The KJP leader said he would await their message to know their mind before deciding on his homecoming.
"I have not received any such message," he told reporters after the Karnataka Janatha Paksha's executive meeting here, amid reports that BJP central top brass had decided to invite him following efforts by state leaders.
Yeddyurappa rejected reports that he had been putting conditions and said, "I have not asked for any favour from central leaders.
Yeddyurappa, whose party garnered 10 per cent vote share in the May 5 Assembly polls that eased BJP out of power and brought Congress back at the helm, said, "I have not received any message (from BJP central leaders). I will wait...See what exactly is in their minds and then we will decide."
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Yeddyurappa, who headed the BJP's first ever government in the south, turned a rebel after he was forced to resign in as Chief Minister in 2011 following his indictment in the report on illegal mining by the then Lokayukta.
Yeddyurappa said he was an admirer of Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi and he, as also the state leadership, had played important roles in BJP pulling out hattrick in the Assembly polls in Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Chattisgarh.
Earlier, he told the state executive meet that he had not even spoken on phone to any central BJP leader.
Yeddyurappa also praised Aam Admi Party's dream debut in Delhi Assembly elections, saying its leader Arvind Kejrival had set an example and showed that any bonafide struggle for people would always pay dividends.