:

  • Broke down expenditure by medium, showing television and print as the largest components.
  • Named the agencies engaged for advertising work (as reported in news coverage; the specific agency names should be verified against Factly's primary sourcing).
  • Covered a multi-year period spanning the scale-up phase of Aadhaar enrolment.

The disclosure was notable because UIDAI had not proactively published this data in its annual reports in comparable detail.

What journalism and scrutiny followed

Factly: Factly published an analysis of the UIDAI RTI response, contextualising the ₹142 crore figure against the scale of Aadhaar enrolment and comparing it to other major government schemes' publicity spends.

Mainstream media: The disclosure was reported in the Times of India, NDTV, and LiveMint, with analysis comparing the Aadhaar ad spend to other central government schemes.

Parliamentary questions: Opposition members in Parliament asked the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology to explain the expenditure and whether it represented value for money, given that Aadhaar enrolment was near-universal by 2017.

Broader Aadhaar debate: The RTI disclosure fed into the ongoing constitutional debate about Aadhaar — which reached the Supreme Court in Justice K S Puttaswamy v. Union of India (2018). The publicity spend data was cited by critics as evidence that the programme had become a political branding exercise as much as a welfare identification system.

UIDAI's position: UIDAI defended the expenditure as necessary for a programme of Aadhaar's scale and the complexity of public outreach required to reach rural and disadvantaged populations.

Why this matters for citizens

What this case proves you can do:

  1. Government advertising spend is public money and public record. No statutory authority exempts routine advertising expenditure from RTI disclosure — it is not national security, not commercial confidence, not personal information. The UIDAI RTI established this principle at scale.
  2. Statutory body budgets are accessible. UIDAI is a statutory authority under the Aadhaar Act, 2016. Its budgets, expenditure, and contracts are public records. This applies to all statutory bodies — SEBI, TRAI, NABARD, IRDA, etc.
  3. RTI + parliamentary questions is a powerful combination. The RTI data provided the factual foundation; MPs then used it in parliamentary questions, creating an official record of scrutiny that the ministry had to respond to.
  4. Cost-to-benefit scrutiny. RTI disclosures about government programme costs feed evidence-based debates about whether programmes deliver value. This is legitimate, constructive use of the transparency regime.

If you want to follow up: File an RTI to UIDAI for current-year advertising expenditure at: CPIO, UIDAI, Bangla Sahib Road, Behind Kali Mandir, Gole Market, New Delhi 110001. Or file via rtionline.gov.in.

Outbound citations

  • Factly — Aadhaar advertising expenditure analysis — factly.in (search “UIDAI advertising”)
  • Times of India on UIDAI ad spend — timesofindia.com
  • NDTV on Aadhaar publicity spend — ndtv.com
  • Supreme Court — Justice K S Puttaswamy v. Union of India (2018) — main.sci.gov.in
  • UIDAI official — uidai.gov.in

FAQ

Is UIDAI a public authority under the RTI Act?

Yes. UIDAI is a statutory authority constituted under the Aadhaar (Targeted Delivery of Financial and Other Subsidies, Benefits and Services) Act, 2016. It is funded by the Government of India and is a public authority under §2(h) of the RTI Act. RTI applications should be addressed to the CPIO at UIDAI headquarters in New Delhi.

Can I get the names of advertising agencies that worked on government campaigns via RTI?

Yes. Government contracts with advertising agencies are public records. The Ministry of Information and Broadcasting publishes an empanelled agency list, and individual agencies' contract values with specific departments can be sought via RTI. Commercial confidence under §8(1)(d) protects genuinely private trade secrets — not publicly funded advertising contracts.

What other government advertising spends have been revealed via RTI?

RTI applications have revealed advertising expenditure for Swachh Bharat, Digital India, Jan Dhan, Make in India, and Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana. Factly has compiled many of these at factly.in. The Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (DAVP / BCAS now BCU) handles a large share of central government advertising and is responsive to RTI queries about media spend.

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