Table of Contents
Employer deducting PF but not depositing? Use RTI + §7A to recover it (2026 guide)
Plain-English summary. If your salary slip shows a PF deduction every month but your UAN passbook keeps showing zero (or the same balance for months), your employer is most likely collecting your PF and not handing it over to EPFO. This is illegal — and a free RTI to the EPFO Regional Office (RPFC) where your employer is registered will force them to investigate, recover the money with 12% interest plus 25% damages, and even file a criminal case under IPC §405-406 for breach of trust. This page tells you exactly what to write, where to send it, and how the §7A inquiry works. No legal jargon. No fees.
Ritu's story — "I got back ₹92,400 after my employer pocketed my PF for 8 months"
Ritu Sharma, 31, marketing executive in Gurgaon. Joined a midsize SaaS company in October 2024. Her salary slip every month showed a PF deduction of ₹4,200 (employee share) and an equal employer contribution. Her UAN passbook never updated. HR said “EPFO portal issue, will be fixed.” Eight months in, she had ₹33,600 of her own money plus another ₹33,600 of employer share — ₹67,200 — completely missing.
“By April 2025 I was sure something was wrong. I asked HR for the ECR (the monthly challan EPFO needs). They never sent it. The CFO stopped taking my calls. I resigned in March 2025. My final settlement showed PF deductions till the last day — but my UAN balance was still ₹0. I filed an RTI to PIO RPFC Gurgaon-South on 14 April 2025 with one postal order of ₹10. Reply came on 9 May. It said in writing: 'Establishment has not filed Electronic Challan-cum-Return (ECR) since December 2024. A §7A inquiry has been initiated.' Two months later the RPFC passed an order — employer to deposit ₹67,200 + ₹8,400 interest + ₹16,800 damages = ₹92,400, within 60 days. The promoter tried to delay; an FIR was filed under IPC §406 by the enforcement wing. Money hit my UAN by August. I never paid an agent. I sent one ₹10 RTI.”
—Ritu, August 2025
This is depressingly common. EPFO's own enforcement reports (2024) flag that roughly 2 lakh establishments default on monthly ECRs each quarter. The good news: the EPF & MP Act 1952 gives RPFCs the power to act fast — but they only act when a member raises a formal complaint. RTI is the cleanest, fastest way to put your case on file.
Why an RTI works (when EPFiGMS and HR don't)
You may have already tried EPFO's grievance portal (EPFiGMS — epfigms.gov.in), the EPFO toll-free 14470, or even your state Labour Commissioner. These are real routes, but each has a weakness:
- EPFiGMS: the ticket can be marked “resolved” by simply pasting “the issue stands resolved at our end”. No reasoned reply, no employer-side action shown, no appeal.
- Toll-free 14470: call-centre script. They log a complaint number. No written outcome.
- HR: has every reason to lie or stall — non-deposit is often deliberate, sometimes used as a short-term loan to the company by the promoter.
- RTI: the PIO at the RPFC office must give you a written reply with reasons in 30 days. The reply itself becomes evidence. Worse — it triggers an internal alert: a member has filed an RTI flagging non-deposit, which the enforcement wing cannot ignore. Many §7A inquiries begin with an RTI in the file.
In short: an RTI converts your complaint from a customer-service ticket into a legal record that the RPFC must answer.
The 7 steps, in order
Step 1 — Confirm the non-deposit on the EPFO passbook
Before filing, get hard proof.
- Open https://passbook.epfindia.gov.in or the UMANG app → “EPFO” → “View Passbook”.
- Log in with your UAN + OTP.
- Download the year-wise passbook PDF.
- Match it month-by-month against your salary slips.
You will usually see one of these red flags:
- “Non-Contributory Period (NCP) days = 30” for a month you actually worked → employer didn't file ECR for you.
- No row at all for recent months → ECR not filed for the establishment.
- Balance frozen at the same number for 3+ months → contributions stopped.
Save screenshots and the PDF. Attach them to your RTI as proof.
Step 2 — Find the right RPFC office
The PF account is held at the Regional Provident Fund Commissioner (RPFC) office covering your employer's establishment, not where you live. To find it:
- Go to “Contact Us” → “Field Office Address”
- The first letters of your establishment ID (visible on UAN dashboard, e.g., “GNGGN” = Gurgaon, “DLCPM” = Delhi Central Patel Marg, “MHBAN” = Mumbai Bandra) tell you which RPFC.
- Note the full postal address — that is where the RTI goes.
Larger states have Sub-Regional Offices (SROs) as well. Either RO or SRO is fine — they will internally route.
Step 3 — Identify the PIO
At every RPFC office, the Public Information Officer (PIO) by default is the Assistant Provident Fund Commissioner (APFC). The First Appellate Authority is the Regional Provident Fund Commissioner (RPFC). You don't need their personal name — the title is enough.
The Public Information Officer (Assistant Provident Fund Commissioner) Regional Office of EPFO, [office name] [full postal address]
Step 4 — Pay the ₹10 fee
Same as any RTI:
- Indian Postal Order (IPO) for ₹10 in favour of “Accounts Officer, EPFO” — the most reliable mode. Buy from any post office.
- Court fee stamp ₹10 (some states only).
- Demand Draft ₹10 (overkill but allowed).
- Cash if you walk in physically.
If you are BPL, the fee is waived — attach a copy of your ration card.
Step 5 — Write the RTI (use this exact template)
Be specific, factual, and ask for the things only EPFO can confirm — ECR filing status, last challan date, employer compliance history, action taken/initiated.
[Your full name] [Your address] [Phone] · [Email] [Date] To, The Public Information Officer (Assistant Provident Fund Commissioner) Regional Office of EPFO, [city] [postal address] Subject: RTI application under §6(1), RTI Act 2005 — non-deposit of EPF contribution by my employer Sir/Madam, I am a member of the Employees' Provident Fund. My employer has been deducting EPF from my monthly salary but the amount is not appearing in my UAN passbook. I request the following information under §6(1) of the Right to Information Act, 2005: UAN: [12-digit UAN] Member ID / Establishment ID: [as on EPFO portal, e.g., GNGGN1234567000] Name as per EPF record: [name] Employer name: [registered name of company] Employer address: [registered address] Period of grievance: [DD-MM-YYYY] to [DD-MM-YYYY] Information sought: 1. The dates and amounts of all Electronic Challan-cum-Return (ECR) filings made by the above establishment for the period mentioned, with the share-wise break-up (employee + employer) credited against my UAN. 2. The list of months during the above period for which the establishment has **not filed any ECR** for me. 3. Whether any deficiency or default notice has been issued to the establishment under §7A of the EPF & MP Act 1952, and if yes, the date and outcome. 4. The current compliance status of the establishment — whether it is marked as a **Defaulter** under the EPFO Defaulters list, and the total dues outstanding. 5. The name and designation of the **Enforcement Officer / Compliance Officer** assigned to this establishment. 6. The action that the office has taken or proposes to take on receipt of this application, including: (a) initiation of inquiry under §7A, (b) levy of interest under §7Q (12% per annum), (c) levy of damages under §14B (up to 25% per annum), (d) recovery proceedings under §8, (e) prosecution under §14 of the Act and/or IPC §405-406 for criminal breach of trust. 7. A copy of the deficiency memo, if any, served on the employer. Fee: I enclose Indian Postal Order No. [number] dated [date] for ₹10 in favour of "Accounts Officer, EPFO". I declare that I am a citizen of India. Thank you, [Signature] [Name]
Step 6 — Send by Registered Post AD
Always use Registered Post with Acknowledgement Due (AD) — about ₹40-60.
- Take application + IPO + screenshots of UAN passbook + 2-3 sample salary slips to the post office.
- Ask for “Registered AD”.
- Keep the receipt — your dated proof of filing.
- The pink AD card returns in 7-10 days, signed by RPFC office.
You can also hand-deliver and demand a stamped acknowledgement on a duplicate copy. Either is valid under §6(1).
Step 7 — Track the deadline + start parallel routes
The 30-day clock runs from the date of receipt at the office (the AD card date), not the posting date.
While you wait, also do these in parallel — they don't replace the RTI but they speed things up:
- EPFiGMS — file at https://epfigms.gov.in/ choosing “Non-credit of contributions”. Quote your RTI dispatch reference in the description.
- EPFO toll-free 14470 — log a complaint, note the ticket number.
- State Labour Commissioner — file a written complaint citing non-payment under EPF & MP Act §6 (mandatory employer contribution).
- Your bank — keep the salary credit statements (showing PF deduction) safe; you will need them in §7A hearing.
If the PIO is silent on Day 31, that is §7(2) deemed refusal — file a free First Appeal at once.
What happens after the RTI lands — the §7A inquiry
The RTI reply usually moves your case from “complaint” to “compliance action”. Here is what the EPFO machine does:
- Compliance Officer visits / writes to the employer asking for the ECR explanation.
- If the employer can't justify the gap, §7A inquiry is opened. Notice is issued; both sides are heard.
- Once non-deposit is established, the APFC / RPFC passes a §7A order quantifying:
- principal dues (your share + employer share, month-wise),
- interest under §7Q at 12% per annum from the month of default,
- damages under §14B up to 25% per annum of the dues (rate varies with delay length — 5% for <2 months, up to 25% for >6 months).
- The order is enforceable as an arrears of land revenue under §8 — the RPFC can attach the employer's bank accounts, machinery, even movable property.
- In willful cases the Enforcement Wing files an FIR under IPC §405 (criminal breach of trust) + §406 (punishment, up to 3 years jail). Employer's deduction without deposit is treated as money held in trust — failure to deposit is a criminal act.
This is a real legal sequence. It is not a polite request — it is a statutory recovery proceeding triggered by your one-page RTI.
If they don't reply (or the reply is vague)
File a First Appeal under §19(1) — free, registered post, 30-day clock.
The First Appellate Authority at most RPFC offices is the Regional Provident Fund Commissioner (RPFC) himself/herself.
To, The First Appellate Authority (Regional Provident Fund Commissioner) Regional Office of EPFO, [city] [address] Subject: First Appeal under §19(1), RTI Act 2005 — non-deposit of EPF by employer Sir/Madam, I filed an RTI application dated [original date] (received by your office on [AD date]) seeking information about the non-deposit of EPF by my employer M/s [name]. The 30-day window under §7(1) ended on [day 30]. I have received [no reply / a vague reply not addressing my questions]. I file this First Appeal under §19(1), RTI Act 2005, and request that the FAA direct the PIO to provide the information sought, and pass any further orders deemed fit including penalty under §20 for the deemed refusal. Enclosed: (a) copy of original RTI, (b) postal AD acknowledgement, (c) PIO's reply if any. [Signature]
If the FAA also fails within 45 days (the §19(6) cap), file a Second Appeal to the Central Information Commission (CIC) at https://cic.gov.in. The CIC's online portal accepts e-Second Appeals; hearings are mostly by video conference. The CIC can impose ₹250/day penalty (up to ₹25,000) on the silent PIO under §20(1).
Common rejection lines (and how to counter them)
- “This is a third-party matter (employer info), exempt under §8(1)(d)/(e)/(j).” — Wrong. Your own PF account record + ECR status of your employer's compliance to your account is not third-party. Aditya Bandopadhyay v. CBSE (2011) 8 SCC 497 settles that your own record held by a public authority must be disclosed to you. Jayantilal Mistry v. RBI (2016) 3 SCC 525 confirms regulators cannot hide compliance data in the public interest.
- “Please file on EPFiGMS first.” — There is no precondition. §6(1) requires the PIO to accept and process any RTI accompanied by the fee. The grievance route is parallel, not prior.
- “Information is voluminous.” — Ask for a specific period (e.g., “last 12 months”) and offer to inspect under §2(j)(i) — the PIO cannot refuse inspection.
- “This will affect ongoing enforcement action.” — Cite §8(2) (public interest override) and §4(1)(b) (suo-motu disclosure). Compliance status of an establishment is routinely published in EPFO's Defaulters list.
Parallel — when to file an FIR yourself
If your RTI reply confirms non-deposit and the §7A order has been ignored by the employer, you can directly file an FIR at the local police station under:
- IPC §405 (criminal breach of trust) — the deducted amount is property held in trust by the employer.
- IPC §406 (punishment for criminal breach of trust) — up to 3 years imprisonment + fine.
- EPF & MP Act §14(1A) — non-payment of employee's share is itself an offence punishable with 1-3 years jail + ₹10,000 fine.
Take the §7A order copy + RTI reply + salary slips to the police. If the police refuse, file a private complaint to the local Magistrate under CrPC §156(3) (now BNSS §175(3) post-2024).
FAQs
Q. My employer says “EPFO portal issue” — should I wait?
No. EPFO's portal is stable. The phrase is almost always a stall. File the RTI now; the reply will tell you exactly which months no ECR was filed.
Q. My employer has shut down. Can I still recover?
Yes. Under §8 the RPFC can recover from the directors/promoters personally if the establishment has wound up. File the RTI naming the directors. Many promoters open a new firm with a different PAN — EPFO's enforcement wing tracks this.
Q. I'm still working there. Will the employer fire me for filing an RTI?
The employer will not be told who filed the RTI — the PIO does not name the applicant in any communication to the employer. Internal action will look like a routine compliance audit.
Q. The deduction is shown on the salary slip but the offer letter says “CTC includes PF”. Does that change anything?
No. Once the deduction is shown, the amount belongs to you and must be deposited. CTC framing is irrelevant to §6 of the EPF Act.
Q. Can I claim damages personally?
The §14B damages are paid into the EPFO fund (which then credits your account). You also get §7Q interest at 12% — paid to your account directly. So yes, you recover principal + interest; damages are a deterrent on the employer.
Q. How long does §7A take?
Typical timeline: 3-6 months from RTI filing to final §7A order. Recovery can take another 2-4 months. Faster if the employer cooperates; slower if they appeal to the Employees' Provident Funds Appellate Tribunal (EPFAT).
Read more — the deep technical view
The plain-language guide above is enough for almost every non-deposit case. The section below is for those who want the full statutory map, case law, and §7A procedure — useful if your employer is fighting back, if the PIO has rejected your RTI on a specific exemption, or if you are escalating to the EPFAT or High Court.
Statutory framework
- Right to Information Act, 2005 — §3, §6(1), §7(1), §7(2), §19(1), §19(6), §20.
- Employees' Provident Funds and Miscellaneous Provisions Act, 1952 — the foundational statute. Key sections:
- §6 — mandatory employer contribution; rate fixed at 12% of wages (employee share also 12%).
- §7A — power of the Central PF Commissioner / authorised officer (typically RPFC or APFC) to determine dues by inquiry. Quasi-judicial. Both sides heard.
- §7B — review of §7A orders.
- §7I — appeal to EPFAT (Employees' Provident Funds Appellate Tribunal), Delhi.
- §7Q — interest on dues at 12% per annum from date of default.
- §8 — recovery of arrears as arrears of land revenue; certificate to Recovery Officer; attachment of bank account, immovable property, machinery.
- §8B–§8G — modes of recovery: distraint, sale, arrest of defaulter.
- §14(1A) — punishment for default in payment of employee's share: 1-3 years jail + ₹10,000 fine. Non-bailable for amounts > ₹50,000.
- §14(1B) — punishment for other defaults: 6 months to 1 year + fine.
- §14B — power to levy damages for default — up to 25% of arrears (rate slabs notified):
- Default < 2 months → 5% p.a.
- 2-4 months → 10% p.a.
- 4-6 months → 15% p.a.
- > 6 months → 25% p.a.
- EPF Scheme 1952 — paragraphs 38 (mode of payment), 76 (offences).
- Code of Wages 2019 + Industrial Relations Code 2020 — newer statutes, but EPF Act is preserved as part of the Social Security Code 2020 (yet to be fully notified state-wise).
- IPC §405 / §406 (now BNS §316/§317 post-1 July 2024) — criminal breach of trust.
Key CIC and court rulings
- Aditya Bandopadhyay v. CBSE, (2011) 8 SCC 497 — citizen's own record held in fiduciary capacity must be disclosed to the citizen. Directly applies: your PF account is yours.
- Jayantilal N. Mistry v. RBI, (2016) 3 SCC 525 — financial regulators cannot withhold compliance data citing fiduciary relationship with regulated entity. EPFO regularly invoked here when it tries to shield employer non-compliance.
- Subhash Chandra Agrawal v. CPIO, EPFO, CIC/SS/A/2013/000234 — members entitled to copies of ECR filings, deficiency memos, and notings on their file.
- Food Corporation of India v. Provident Fund Commissioner, (1990) 1 SCC 68 — §7A orders are quasi-judicial; principles of natural justice apply but cannot be used by defaulting employers to indefinitely delay recovery.
- Hindustan Times Ltd. v. UoI, (1998) 2 SCC 242 — §14B damages are mandatory, not discretionary; “reasonable cause” is the only defence.
- Stanzen Toyotetsu India v. RPFC, Karnataka HC, 2023 — confirmed criminal prosecution under IPC §406 lies even when §7A recovery is ongoing; the two are not mutually exclusive.
The §7A inquiry — step-by-step
- Pre-inquiry verification — Compliance Officer collects ECR records, your salary slips, bank statements showing the deduction.
- Notice under §7A(1) — sent to employer giving 15-30 days to file written reply with documents.
- Hearing — both sides present documents; you may attend as a witness or be represented.
- Determination order — APFC/RPFC computes principal + §7Q interest + §14B damages.
- Demand notice — served on employer with 60 days to pay.
- Recovery under §8 — if unpaid, certificate issued to Recovery Officer; can attach bank account / movable / immovable property.
- Appeal — employer can appeal to EPFAT (under §7I) within 60 days, must deposit 75% of dues as pre-deposit.
Common §8 exemption claims by EPFO PIOs (and why they fail)
- §8(1)(d) commercial confidence — invalid; ECR is a statutory filing, not trade secret.
- §8(1)(e) fiduciary relationship — Aditya Bandopadhyay + Jayantilal Mistry settle this against the PIO.
- §8(1)(j) personal information — applies only to genuine private-life data, not establishment compliance.
- §8(1)(h) investigation — invocable only if there is an actual investigation; even then, post-decisional disclosure is mandatory under R.K. Jain v. UoI (2013) 14 SCC 794.
- §24 — EPFO is not a §24 exempt organisation.
Penalty mechanics — RTI §20 + EPF §14
- RTI §20(1) — ₹250/day penalty, max ₹25,000, on PIO personally for unjustified delay.
- RTI §20(2) — disciplinary action recommendation.
- EPF §14(1A) — 1-3 years jail + ₹10,000 fine on employer for non-deposit of employee's share. Cognizable. Non-bailable for dues > ₹50,000.
Cross-references on RTI Wiki
Sources
- EPF & MP Act 1952 (consolidated, March 2025 reprint)
- EPF Scheme 1952
- EPFO Annual Report 2023-24, Chapter 8 (Enforcement)
- EPFO Defaulters List, https://www.epfindia.gov.in/site_en/Defaulters.php
- CIC orders cited above (cic.gov.in archive)
- RTI Act 2005 (bare act + DPDP 2025 amendment)
Conclusion
Your employer holding back your PF is not an accounting glitch — it is a criminal breach of trust and an offence under §14(1A) of the EPF Act. The good news: you don't need a lawyer, an agent, or a tout. A ₹10 RTI to the right RPFC office triggers a §7A inquiry, recovers your money with 12% interest plus damages, and can put the promoter behind bars. Ritu got back ₹92,400 in four months. The same path is open to you.
Don't wait for the company to “sort it out”. Once the deduction stops being deposited, every month of silence loses you matching contribution + interest forever.
Related
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.

