Who can I request information from?
WhatDoTheyKnow covers requests to 46,511 authorities, including:
- Department for Work and Pensions 13849 requests
- Wirral Metropolitan Borough Council 3979 requests
- Kent County Council 2858 requests
- British Broadcasting Corporation 4376 requests
- Ministry of Defence 8391 requests
Looking for an EU Authority?
You can request documents directly from EU Institutions at our sister site AskTheEU.org . Find out more .
What information has been released?
WhatDoTheyKnow users have made 1,036,378 requests, including:
-
Northern Lincolnshire and Goole Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust answered a request about Number of Nurse and Midwife Referrals to the Nursing and Midwifery Council
6 minutes ago
-
University College London answered a request about Computer Science Dean's List
about 1 hour ago
-
Wakefield City Council answered a request about Freedom of Information Request: Byelaws and Policies on Recreational Use of Drones
about 2 hours ago
-
Office for National Statistics answered a request about Excess Deaths New Model Calculations
about 3 hours ago
-
British Broadcasting Corporation answered a request about RTS switch off, justification, communications and technical details
about 14 hours ago
What is Freedom of Information?
Make a request for information to a UK public authority.
By law, they have to respond.
The Freedom of Information Act, also known as FOI gives you the right to request recorded information from public authorities.
As well as documents and emails, it also covers things like spreadsheets, presentations, maps, videos and photographs.
By law requests have to be answered promptly and within 20 working days.
In most cases information should be released, but various exemptions allow authorities to withhold information.
How do I use Freedom of Information?
From coach drop off points to national borders; modern slavery to council sell-offs, Freedom of Information is a tool that everyone can use. Individual or community group; journalist or campaigner. National or local; every day or now and then. Here are just a few of the ways that it can help…
🔍 Find the evidence: Survey responses, research reports and board papers can help you to uncover the truth behind decisions and public statements.
⚖️ Compare and contrast: Compare the situation in your local area with what’s happening in other parts of the country and highlight disparities or similarities.
💰 Follow the money: Contracts, invoices and budget information let you see where public money goes, ensuring greater accountability for how funds are allocated and spent.
🧩 Fill in the gaps: You can ask a group of authorities to build or extract a dataset that didn't exist. This can fill knowledge gaps and improve public understanding of specific issues.
🤔 Understand why: Meeting minutes, policy papers and internal correspondence can help you to understand why important decisions were taken, and who is accountable for those decisions.
☀️ Promote openness: Asking for datasets can help to show that there is public demand to see it, which might persuade the authority to publish it themselves without needing to be asked.
Read our case studies for some great examples of how others have put these ideas to use.
How does WhatDoTheyKnow help?
🔀 Find the right authority: A database of 46,000+ public bodies, kept up to date by a team of staff and volunteers.
🗂️ Public archive: A permanent, searchable, public record of over one million information requests and responses.
✍️ Write your request: Inline guidance and a collection of help pages to help write your request.
🤖 Automate bureaucracy: Built in assistance and reminders to manage your request from submission to completion.
🏟️ Correspond in public: Requests and responses are automatically published online with proof of delivery to hold authorities accountable to respond.
🛑 Refusal advice: Encouragement, support, guidance and snippets to help challenge refusals at internal review, regulator appeal and tribunal(soon).
Learn more about WhatDoTheyKnow. Want to know something? Start your own request →
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