If your LPG delivery person demanded a “tip”, “trolley charge” or any cash over the printed cylinder price, you have paid too much and you can get it back. The price of a domestic refill is fixed by the oil company, and home delivery is already part of that price. This guide walks you through the exact complaint ladder, what you are actually supposed to pay, the proof to keep, and the one helpline number people wrongly call for this.
Any extra amount collected over the notified price can be complained about, and an overcharge is refundable. Keep pushing up the ladder until the extra money is returned. For drafting power and follow-up discipline, keep The RTI Playbook handy.
For a domestic LPG refill you pay only the retail selling price (RSP) notified by your oil marketing company, that is, Indane and IndianOil, Bharat Gas and BPCL, or HP Gas and HPCL. This RSP is the all-in price for the cylinder delivered to your home.
Home delivery of a domestic refill is part of the service the distributor is paid to provide. A distributor or delivery person is not permitted to demand extra money over the notified RSP, whether it is called a delivery charge, trolley charge, stair charge, or a tip. You may choose to give a small voluntary tip if you wish, but no one can make it a condition of handing over your cylinder.
If you are not sure of the current RSP for your city, it is printed on the cash memo and shown inside your gas company app. Match what you paid in cash against that figure. Anything above it is the overcharge you can reclaim.
A complaint moves faster when you can show what happened. Before and right after delivery, keep:
Even a quick note on your phone with the delivery person's name and the extra amount is useful. If you paid digitally, the transaction record is strong proof of the total you were charged.
1906 is the LPG emergency helpline for gas leaks only. Call it if you smell gas, suspect a leak, or face a fire risk. It is a safety line and it is not a billing or overcharge complaint number.
For overcharging, use the distributor, the OMC app and customer care, the state grievance officer, and the MoPNG e-SEVA portal as set out above. People often dial 1906 for money disputes and lose time. Use the right channel from the start so your complaint reaches someone who can order a refund.
This guide is about being charged extra over the price. If instead your cylinder simply never arrived after booking, see cooking gas cylinder not delivered, which is a separate problem with its own remedy.
No. For a domestic refill you owe only the retail selling price notified by the oil company, and home delivery is already included in that price. Any cash demanded over the RSP is an overcharge you can complain about and recover.
A separate delivery, trolley, or stair charge over the notified RSP is not something a delivery person can force on you for a domestic refill. A voluntary tip is your choice and can never be made a condition of getting your cylinder.
Complain first to the distributor and on the oil company app or customer care, then to the OMC area office, then the state LPG grievance officer, and finally on the MoPNG e-SEVA portal. Attach the cash memo and the extra amount paid.
No. 1906 is only the emergency helpline for gas leaks and safety. For billing or overcharge issues, use the distributor, OMC app or customer care, the state grievance officer, and the MoPNG e-SEVA portal instead.
Keep the cash memo showing the RSP, the amount you actually paid, the delivery person's name and vehicle number, the date and time, your consumer number, and any booking SMS or app message. Digital payment records are especially strong proof.
Take it past the agency to your oil company's area office and state LPG grievance officer, and lodge it on the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas e-SEVA portal. You can also use the national consumer routes below if the overcharge is not refunded.
If the agency and OMC do not refund the extra money, widen the pressure. You can raise a general government grievance through CPGRAMS, call the national consumer helpline explained at NCH 1915 consumer helpline, and for a persistent or larger loss, consider a consumer complaint at the NCDRC. The same overcharging logic applies to other essential services, as in our guide on ambulance overcharging rights.
Act quickly, keep your proof, and use the correct ladder. The price on the cash memo is the price you owe, and the rest is refundable.