RTI vs Complaint: When to File RTI, CPGRAMS, Police Complaint, Consumer Complaint or Court Case
RTI gives you records, not relief. If you want a copy of a file, dispatch register or status report, file an RTI under Section 6 of the RTI Act 2005. If you want the authority to act, refund, punish or pay, you need a complaint route, CPGRAMS for service grievances, police FIR for crime, consumer forum for goods or services, or a writ in the High Court for fundamental rights.
When to use this guide
You probably landed here because you waited weeks for a passport, pension, ration card or municipal repair, and someone told you to file an RTI. RTI is powerful but narrow. It forces a Public Information Officer to share records that already exist. It cannot order anyone to grant the benefit, transfer the file, or take action. Many citizens lose months filing RTIs when a one-page complaint to the right grievance cell would have moved their case faster.
This guide draws a clear decision line between RTI and the four common complaint routes that exist in 2026. Use it before you send a single envelope.
Legal basis
- RTI Act 2005, Section 2(j): defines “right to information” as a right to inspect or obtain copies of records held by a public authority.
- RTI Act 2005, Section 6: lays down the procedure for filing a request for information.
- RTI Act 2005, Section 7(1): 30-day reply timeline; 48 hours for life-and-liberty matters.
- CPGRAMS: Centralised Public Grievance Redressal and Monitoring System under Department of Administrative Reforms and Public Grievances. Non-statutory but very effective.
- Code of Criminal Procedure (CrPC), Section 154: registration of FIR for cognisable offences.
- Consumer Protection Act 2019, Section 35: consumer complaint to District, State or National Commission.
- Constitution, Article 226: writ jurisdiction of High Courts.
The Supreme Court in Reserve Bank of India v Jayantilal N Mistry (2015) and the Delhi High Court in Bhagat Singh v CIC (2007) confirm that RTI is a tool for record disclosure, not for ordering authorities to grant benefits.
Step-by-step process
Use the steps below to decide your route before you draft anything.
- Write down what you actually want. One sentence. Example: “I want my pension started” or “I want the road outside my house repaired” or “I want to know the status of my passport file”.
- Check whether your goal is a record or an action. If you want a copy of a noting, register or order, the answer is RTI. If you want a benefit, refund, repair or arrest, the answer is a complaint.
- If it is a record, file under Section 6 of the RTI Act with ₹10 fee (₹50 in Tamil Nadu, ₹40 in Rajasthan, ₹20 in Gujarat, ₹0 if BPL) by Speed Post AD to the Public Information Officer.
- If it is an action, pick the right grievance cell. Use the decision table below.
- Layer both routes when needed. File the complaint first to start the action, and file an RTI in parallel to track the file movement, dispatch number and noting. The two work together.
- Escalate after the statutory wait. RTI: First Appeal after 30 days. CPGRAMS: re-open the ticket after the official deadline (usually 30 to 60 days). Consumer: send legal notice, then file complaint.
Format / template
A short script for the decision and your covering line.
GOAL: ________________________________________ Do I want a record or an action? [ ] Record only ........... → RTI under Section 6 of the RTI Act 2005 [ ] Action only ........... → Complaint route below [ ] Both .................. → File complaint first, RTI parallel If action, which forum? [ ] Government service delay (passport, pension, EPFO, PAN, Aadhaar) → CPGRAMS at pgportal.gov.in [ ] Cognisable crime (cheating, theft, assault) → FIR at the local police station; if refused, approach the Superintendent under CrPC 154(3) [ ] Goods or services I paid for (private hospital, courier, builder, OTT, electricity meter) → Consumer Commission under Consumer Protection Act 2019 [ ] Local body (road, drain, garbage, streetlight) → Municipal grievance cell or PG portal of the urban local body [ ] Fundamental rights breach (illegal arrest, custodial torture, demolition without notice) → Writ petition in the High Court under Article 226 [ ] Service rules dispute (transfer, suspension, increment) → Departmental appeal, then CAT or SAT
Decision table, common citizen problems
| < 100% 35% 35% 30% > | ||
| Problem | Best first step | RTI in parallel? |
|---|---|---|
| Passport delay beyond 30 days | CPGRAMS to MEA + local SP for police verification | Yes, police verification file noting |
| Pension not credited | CPGRAMS to CPAO / pension portal | Yes, sanction order, GPF balance, NPS PRAN status |
| Property mutation pending in tehsil | Application to Tehsildar + revenue grievance cell | Yes, file movement, diary number |
| Ration card deleted without notice | Appeal to District Supply Officer | Yes, copy of deletion order, reason recorded |
| Municipal road not repaired | City grievance app or 311 portal | Yes, tender, work order, payment register |
| Fraud by online seller | Consumer Commission complaint | No, RTI does not lie against private sellers |
| Police refusing to register FIR | Letter to SP under CrPC 154(3); then 156(3) Magistrate | Yes, daily diary entry, GD number from station |
| EPFO claim rejected | EPFiGMS grievance | Yes, rejection noting, scrutiny sheet |
| Builder not delivering flat | RERA complaint, then NCDRC | No, RERA gives the relief |
Common mistakes
- Asking the PIO to “take action”. PIO has no power to grant your benefit. The PIO can only share records.
- Filing RTI instead of FIR. RTI does not register a crime. If your phone is stolen or you are cheated, walk to the police station. Use RTI later to track the daily diary entry.
- Asking opinions. “Why is my pension not started?” is not an RTI question. “Provide a copy of the file noting and current location of my pension file” is.
- Filing one combined RTI for ten different ministries. Section 6(3) lets a PIO transfer to one office, not ten. Split your RTI by subject.
- Skipping CPGRAMS. Many delays end within ten days on CPGRAMS without any RTI. Try the cheap route first.
- Going to consumer forum against a government service. Free public services (eg ration, pension, passport) generally do not fall under “service” in the consumer sense unless a fee was paid. Use CPGRAMS instead.
Appeal or next step
- RTI no reply in 30 days or unsatisfactory reply → First Appeal under Section 19(1) within 30 days to the First Appellate Authority of the same office.
- Still nothing after 30 days from First Appeal → Second Appeal under Section 19(3) to the Central Information Commission (CIC) or State Information Commission within 90 days.
- CPGRAMS ticket closed without action → Re-open within seven days giving fresh facts; escalate to the Director (Public Grievances) of the ministry.
- Police FIR refused → Application under CrPC 154(3) to SP; then 156(3) to the Judicial Magistrate.
- Consumer complaint dismissed → Appeal to State Commission within 30 days (Section 41).
- Constitutional violation continuing → Writ petition under Article 226 in the High Court.
FAQs
Can I file an RTI to ask the government to take action?
No. RTI gives records. To force action, file a complaint with the right grievance cell. Use RTI alongside to track the file.
Will an RTI speed up my pension or passport?
Often yes, indirectly. A well-drafted RTI asking for the file movement and noting puts pressure on the office. But the legal route to actually start the pension is the pension grievance cell or a writ.
Is CPGRAMS better than RTI?
For action-oriented problems, yes. CPGRAMS is faster, free, and forces a deadline-driven reply. RTI is better when you need to inspect or obtain records.
Can I file both RTI and CPGRAMS?
Yes. They run on parallel tracks and do not block each other. Most experienced citizens file both.
Does RTI work against private companies?
Only if the company is substantially financed by the government (Sarbananda Sonowal v UOI line of cases). Pure private companies are out of scope. Use consumer forum or RERA.
What if my issue is small but urgent, like a wrong electricity bill?
Try the consumer grievance cell of the discom first. RTI for the meter reading log helps if the cell ignores you.
Is there a fee for CPGRAMS or police complaint?
CPGRAMS is free. FIR registration is free. RTI is ₹10 to ₹50. Consumer complaint has a small filing fee that depends on claim value.
Sources
- RTI Act 2005, full text: rti.gov.in
- CPGRAMS official portal: pgportal.gov.in
- Department of Administrative Reforms and Public Grievances: darpg.gov.in
- National Consumer Helpline: consumerhelpline.gov.in
- Department of Justice eCourts: ecourts.gov.in
Last reviewed: 9 May 2026.
Related guides
- AI RTI Drafter, generates a Section 6 application in two minutes.