However, Hazare slammed the "casual and unprofessional" approach of the Prime Minister's Office on the matter.
PMO sources said the Prime Minister has invited Hazare for a discussion as he has some views on the Lokpal Bill.
The sources said that Hazare could visit and meet the Prime Minister at his convenience.
In a statement here, Hazare said he did receive a call from the PMO but was upset at the tone and tenor of the invitation.
"We did get a call from PMO asking me when I would come to Delhi next. They assumed that was a good enough way of telling me that I have been invited for a talk on Jan Lokpal Bill," he said in a statement.
The veteran activist wondered at the condition of millions of citizens who look towards the Prime Minister for basic justice if he was being treated in this "casual and unprofessional" manner.
"We would be very happy to have a discussion with the Prime Minister if we are intimated a date and time, mutually convenient to all of us. We should also be intimated the agenda of the same," Hazare said.
Demanding enactment of a strong anti-corruption law, Hazare, who addressed a press conference here on Saturday last, threatened to go on an indefinite fast from April 5 if the Prime Minister did not act decisively on his suggestion by March-end.
Hazare had wondered how the government could pass the anti-corruption Bill without consulting anyone from the civil society.