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Check Electricity Bills Online Pakistan

Instantly check duplicate electricity bills for MEPCO, LESCO, FESCO, IESCO, GEPCO, HESCO, PESCO, QESCO, SEPCO, TESCO, HAZECO, and K-Electric (KE). View, download, and print your bill using your reference number or customer ID.

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                                                                                                MEPCO Service Coverage: A Detailed Overview

The Multan Electric Power Company, widely known by its acronym MEPCO, stands as the largest electricity distribution company (DISCO) in Pakistan in terms of geographical coverage. Headquartered in the city of Multan, MEPCO supplies electricity to thirteen administrative districts across South Punjab, a region that includes Multan, Bahawalpur, Bahawalnagar, Rahim Yar Khan, Dera Ghazi Khan, Rajanpur, Muzaffargarh, Layyah, Vehari, Khanewal, Sahiwal, Pakpattan, and Lodhran. Multan itself serves not only as the company’s administrative headquarters but also as the commercial and logistical hub of the entire South Punjab region.

Historical Background

MEPCO’s roots trace back to 1922, when it operated under British colonial rule as the Multan Power Supply Company. Following independence, the company underwent nationalization in 1972 and came under the direct control of the Government of Pakistan. Interestingly, the company was once publicly listed on the Karachi Stock Exchange, though it was delisted in 1985. The modern incarnation of MEPCO came into existence on 14 May 1998, when the Government of Pakistan initiated the corporatization of the national energy sector. As part of this restructuring, MEPCO was established to take over all properties, rights, assets, obligations, and liabilities of the former Multan Area Electricity Board, along with its grid stations and transmission infrastructure.

Scale and Reach

Today, MEPCO serves somewhere between 7 and 7.5 million registered consumers, with the broader population benefiting from its services estimated at around 34 to 35 million people. In terms of sheer geography, MEPCO’s operational territory spans approximately 97,358 square kilometers, making it the single largest distribution company in the country by area covered. This vast territory is far larger than that of most other DISCOs operating in Pakistan, which is a direct consequence of South Punjab’s expansive and largely rural landscape.

To manage a network of this scale, MEPCO has organized its operations into a hierarchical structure consisting of 9 operational circles, 38 divisions, and 181 subdivisions. Each circle oversees a cluster of divisions, and each division in turn manages several subdivisions, allowing the company to maintain localized oversight of grid stations, feeders, and consumer services across such a wide and diverse territory. This layered administrative model helps MEPCO handle everything from routine maintenance to fault reporting and new connection requests at a manageable, localized level.

Infrastructure

MEPCO’s physical infrastructure reflects the scale of its coverage area. The company operates more than 150 grid stations, with a combined transformation capacity of roughly 7,500 MVA (megavolt-amperes). Its transmission and distribution network extends across tens of thousands of kilometers of lines — estimates place the figure between 66,000 and 82,000 kilometers depending on the source and year of measurement — supported by over 2,000 feeders that carry electricity from grid stations to the doorsteps of consumers. This extensive network is a continual work in progress, with MEPCO periodically adding new grid stations, transformers, and feeders to reduce voltage drops, tripping complaints, and unplanned outages, particularly in high-demand agricultural belts.

A Unique Geographic Position

One of the most distinctive aspects of MEPCO’s service territory is that it is the only Pakistani DISCO whose boundaries touch three different provinces and border five other distribution companies. Near Sadiqabad, MEPCO’s territory meets HESCO, which serves Sindh province. Close to Vahova, it borders PESCO, the distribution company for Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. Near Fort Munro, MEPCO’s territory touches QESCO’s jurisdiction in Balochistan. It also shares boundaries with FESCO near Bhakkar and with LESCO near Sahiwal. Adding to this geographic significance, MEPCO’s territory in the Minchinabad area of Bahawalnagar district actually extends to the international border with India. This combination of provincial and international boundary contact is unmatched by any other DISCO in the country.

Consumer Profile

Because MEPCO’s coverage area is predominantly rural and agricultural in character, its consumer base skews heavily toward domestic and lifeline (low-consumption) users, along with a substantial number of agricultural tube-well connections. Unlike more urbanized DISCOs such as LESCO or IESCO, which serve dense city populations with a higher proportion of commercial and industrial connections, MEPCO’s network must accommodate scattered rural feeders spread across vast farmland, which presents unique challenges in terms of line losses, maintenance costs, and outage management. The company categorizes its consumers into four broad groups — domestic, commercial, industrial, and agricultural — each billed according to tariff structures set by the National Electric Power Regulatory Authority (NEPRA).

Consumer Services

To make life easier for its millions of consumers, MEPCO has invested in a range of digital and remote-access services. These include online bill checking through the official PITC (Power Information Technology Company) portal, duplicate bill downloads, SMS-based bill inquiries, and an online complaint registration system. Complaints related to billing errors, low voltage, tripping, or unscheduled load shedding can be tracked through the Customer Complaint Management System (CCMS), which is shared across multiple DISCOs including MEPCO. The company also supports net metering for consumers who have installed solar panels, allowing surplus electricity generated at home to be fed back into the grid in exchange for billing credits — a service that has grown increasingly popular given Pakistan’s rising interest in renewable energy and rising conventional electricity costs.

Conclusion

In summary, MEPCO occupies a singular position within Pakistan’s power distribution landscape. It is not only the largest DISCO by geographical area but also one of the most administratively complex, given its nine circles, dozens of divisions, and nearly two hundred subdivisions spread across thirteen districts of South Punjab. Its unique position bordering three provinces and one foreign country, combined with a predominantly rural and agricultural consumer base, sets it apart from the more urban-focused distribution companies elsewhere in the country. For millions of residents across South Punjab, MEPCO is not just a utility provider but a critical piece of infrastructure underpinning agriculture, industry, and daily life across one of Pakistan’s largest and most populous regions.

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                                                                                                     Trust & Transparency
                                                                                   Clear, honest, and easy to understand

                                           We give you access to the same official bill data used by millions of consumers, while making it clear who manages your electricity account (your DISCO) and who operates this website (us).



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Every duplicate bill is fetched from the official centralized billing platform. We never generate or alter bill amounts, tariff calculations, or due dates—only the official data is shown for your reference.

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Forget passwords and paid subscriptions. With your printed reference number, you can retrieve your bill in just a few seconds from any internet connection.

Learn While You Check
Helpful guides on FPAs, tariff slabs, and payment processes are available alongside the bill checker, making it easier to understand your bill—not just view it.

Yahan MEPCO ke peak hours ki general table hai. Note: yeh timings season ke hisab se thori vary ho sakti hain, aur exact timing sirf official MEPCO/NEPRA notification ya aapke TOU meter tariff se confirm honi chahiye.

SeasonPeak HoursOff-Peak Hours
Summer (June–August)6:00 PM – 10:00 PM (kahin kahin 7 PM – 11 PM bhi report hui hai)Raat 11 PM se subah tak
Winter (December–February)5:00 PM – 9:00 PMDin/raat ke baqi hours
General/All-week6 PM – 10 PM (sabse zyada quoted window)Baaki poora din

Extra points jo useful hain:

  • Yeh peak hours har din (Monday se Sunday tak, including holidays) apply hoti hain.
  • Peak hours mein per-unit rate off-peak se kaafi zyada hota hai (kuch sources ke mutabiq roughly double).
  • Yeh schedule sirf TOU (Time of Use) ya TOD meter walon ke liye directly relevant hai — agar aapka simple meter hai to slab-based tariff apply hoga, peak/off-peak nahi.

Chunke yeh sab third-party/blog sources se hai (official MEPCO announcement nahi mila mujhe search mein), best hoga ke aap apna exact bill ya MEPCO ka official portal/customer service (118 helpline) check kar lein confirm timing ke liye.

MEPCO Net Metering Policy & Net Billing (2026 Update)

A complete guide for MEPCO (Multan Electric Power Company) solar consumers on the new NEPRA regulations, eligibility, application process, and rates.


What Changed in 2026?

On February 9, 2026, NEPRA officially notified the Prosumer Regulations 2026, replacing the older Net Metering Regulations 2015. This introduced a new Net Billing mechanism for new solar applicants, while existing net metering consumers retain their old terms until contract expiry.

Aspect Old System (Net Metering 2015) New System (Net Billing 2026)
Billing Mechanism 1:1 unit-for-unit exchange Two separate rates for import & export
Export (Sell) Rate Same as retail purchase rate (~Rs. 22–27/unit) National Average Energy Purchase Price (NAEPP) — approx. Rs. 10–11/unit
Import (Buy) Rate Standard MEPCO tariff Standard MEPCO tariff (Rs. 45–60/unit depending on slab)
Settlement Adjusted monthly against bill Surplus units settled/paid quarterly
Contract Duration Long-term (up to 7 years under later revisions) Capped at 5 years, renewable for another 5-year term
Applicability Existing contracts largely protected/honoured till expiry Applies to new applications only

Note: Following intervention at the federal level, NEPRA confirmed on February 16, 2026 that existing net metering agreements remain valid until their original expiry date and continue under the old unit-for-unit basis — only new connections fall under Net Billing.


Why the Policy Changed

  • Rooftop solar capacity in Pakistan crossed 6,000 MW, growing rapidly under the old 1:1 model.
  • DISCOs (including MEPCO) reported rising financial losses from buying back solar units at full retail rates.
  • Grid stability concerns emerged during peak solar generation hours.
  • NEPRA introduced Net Billing to make buyback rates reflect the actual average cost of power generation, rather than the retail tariff.

MEPCO Net Metering — Eligibility Criteria

Requirement Detail
Connection Type Residential, commercial, industrial, or agricultural (tube well) with active MEPCO connection
Phase Requirement Three-phase connection generally required
System Size Minimum 1 kW; must not exceed 1.5x sanctioned load
Sanctioned Load Must be equal to or greater than solar system capacity
Dues All previous MEPCO electricity dues must be cleared
Metering Hardware NEPRA/PEPCO-approved bi-directional (smart) meter
Installer AEDB-certified solar installer recommended/required
Safety Standard Inverter must have anti-islanding protection (UL 1741 / IEC 62116)

Rate Comparison (Approximate, 2026)

Item Old Net Metering New Net Billing
Buy-back (export) rate Rs. 22–27 / unit Rs. 10–11 / unit
Purchase (import) rate Rs. 37–55 / unit (slab-based) Rs. 45–60 / unit (slab-based)
Net Effect Oversized systems remained financially attractive Oversizing is less beneficial — best to size system close to actual consumption

Rates vary by consumer category and slab; always confirm current tariff via MEPCO or NEPRA’s official notification.


MEPCO Net Metering Application Process

  1. Submit Application — Apply through MEPCO’s online portal or your local sub-division office with CNIC, electricity bill, and property documents.
  2. Technical Feasibility Study — MEPCO reviews sanctioned load, wiring, and grid capacity.
  3. Demand Notice & Payment — Pay applicable fee for the bi-directional meter and connection charges.
  4. Solar System Installation — Installed by an AEDB-certified installer as per NEPRA technical standards.
  5. Inspection — MEPCO inspects the installation for safety and compliance.
  6. NOC (No Objection Certificate) — Issued after Punjab Energy Department clearance confirming compliance with SRO 892(I)/2015 and related regulations.
  7. Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) — Signed between the consumer (now a “prosumer”) and MEPCO.
  8. Bi-Directional Meter Installation — Final step; meter starts recording imported vs exported units.

Common Issues Faced by MEPCO Net Metering Consumers

  • Application processing delays
  • Bi-directional meter installation backlog
  • Billing mismatches between imported/exported units
  • Confusion between old vs new contract terms after the 2026 policy shift

Quick FAQs

Is net metering with MEPCO legal? Yes — it is fully regulated by NEPRA, and MEPCO operates under NEPRA’s official framework.

Will my existing net metering agreement change? No — contracts signed under the 2015 regulations remain valid on their original 1:1 terms until expiry.

What is the minimum/maximum system size for MEPCO net metering? Minimum 1 kW; maximum limited by sanctioned load (MEPCO processes up to 1 MW under the NEPRA Generation Licence Exemption framework).

How is surplus electricity paid under Net Billing? On a quarterly basis, at the National Average Energy Purchase Price, rather than monthly bill adjustment.

Where can I apply or get more information? Through your nearest MEPCO sub-division office or the MEPCO online portal; helpline for general queries is available via MEPCO customer service.


Disclaimer: Rates, timelines, and procedures are subject to change per NEPRA notifications. Always verify current details with your local MEPCO office or NEPRA’s official website before making investment decisions.

MEPCO Electricity Bills: Complete Guide 2026

Everything MEPCO (Multan Electric Power Company) consumers need to know — tariff slabs, bill components, how to check and pay your bill, and tips to reduce your monthly cost.


About MEPCO

MEPCO (Multan Electric Power Company) is the electricity distribution company serving South Punjab, including Multan, Bahawalpur, Sahiwal, DG Khan, Vehari, Khanewal, Lodhran, Muzaffargarh, Layyah, Rajanpur, and Bahawalnagar. Electricity rates for MEPCO are set by NEPRA (National Electric Power Regulatory Authority) under the Government of Pakistan.


MEPCO Residential Tariff Slabs (2026)

Consumer CategoryMonthly UsageApprox. Rate per Unit
Protected ConsumerUp to 200 units/monthRs. 5 – 14 / unit
Non-Protected ConsumerAbove 200 units/monthRs. 23 – 68 / unit (slab-based)

Important: If a “Protected” consumer crosses 200 units even once in a billing month, MEPCO reclassifies the entire month’s consumption under Non-Protected slab rates — not just the extra units. This is one of the most common reasons for a suddenly high bill.

Commercial, industrial, and agricultural (tube well) consumers have separate tariff categories (e.g., A-1, B, C, E series) with their own minimum monthly charges — some categories carry a minimum bill even with zero consumption.


What’s Included in a MEPCO Bill

A typical MEPCO bill has around 9–11 line items:

ComponentDescription
Energy ChargesUnits consumed × applicable slab rate
Fixed/Customer ChargesFlat monthly charge, applies regardless of usage in some categories
FPA (Fuel Price Adjustment)Variable monthly charge reflecting fuel cost used for generation; can be positive or negative
QTA (Quarterly Tariff Adjustment)Periodic adjustment reviewed by NEPRA every quarter
GST17% General Sales Tax
Electricity Duty1.5%, collected by the provincial government
NJ SurchargeAdditional regulatory surcharge (~10%)
TV License Fee (PTV Fee)Fixed Rs. 35/month
Meter RentSmall fixed charge for meter maintenance
Arrears / Deferred AmountAny unpaid previous balance or postponed installment

How to Check Your MEPCO Bill Online

You’ll need either your 14-digit Reference Number or 10-digit Customer ID, both printed on any previous bill.

  1. Visit MEPCO’s online bill portal (or an authorized bill-checking service).
  2. Enter your Reference Number or Customer ID.
  3. View your bill amount, due date, consumer name, address, and consumption details.
  4. Download or print the PDF — it’s accepted as a legally valid duplicate copy.

Check via SMS (no internet needed): Send PITC <space> <14-digit reference number> to 8334. You’ll receive the bill amount and due date within seconds.

SMS reminders: Register the same way to get an automatic alert ~10 days before your due date.


How to Pay Your MEPCO Bill

MethodHow
Mobile Wallets (Easypaisa, JazzCash, NayaPay, SadaPay)Open app → Bill Payment → Electricity → MEPCO → enter reference number → confirm
Mobile/Internet Banking (HBL, UBL, MCB, Meezan, Allied, etc.)Log in → Bill Payments/Utility → select MEPCO → enter reference number → pay
ATMInsert card → Bill Payments → MEPCO → enter reference number → follow prompts
Bank Branch / Post OfficePresent original or duplicate bill at the counter and pay in cash

Tip: Always save your transaction ID/screenshot. If a payment shows “pending” for more than 24 hours, contact your bank with this reference for follow-up.


Due Date Extensions

  • Bill amount under Rs. 100,000 → can request a 3-day extension
  • Bill amount over Rs. 100,000 → can request a 5-day extension

Extensions are typically requested through your nearest MEPCO sub-divisional office.


Peak Hours & Their Effect on Your Bill

Bills are higher when consumption happens during peak hours (typically 6 PM–10 PM, shifting to 5 PM–9 PM in winter for TOU/TOD meter consumers). See our detailed [MEPCO Peak Hours guide] for the full seasonal breakdown and rate comparison.


Common Reasons for a High MEPCO Bill

  • Crossing 200 units and losing “Protected” status for the whole month
  • Running heavy appliances (AC, iron, water heater) during peak hours
  • FPA/QTA increases passed on by NEPRA that particular quarter
  • Meter reading errors or estimated (not actual) readings
  • Unpaid arrears carried forward from a previous bill

Tips to Reduce Your MEPCO Bill

  1. Track usage regularly and try to stay within the 200-unit protected slab if you’re close to the line.
  2. Shift heavy appliance use (AC, washing machine, iron) outside peak hours.
  3. Use energy-efficient LED bulbs and inverter appliances.
  4. Consider net metering/solar if usage is consistently high (see our MEPCO Net Metering guide).
  5. Check your bill every month for reading errors or incorrect slab classification.

Quick FAQs

What is the 200-unit rule? Residential consumers using 200 units or less per month qualify as “Protected” and get lower slab rates. Exceeding 200 units in any month shifts the entire month’s bill to Non-Protected rates.

What is FPA on my bill? Fuel Price Adjustment — a variable monthly charge based on the fuel cost of electricity generation that month, set by NEPRA.

Can I check my bill without the internet? Yes, via SMS: send PITC <reference number> to 8334.

How do I get a duplicate bill copy? Enter your 14-digit reference number on MEPCO’s online portal and download the PDF — it’s valid for official use.

Does MEPCO use the same tariff as other DISCOs (LESCO, FESCO, etc.)? Yes, residential tariff slabs are set nationally by NEPRA, so base rates are generally consistent across DISCOs, though local surcharges can vary slightly.


Disclaimer: Tariff rates, taxes, and charges are set and periodically revised by NEPRA and are subject to change. Figures in this guide are approximate and for informational purposes — always confirm exact rates and charges via your official MEPCO bill or NEPRA’s website.

MEPCO Electricity Bills — FAQs (2026)

Q1: What is the 200-unit “Protected Consumer” rule? Residential consumers who use 200 units or less in a month are classified as “Protected” and billed at lower, subsidized slab rates. If usage crosses 200 units even once, the entire month’s consumption is billed at the higher Non-Protected rates — not just the extra units.

Q2: Why is my MEPCO bill suddenly so high this month? Common reasons include: crossing the 200-unit threshold and losing Protected status, running heavy appliances (AC, iron, water heater) during peak hours, a NEPRA-approved FPA or quarterly tariff increase, an estimated (not actual) meter reading, or arrears carried over from a previous unpaid bill.

Q3: What is FPA on my MEPCO bill? FPA stands for Fuel Price Adjustment — a variable monthly charge that reflects the actual cost of fuel used to generate electricity that month. It’s set by NEPRA and can increase or decrease your bill depending on the energy mix.

Q4: What is QTA (Quarterly Tariff Adjustment)? QTA is a periodic adjustment NEPRA applies every quarter to account for changes in the overall cost of electricity generation and distribution across the country.

Q5: What taxes and surcharges appear on a MEPCO bill? Typically: 17% GST, 1.5% Electricity Duty, an NJ Surcharge (~10%), and a fixed Rs. 35 TV License (PTV) fee, in addition to energy charges, fixed/customer charges, FPA, and QTA.

Q6: How can I check my MEPCO bill online? Enter your 14-digit Reference Number or 10-digit Customer ID on MEPCO’s online bill portal to view your bill amount, due date, and consumption details, and download a PDF copy.

Q7: Can I check my bill without internet access? Yes. Send PITC <space> <your 14-digit reference number> as an SMS to 8334 to get your bill amount and due date instantly.

Q8: How do I get a duplicate copy of my MEPCO bill? Enter your reference number on the MEPCO online portal and download the PDF — it’s accepted as a legally valid duplicate, identical to the original printed bill.

Q9: What are the easiest ways to pay my MEPCO bill? Mobile wallets (Easypaisa, JazzCash, NayaPay, SadaPay), mobile/internet banking apps (HBL, UBL, MCB, Meezan, Allied, etc.), ATMs, or in person at any bank branch or post office.

Q10: Can I get an extension on my due date? Yes. Bills under Rs. 100,000 are generally eligible for a 3-day extension, and bills over Rs. 100,000 for a 5-day extension. Extensions are requested through your nearest MEPCO sub-divisional office.

Q11: Do peak hours affect my MEPCO bill? Yes. Electricity used during peak hours (typically 6 PM–10 PM, or 5 PM–9 PM in winter) is billed at a significantly higher rate for TOU/TOD meter consumers. Shifting heavy appliance use to off-peak hours can noticeably lower your bill.

Q12: Does MEPCO charge the same tariff as LESCO, FESCO, or other DISCOs? Residential tariff slabs are set nationally by NEPRA, so base rates are broadly the same across DISCOs, though small differences in local surcharges may apply.

Q13: What happens if I don’t pay my MEPCO bill on time? A late payment surcharge is added, and your unpaid amount carries forward as arrears on the next bill. Continued non-payment can eventually lead to disconnection.

Q14: How can I reduce my monthly MEPCO bill? Stay within the 200-unit protected slab where possible, avoid heavy appliance use during peak hours, switch to energy-efficient LED lighting and inverter appliances, check your bill monthly for errors, and consider net metering/solar if your usage is consistently high.

Q15: Who regulates MEPCO’s electricity rates? NEPRA (National Electric Power Regulatory Authority), under the Government of Pakistan, approves and revises all MEPCO tariff rates, slabs, and periodic adjustments.


Disclaimer: Rates, charges, and procedures mentioned above are subject to change per NEPRA notifications. Always verify current details via your official MEPCO bill or NEPRA’s website.

Gas Bills in Pakistan The Complete 2026 Guide (SNGPL & SSGC)

Gas Bills in Pakistan The Complete 2026: Every winter, millions of Pakistani households brace for the same thing: a gas bill that seems to jump out of nowhere. One month it’s a manageable few hundred rupees, and the next it’s several thousand — even though nothing about the household’s routine has changed. Understanding how gas billing actually works in Pakistan is the key to making sense of that swing, and to catching errors before you pay for something you shouldn’t.

Gas Bills in Pakistan The Complete 2026

This guide covers everything about gas bills in Pakistan — who supplies your gas, how the tariff is structured, what every charge on the bill means, how to check and pay online, and what you can actually do to bring the number down. Gas Bills in Pakistan The Complete 2026

Who Supplies Gas in Pakistan: SNGPL vs SSGC

Unlike electricity, which is split across eleven regional DISCOs, natural gas distribution in Pakistan is handled by just two companies:

CompanyFull NameRegion Covered
SNGPLSui Northern Gas Pipelines LimitedPunjab, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Islamabad, and Azad Jammu & Kashmir
SSGCSui Southern Gas Company LimitedSindh and Balochistan, including Karachi, Hyderabad, Quetta, and Sukkur

Both companies distribute gas under prices and tariff categories set by OGRA (Oil and Gas Regulatory Authority), which are then approved by the Federal Government. In other words — much like NEPRA for electricity — the actual rate you pay isn’t decided by SNGPL or SSGC themselves; they collect payment on behalf of the government under an approved tariff structure. Gas Bills in Pakistan The Complete 2026

How Gas Bills Are Calculated

Consumption Units: hm³, MMBTU, and What They Mean

Gas consumption is measured differently than electricity. Instead of “units” (kWh), your bill will typically show consumption in: Gas Bills in Pakistan The Complete 2026

  • hm³ (hundred cubic meters) — the volume of gas used
  • MMBTU (million British thermal units) — the energy content of the gas, adjusted for gas quality (GCV) and pressure

Most household bills describe usage in the range of 0.5 to 1.5 hm³ per month, with sharp seasonal spikes in winter when gas heaters and geysers come into heavy use.

Gas Bills in Pakistan The Complete 2026

Protected vs Non-Protected Consumers

Just like the 200-unit rule on electricity bills, gas billing has its own critical threshold — and it works a bit differently: Gas Bills in Pakistan The Complete 2026

  • Protected Consumers: Households whose average winter consumption (November to February) is 0.9 hm³ or less per month fall into this subsidized category.
  • Non-Protected Consumers: Households averaging above 0.9 hm³ in winter are billed at higher slab rates with steeper fixed charges.

The important detail here is that your category isn’t decided by a single month’s usage — it’s based on your average consumption across the four winter months. This means your gas bill category can be locked in based on how much you used last winter, even if your current month’s usage looks lower. Gas Bills in Pakistan The Complete 2026

Gas Bills in Pakistan The Complete 2026

Fixed Charges by Category

On top of the volumetric (usage-based) charge, every gas connection carries a fixed monthly charge:

CategoryApprox. Fixed Charge
ProtectedAround Rs. 600/month
Non-Protected (moderate usage)Around Rs. 1,500/month
Non-Protected (higher usage, above ~1.5 hm³)Up to Rs. 3,000/month

This fixed charge applies regardless of how much gas you actually burned that month — which is why a household with a very low bill one month can still see a meaningful base charge sitting on it. Gas Bills in Pakistan The Complete 2026

Understanding the Line Items on Your Gas Bill

A typical SNGPL or SSGC bill includes several components beyond the basic usage charge: Gas Bills in Pakistan The Complete 2026

Line ItemWhat It Means
Gas ChargesVolumetric consumption × applicable slab rate, based on your Protected/Non-Protected category
Fixed/Minimum ChargesA flat monthly charge tied to your consumer category
GIDC (Gas Infrastructure Development Cess)A mandatory government levy that funds pipeline infrastructure development. It applies to every consumer and cannot be disputed with the gas company directly — complaints go to OGRA, not SNGPL/SSGC
GST17–18% General Sales Tax on gas and fixed charges combined
Meter RentA small fixed charge (commonly Rs. 50–200) for meter maintenance
Late Payment SurchargeAdded if the previous bill was paid after its due date
Rebate AdjustmentAn occasional deduction, applied when applicable
ArrearsAny carried-forward unpaid balance from a previous bill

Two things confuse consumers most: GIDC, because it’s a fixed government levy rather than something tied to how much gas you actually used, and the fact that RLNG (imported gas) is increasingly blended into the network, which affects newer connections differently than older ones still running on cheaper domestic gas supply.

What Is RLNG, and Why Does It Matter for Your Bill?

As Pakistan’s domestic natural gas reserves decline, both SNGPL and SSGC have increasingly integrated RLNG (Re-Liquified Natural Gas) — imported gas, largely sourced from the Gulf region — into their distribution networks. Gas Bills in Pakistan The Complete 2026

  • Older connections in many areas still draw more heavily on cheaper domestic gas supply. Gas Bills in Pakistan The Complete 2026
  • Newer connections, particularly commercial and industrial ones, are more directly affected by RLNG blending, which costs more per unit than domestic gas.

This is part of why two households with seemingly similar usage can see noticeably different bills — the underlying gas mix reaching their meter isn’t always identical.

How to Check Your Gas Bill Online

Both SNGPL and SSGC allow consumers to check their bill using a Consumer Number or Reference Number, printed on any previous bill (often labeled “Account ID”).

For SNGPL:

  1. Visit the official SNGPL website or an authorized bill-checking service.
  2. Enter your Consumer Number/Account ID (typically 11 digits).
  3. View your current bill amount, due date, and consumption details.
  4. Download or print your duplicate bill copy.

For SSGC:

  1. Visit the official SSGC website.
  2. Enter your Customer Number.
  3. View and download your bill in the same way.

Unified bill-checking platforms and mobile wallet apps (Easypaisa, JazzCash, 1-Bill Pakistan) also support gas bill inquiries alongside electricity, water, and telecom bills, letting you check everything from a single interface. Gas Bills in Pakistan The Complete 2026

How to Pay Your Gas Bill

MethodHow
Mobile wallets (Easypaisa, JazzCash, Upaisa)Open app → Bill Payment → Gas → select SNGPL/SSGC → enter consumer number → confirm
Mobile/Internet bankingLog in → Bill Payments/Utility → select your gas company → enter consumer number → pay
Bank branch or authorized collection centerPresent the bill and pay in cash at the counter
Official company website/appSome regions support direct online payment through SNGPL/SSGC’s own portal

Always pay a few days before the due date — a late payment surcharge is automatically added to your next bill if the previous one is settled after its due date.

Why Is My Gas Bill So High? Common Reasons

  1. Winter heating season. Gas geysers and heaters dramatically increase consumption from November through February, often multiplying a summer-level bill several times over.
  2. Crossing into Non-Protected status. If your average winter usage crept above 0.9 hm³, both your slab rate and fixed charge increase — and this status can carry forward even into lower-usage months.
  3. GIDC and GST. These aren’t usage-dependent, so they show up even when consumption drops.
  4. RLNG blending. Areas or connections drawing more imported gas pay a premium built into that portion of supply.
  5. Estimated meter readings. Like electricity, gas meters are sometimes read on an estimated basis, which can occasionally overstate real consumption until corrected.
  6. Arrears or late payment surcharges from a previous unpaid bill.

Tips to Reduce Your Gas Bill

  1. Service your geyser and stove regularly. Poorly maintained appliances burn more gas for the same output.
  2. Insulate and use timers on geysers rather than leaving them running continuously through the day.
  3. Track your winter average. Since the Protected/Non-Protected threshold is based on your four-month winter average, moderating peak winter usage can help you avoid tipping into the higher category for the following year.
  4. Check your bill every month for reading errors, incorrect category classification, or unexplained arrears.
  5. Use gas-efficient appliances where possible, and avoid running multiple gas-heavy appliances (heater + geyser + stove) simultaneously during peak winter hours.
  6. Report suspected meter faults promptly — a stuck or faulty meter is one of the more common causes of a bill that doesn’t match actual usage.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between SNGPL and SSGC?

They are Pakistan’s two natural gas distribution companies. SNGPL covers Punjab, KPK, Islamabad, and Azad Kashmir, while SSGC covers Sindh and Balochistan. Both operate under tariffs set by OGRA and the Federal Government.

What does “Protected Consumer” mean for a gas bill?

It refers to households whose average winter (November–February) gas consumption is 0.9 hm³ or less per month. These consumers pay lower slab rates and lower fixed charges than Non-Protected consumers.

Why is my winter gas bill so much higher than in summer?

Gas heaters and geysers significantly increase consumption in winter. Additionally, your winter average usage determines your Protected/Non-Protected status, which can affect your bill for months afterward.

What is GIDC on my gas bill?

The Gas Infrastructure Development Cess — a mandatory government levy that funds pipeline development. It applies to all consumers and is not something the gas company itself can waive or adjust; disputes go to OGRA.

Can I check my SNGPL or SSGC bill without a physical copy?

Yes, both companies’ online portals allow bill lookup using your Consumer Number or Account ID, which you can also retrieve from a previous bill or by contacting customer service.

Does using RLNG affect my bill?

Yes. As more RLNG (imported gas) is blended into the network, especially for commercial/industrial consumers, this portion of usage is billed at a different, generally higher, rate than domestic-sourced gas.

What happens if I miss my gas bill’s due date?

A late payment surcharge is added to your following bill, and the outstanding amount carries forward as arrears until paid.

Final Thoughts

Gas billing in Pakistan follows a logic that’s genuinely different from electricity billing, even though the two get compared constantly. The Protected/Non-Protected distinction here is based on a rolling winter average rather than a single month’s crossing point, GIDC is a fixed government levy rather than a usage-based charge, and the growing role of RLNG means your specific connection’s gas mix can shift your bill in ways that have nothing to do with how carefully you’re using your stove or geyser.

Once you understand these mechanics — and make a habit of checking your bill online each month rather than waiting for the printed copy — a gas bill stops being an unpredictable shock and becomes something you can anticipate, verify, and budget around, especially heading into the winter months when usage naturally climbs.

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