Right to Information Wiki

Commercial vehicle Fitness Certificate stuck in 2026? Use RTI to get

Commercial vehicle Fitness Certificate (FC) stuck at the RTO or Automated Fitness Centre? File a free RTI to the MVI / RTO PIO and get a written reason in 30 days.

Commercial vehicle Fitness Certificate stuck in 2026? Use RTI to get

Commercial vehicle FC stuck — RTI Wiki guide

⚠️ DPDP Rules, 2025 (14 Nov 2025) amended Section 8(1)(j) of the RTI Act — public-interest override now under Section 8(2). Read the note →

· 2026/04/19 05:02

Plain-English summary. A Fitness Certificate (FC) is mandatory for every transport vehicle (taxi, truck, bus, autorickshaw, e-rickshaw, tempo) under §56 of the Motor Vehicles Act 1988. Without a valid FC, your vehicle stops earning the moment it expires, and any trip risks ₹5,000-10,000 challan under §192. RTOs and Automated Fitness Centres (AFCs) are bound by the Right to Service Acts (typically 30 days). When the slot is not allotted, the inspection drags, or the file goes silent — the Right to Information Act, 2005 lets you compel the Motor Vehicle Inspector (MVI) and the RTO PIO to give you the specific reason, slot date, and dealing officer name in writing within 30 days, for ₹10. No legal jargon. No agent fees.

Rajiv's story — "Taxi back on road in 9 days; saved Rs 36,000 in lost earnings"

Rajiv Yadav, 45, taxi owner-driver in Delhi (Burari). His 2017 Wagon-R taxi (commercial yellow plate, DL-1Y-AB-2345) FC expired on 30 January 2026. Applied for renewal via Vahan portal on 5 February — fee Rs 600 paid. Slot at the Sarai Kale Khan AFC was not allotted by week 5. Lost income: Rs 1,200/day × 35 days = Rs 42,000.

“I had submitted every paper — RC, insurance, PUC, road tax. The Burari RTO counter said 'AFC slots are full, wait'. The Vahan helpline said 'AFCs are run privately under MoRTH norms, contact AFC'. The AFC counter said 'we get slots from RTO, not from us'. Round and round. On 13 March I posted an RTI to the PIO, Burari RTO by Registered AD with a ₹10 IPO. On 4 April a registered envelope arrived. Reply: the AFC at Sarai Kale Khan had a 6-week backlog, my slot was scheduled in week 7. The PIO gave me the MVI's name and a procedure to request an early slot for commercial vehicles in revenue loss. I applied the same day with the RTI reply attached. FC inspection done on 11 April, FC issued on 13 April. Taxi back on road. Total cost: ₹10 + envelope. Lost earnings: ₹46,000 — but if I had waited another month, it would have been ₹80,000+.

—Rajiv, April 2026

This is the typical commercial-vehicle owner's nightmare. AFC backlogs, MVI staffing shortages, software glitches in the IMV system — and the file just sits. The RTI breaks the silence.

Why an RTI works (when the Vahan helpline doesn't)

You have probably already tried:

These give status flags. They don't tell you which MVI has your file or whether the AFC has technical/staffing issues. RTI does.

  • Vahan portal: shows “Pending FC inspection” indefinitely.
  • AFC counter: can verbally say “slot full, wait”.
  • CPGRAMS: can be closed by the office with “case under process”.
  • RTI: the PIO must give you a written reply with the specific reason, scheduled inspection date, dealing MVI name, and AFC backlog status within 30 days under §7(1).

In short: the portal is a status flag. The RTI is a forensic look at where your file is and why.

The 7 steps, in order

Step 1 — Identify the right RTO + AFC

  • RTO: the office where your vehicle is registered (first 4 characters of plate — e.g., DL-1Y = Burari Delhi, MH-12 = Pune, TN-09 = Chennai West, KA-01 = Bangalore Koramangala).
  • MVI (Motor Vehicle Inspector): sits at the RTO; conducts manual inspection where AFC is not mandated.
  • AFC (Automated Fitness Centre): mandatory in 22 states (notified 2024-25) for commercial vehicles. Cities: Delhi (Sarai Kale Khan, Burari, Jhuljhuli), Mumbai (Wadala, Goregaon), Bangalore (Yelahanka, Electronic City), Chennai (Thirumazhisai), Hyderabad (Uppal, Bahadurpally), Kolkata (Beliaghata).

Step 2 — Identify the PIO

  • RTO level: PIO is usually the ARTO or the designated officer.
  • MVI section: the MVI himself/herself in some states; in others, the ARTO is the PIO for FC matters.
  • State Transport Department: PIO at Transport Commissioner.
  • FAA: the RTO himself/herself, or the Joint/Transport Commissioner at state level.

Address line:

The Public Information Officer
Vehicle Inspection / Fitness Section
[Name of RTO — e.g., Burari RTO (DL-1Y)]
[Address, City, State, PIN]

Step 3 — Pay the ₹10 fee

  • Indian Postal Order (IPO) ₹10 — most reliable.
  • Court fee stamp ₹10.
  • Cash at counter (where allowed).
  • BPL applicants: fee waived (attach BPL ration card).

Step 4 — Write the RTI (use this exact template)

[Your full name]
[Your address]
[Phone] · [Email]
[Date]

To,
The Public Information Officer
(Vehicle Inspection / Fitness Section)
[Name of RTO]
[Address]

Subject: RTI application under §6(1), RTI Act 2005 — status of Fitness Certificate renewal application

Sir/Madam,

I am the registered owner of the following commercial vehicle:

Registration No.: [e.g., DL-1Y-AB-2345]
Make / Model / Year: [e.g., Maruti Wagon-R 2017]
Vehicle Class: [Taxi / Truck / Bus / Autorickshaw / E-rickshaw / LMV-Transport]
Engine No.: [last 6 digits]
Chassis No.: [last 6 digits]
Previous FC Validity: from [date] to [date — date of expiry]
FC Renewal Application No.: [as on Vahan portal]
Date of online submission: [DD-MM-YYYY]
Fee paid: Rs [amount] on [date]

I request the following information under §6(1) of the Right to Information Act, 2005:

1. The current status of my FC renewal application, in writing.

2. The date on which the **fitness inspection slot** was allotted (or is scheduled to be allotted) at [AFC name / RTO inspection bay].

3. The name and designation of the **Motor Vehicle Inspector (MVI)** assigned to my file.

4. The current backlog at the AFC / MVI inspection bay (number of vehicles ahead of mine, expected slot date).

5. If my application is held due to any deficiency (document mismatch, fee receipt, technical glitch), the **specific deficiency** and the **specific rule** (CMVR 1989 Rule 62 / state MV Rules) under which it is being held.

6. The procedure available under the State [Right to Service Act] for an early slot for commercial vehicles in active revenue loss, and the dealing officer for such a request.

7. A copy of the inspection slot register / dak entry pertaining to my application.

8. The **Right to Service Act SLA** applicable to FC renewal in [State], the date by which the SLA expires, and the compensation payable to the applicant on breach.

Fee: I enclose Indian Postal Order No. [number] dated [date] for ₹10 in favour of "Accounts Officer, [RTO name]".

I declare that I am a citizen of India.

Yours faithfully,
[Signature]
[Name]

Step 5 — Send by Registered Post AD

  • Take application + IPO to the post office
  • Ask for “Registered AD” — cost ₹40-60
  • Keep the receipt; AD card returns in 7-10 days
  • Optional: hand-deliver a stamped duplicate at the RTO

Step 6 — Mark the deadline + parallel routes

The 30-day clock starts the day the office receives your application (date on AD card).

  • Day 30: reply due. If silence → §7(2) deemed refusal.
  • Day 31: file First Appeal under §19(1).

In parallel:

  • Vahan portal grievance — log in → “Lodge Grievance”.
  • State Right to Service Act — file SLA breach complaint.
  • Transport Commissioner email.
  • Taxi / auto / truck union — collective representations have weight at AFCs.

Step 7 — When the reply arrives, use it

The RTI reply will typically reveal one of these:

  1. “Inspection slot allotted on [date].” Show up with the vehicle on date; FC issued same day if pass.
  2. “AFC backlog — slot in week N.” Apply for early slot citing revenue loss; many states have priority-slot procedure.
  3. “Vehicle failed previous inspection — defects: [list].” You may not have been informed. Fix defects; reapply.
  4. “Document mismatch — insurance/PUC/RC.” Update; resubmit.
  5. “Fee receipt not generated.” Re-pay; the application was never assigned.
  6. “AFC at [location] non-operational; alternate AFC at [other].” Apply slot at the alternate.
  7. “MVI on leave / staff shortage.” Escalate to RTO.
  8. “Vehicle exceeded fitness re-issue cap” (15 years private / 8 years commercial heavy under Scrappage Policy 2022) — separate route via fitness re-classification or scrappage.

If silence — file the First Appeal under §19(1):

To,
The First Appellate Authority
(Regional Transport Officer / Joint Transport Commissioner)
[Office address]

Subject: First Appeal under §19(1), RTI Act 2005 — non-response by PIO, [RTO name]

Sir/Madam,

I filed an RTI application dated [original date] (AD acknowledged on [AD date]) with the PIO of [RTO name]. The §7(1) 30-day window ended on [day 30]. I have received [no reply / a vague reply not addressing my questions]. I file this First Appeal under §19(1) of the RTI Act 2005.

Grounds:
  - Information sought is administrative — about my own commercial vehicle's fitness application — and squarely covered by //Aditya Bandopadhyay v. CBSE// (2011) 8 SCC 497.
  - I am a transport operator in active revenue loss (Rs [amount]/day) due to expired FC; delay is causing direct economic harm.
  - The PIO has committed §7(2) deemed refusal.

I request the FAA to direct the PIO to disclose the information sought and consider §20 action for the deemed refusal.

[Signature]

If FAA also fails (45-day cap under §19(6)), file a Second Appeal to the State Information Commission under §19(3).

Common reasons FC gets stuck

  • AFC slot not allotted — backlog at automated centres (especially metros).
  • MVI staffing shortage at the RTO.
  • Vehicle failed inspection (mechanical defect — brakes, lights, emission) but applicant not informed.
  • Road test failed.
  • Document mismatch — insurance / PUC / RC mismatch.
  • FC fee deposited but receipt not generated in Vahan.
  • Vehicle older than fitness re-issue cap (15 years private petrol / 10 years private diesel in NCR / scrappage states; 8 years for commercial heavy under Scrappage Policy 2022 norms in some categories).
  • AFC non-operational (technical / power / maintenance shutdown).
  • Inter-state vehicle — original-state RTO records not synced.
  • Outstanding traffic challans — auto-block in many states.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Sending by ordinary post. Always Registered AD.
  • Letting FC expire. Apply at least 30 days before expiry. Driving with expired FC = ₹5,000-10,000 challan + impounding under §192 MV Act.
  • Not pre-booking AFC slot. In AFC-mandated states, slot is the bottleneck. Book the moment Vahan accepts the application.
  • Skipping pre-inspection self-check. Get the brakes, emission, lights, indicators checked at a private garage before the AFC visit. Most failures are minor.
  • Vague RTI questions. Ask for slot date, MVI name, backlog count, deficiency list.
  • Paying touts. RTO touts charge ₹3,000-15,000 for what an RTI + a ₹10 stamp resolves.
  • Threats / rude tone. A polite, specific RTI gets cooperation.

FAQs

Q. My FC expires next week. What do I do?
Apply on Vahan today. Park the vehicle off-road until FC is renewed (driving without valid FC = challan). File the RTI on day 25 if no slot allotted.

Q. How long is FC valid?
Transport vehicles:

  • New transport vehicle: 2 years
  • Renewal (after 2 years): 1 year
  • Commercial vehicle older than 8 years (heavy goods under some categories): 6 months

Private vehicles: 15 years initial, then renewable in 5-year blocks (some states 5 years).

Q. What is the FC inspection fee?
Varies by state and vehicle class. Typically Rs 200-1,000 for AFC; Rs 200-600 for manual MVI inspection. Plus Rs 100-200 grade-fee.

Q. My vehicle failed the AFC test. Can I appeal?
Yes. Under CMVR Rule 62, you can request re-test after rectification (within 7-15 days). RTI to ask for the failure report is your right.

Q. The AFC inspector demands “speed money”.
Refuse. Report to the State Vigilance Bureau / Anti-Corruption Bureau, the Transport Commissioner, and the MoRTH (since AFCs operate under MoRTH norms). Many AFCs have CCTV — RTI for the CCTV footage.

Q. My vehicle is older than 15 years (private petrol). Can I get FC?
Outside NCR / Scrappage-Notified States, yes — with green tax surcharge. Inside NCR (Delhi, NCR districts), private petrol vehicles 15+ years and diesel 10+ years cannot be re-registered (NGT order + Scrappage Policy 2022). Options: scrap or sell to a state that allows older vehicles.

Q. E-rickshaw / battery-operated vehicles — fitness?
Yes — separate fitness norms under MV (Amendment) Rules. RTI applies the same way.

Q. My FC inspection slot was scheduled but the AFC was closed that day.
File RTI to ask (a) reason for closure, (b) fresh slot date, © compensation procedure under State Right to Service Act. Many states pay ₹100-500 per delayed day.

Read more — the deep technical view

The plain-language guide above is enough for almost all FC delay cases. The section below is for those who want the full statutory and case-law references.

Statutory framework

  • Right to Information Act, 2005 — §3, §6(1), §7(1), §7(2), §10, §19(1)+(3)+(6), §20.
  • Motor Vehicles Act, 1988
    • §56 — Fitness Certificate mandatory for every transport vehicle. Without FC, the vehicle is deemed not to be validly registered for use as a transport vehicle.
    • §62 — renewal of FC.
    • §192 — driving without FC: penalty ₹5,000 (LMV)/₹10,000 (MV). Subsequent offence: ₹10,000/₹20,000.
    • §192A — driving uncovered/contract carriage without permit (separate but related).
  • Central Motor Vehicles Rules, 1989 (CMVR)
    • Rule 62 — fitness inspection procedure (visual check, brake, emission, headlight alignment, steering, suspension, road test).
    • Rule 62A — Automated Fitness Centre norms (introduced 2018, mandatory phasewise from 2024).
    • Rule 81 — fees schedule for FC renewal.
  • MV (Amendment) Act, 2019 — increased penalties for §192 violations.
  • Vehicle Scrappage Policy, 2022 — Notification dated 25-Jan-2022:
    • Fitness mandatory at 8 years for commercial heavy.
    • Vehicles failing fitness twice are deemed end-of-life.
    • Scrappage gives Certificate of Deposit (CoD) eligible for road tax rebate (15-25%) on new vehicle.
  • AFC Notification — MoRTH Rules 175-180 of CMVR (inserted 2018-2024) — accreditation, equipment standards, inspection protocols.
  • State Right to Service Acts — define SLA for FC (typically 30 days from application + slot to inspection to issue) + compensation for breach.

Key CIC, court rulings

  • Aditya Bandopadhyay v. CBSE, (2011) 8 SCC 497 — citizen's own records disclosable.
  • Subhash Chandra Agrawal, CIC 2009-2014 — names of dealing officers / MVIs disclosable.
  • Bhagat Singh v. CIC, Delhi HC 2007 — §8(1)(h) requires specific justification.
  • M.C. Mehta v. UoI (vehicular pollution series) — courts have repeatedly upheld FC mandate; RTOs cannot refuse FC arbitrarily.
  • CIC orders 2015-2024 — multiple orders mandating disclosure of FC application status, AFC backlog data, MVI names. RTOs cannot refuse on “internal data” grounds.
  • National Green Tribunal orders (NGT, 2014-2024) — older vehicle restrictions; RTOs must follow NGT-state-notified scrappage norms.

Common §8 exemption claims (and why they fail)

  • §8(1)(d) — commercial confidence. AFC operations are public. Doesn't apply.
  • §8(1)(j) — personal information. Owner's own data; MVI's name is duty info.
  • §24 — exempt orgs. RTO / AFC not exempt.

Specific procedural anchors in CMVR

If your RTI reply cites a specific rule, look up:

  • Rule 62(1) — manner of inspection.
  • Rule 62(2) — rejection grounds (defective brakes, emission, etc.).
  • Rule 62(3) — re-test after rectification.
  • Rule 62A — AFC equipment + protocol.
  • Rule 81 + Schedule X — fee structure.

Vehicle Scrappage Policy + Green Tax mechanics

  • Green Tax — older vehicles (8+ years commercial, 15+ years private) attract Green Tax on FC renewal. Rates vary by state (Maharashtra: 10-25% of road tax; Delhi: 50% of road tax for renewal; Tamil Nadu: 50% of road tax).
  • Scrappage CoD — voluntarily scrap an old vehicle at a Registered Vehicle Scrapping Facility (RVSF). Get CoD. Use for road tax rebate (15-25%) on a new vehicle.
  • Mandatory scrappage — only for vehicles that fail fitness twice (8+ years commercial heavy under MoRTH 2022 rules).

When the RTO refuses to register the RTI

  1. Drop application + IPO at the dak section; ask for dak number.
  2. The dak number is your acknowledgement.
  3. If dak refuses, post by Registered AD.
  4. Mention counter-refusal in First Appeal as additional ground under §20.

Penalty mechanics — §20

  • §20(1): ₹250/day, max ₹25,000.
  • §20(2): Disciplinary action.

Cross-references on RTI Wiki

Sources used in this article

  • Motor Vehicles Act 1988 + CMVR 1989 (consolidated MoRTH text)
  • MV Amendment Act 2019
  • Vehicle Scrappage Policy 2022 notification (MoRTH 25-Jan-2022)
  • AFC notification (MoRTH 2018-2024)
  • Vahan portal documentation (parivahan.gov.in)
  • State Right to Service Acts
  • CIC orders archive (cic.gov.in)

Conclusion

A stuck FC means a parked vehicle, lost income, and rising fines. You don't need a tout. You need a ₹10 postal order, a Registered AD envelope, and the template above. Rajiv got his taxi back on the road in 9 days for the cost of an envelope. The same path is open to every owner-driver, fleet operator, and small transporter in India.

Don't pay anyone to file an RTI for you. It is a one-page letter, a ₹10 stamp, and a polite tone. That's it.

Last reviewed: 26 April 2026 by RTI Wiki editorial team. If you spot an error or an out-of-date phone/address, please post on the Q&A forum or write to admin@bighelpers.in.