India's New Gas Rule and What It Means for Households

India’s New Gas Rule and What It Means for Households

Since March 2026, the rules connecting kitchens to fuel have shifted in a way that has not happened in decades. A notification under the Essential Commodities Act now means households in pipeline-covered areas face a binding choice between LPG and piped natural gas. The urgency is not about convenience. A supply disruption from conflict in West Asia has tightened India’s LPG import pipeline, and the government is using the regulatory lever to manage the pressure.

Regardless of which fuel a household uses, the bill requires payment. Bajaj Pay, the BBPS-based payments platform on Bajaj Finance, handles both LPG cylinder bookings and piped gas bill payments from one place, with the amount shown upfront and confirmation in under two minutes.

The Supply Crisis That Made This Switch Urgent

The booking gap between cylinder orders has grown from 21 days to 25 in cities and up to 45 days in rural areas, per revised MoPNG booking guidelines. A supply disruption originating from conflict in West Asia since late February 2026 tightened India’s LPG import pipeline, according to the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas. The pivot toward piped gas is a pressure release valve for a strained supply chain. That context explains why the new rule carries enforcement weight that earlier voluntary nudges toward PNG never did.

The One Household One Gas Connection Rule Explained

Per the gazette notification of 24 March 2026, the Natural Gas and Petroleum Products Distribution Order was issued under the Essential Commodities Act. The core rule is that a household cannot hold both an active LPG connection and a PNG connection at the same time.

What the rule requires in practice:

  • Where PNG infrastructure exists at a notified address, a window opens to apply for a PNG connection. Failure to apply means LPG supply “shall cease,” per the order.
  • A clause covers cases where PNG is genuinely not feasible; the distributor issues a No-Objection Certificate and LPG continues unaffected.
  • Existing PNG holders who still carry an LPG cylinder must surrender it within 30 days of the PNG connection going live, per the amendment notified 25 May 2026.
  • Households that switch and later relocate to areas without pipelines may obtain a transfer voucher to restore LPG service.

What the June Deadline Means and Does Not Mean

The “June 30” date counts 90 days from the March notification. The Ministry has not issued one confirmed nationwide cutoff for cylinder disconnection. Multiple independent fact-checks have rejected the claim that all LPG connections cease after June 30; the rule applies only to dual-connection households in pipeline-covered areas.

Two positions are both accurate. Where no pipeline exists at an address, nothing in this order applies. Where PNG infrastructure exists and formal notice has arrived, the clock is real; acting on the notice is the safer position than waiting for further clarity.

One unrelated deadline has been conflated with this rule: Aadhaar-based e-KYC for LPG subsidy, also due 30 June 2026. Missing the e-KYC suspends the subsidy, not the gas supply. The process and consequence are different; the shared date has generated the confusion.

LPG and PNG Compared Across Five Practical Factors

  LPG Cylinder PNG (Piped Gas)
Supply Delivered by distributor Underground pipeline, always on
Payment Fixed price per cylinder, upfront Monthly meter bill
Booking Required; 25–45-day gaps apply None
Upfront cost None Refundable deposit Rs. 5,000-10,000
Availability Pan-India Pipeline-covered areas only

For households still on cylinders, scheduling LPG gas cylinder booking online as early as eligibility allows now matters more than it did before booking windows extended.

How to Check If PNG Has Reached You

  • Visit pngrb.gov.in and identify the authorised City Gas Distribution company for your district.
  • Use the company’s pin code or area checker to confirm pipeline availability at your address.
  • Apply directly through the CGD website if the pipeline has reached you.
  • Register interest if it has not; demand density determines where the rollout goes next.

Where PNG is not available at an address, nothing in the order applies.

How to Pay Your Gas Bill on Bajaj Finance

Whether a household remains on cylinders or has switched to piped gas, the payment steps are the same on the Bajaj Finance app or website:

  1. Open the Bajaj Finance app or visit bajajfinserv.in and log in.
  2. Go to Bills and Recharges section and scroll to locate LPG and PNG.
  3. For an LPG booking, select your LPG distributor. For piped gas, select Piped Gas and your City Gas Distribution company.
  4. Enter your customer number, registered mobile number, or BP number as required.
  5. Review the amount, then pay by card, UPI, net banking, or wallet for instant confirmation.

Failed transactions are reversed automatically. If the PNG security deposit is the only barrier to switching, an Insta EMI Card or short personal loan can spread that cost across months rather than absorbing it in a single payment.

The One Check Worth Doing Before Anything Else

The only fact that determines the next move is whether a pipeline physically exists on the street. That check takes under five minutes on the CGD company’s website. Where a pipeline exists and no notice has yet arrived, time remains to plan rather than react. Where notice has already arrived, acting on it now is the safer position than waiting for a deadline that may never appear in the form public statements have described.

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