Pennsylvania

Public Records Guide

Pennsylvania

Public Records Law

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Each state page includes: response deadlines, fee structures, special rights, exemptions, enforcement options, and success strategies

Pennsylvania — At a Glance
Pennsylvania — At a Glance
Year Enacted
1970 (amended 2024)
Response Deadline
5 business days
Who Can Request
Anyone
Fees
Yes
Attorney Fees
Recoverable if you win
Enforcement
Multiple mechanisms

Last verified: February 18, 2026

Use Pennsylvania FOIA Template

Definition of Public Record

The Pennsylvania Right to Know Law defines records as, “information, regardless of physical form or characteristics, that documents a transaction or activity of an agency and that is created, received or retained pursuant to law or in connection with a transaction, business or activity of the agency.”

Exemptions to Public Records

Personnel records are exempted, including public employees’ private information, and donor information. Trade secrets, work files of public servants and professors of higher learning, records that would compromise the security of a computer network, records that could damage law enforcement’s efforts to protect national security and the public, and records that would result in loss of funding for the agency or state are all considered exempt.

🔍 Search Common Exemptions

Exemption database for PA is being compiled. Check back soon!

Who Can Make a Request?

Any United States citizen.

Response Timeframe

5 days.

📅 Calculate Your Response Deadline

3/30/2026
Agency Response Deadline:
Monday, April 6, 2026
(5 business days)
7 days remaining
⚠️ Important: This is an estimate using federal holidays only. Verify that state-specific holidays may affect the actual deadline.

Information on Fees

Fees in Pennsylvania are fairly limited. Agencies can charge for actual cost of duplicating records, but may not charge for review of documents or searching for them. The only other fee allowed to be charged is if the agency incurs a cost in processing the request, i.e. if they have to put it on a CD or if they have to do an extensive server search which involves outside professionals.

Enforcement Mechanisms

The Office of Open Records can issue advisory opinions for court cases involving public records. For “bad faith” offenses a court can issue a civil penalty of a fine of $1,500. If an agency does not comply with a court order and turn over records they are subject to a fine of $500 per day that the records have not been turned over.

Attorney Fees

Yes, you can win attorney’s fees.


🚀 Ready to Request Records?

Choose how you want to proceed with your PA public records request:

💡 Both options provide comprehensive, well-formatted requests based on PA transparency law.