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LPG cylinder price hiked by Rs 195.50: Check LPG domestic and commercial rates today in Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata and other cities
ET Online | April 1, 2026 10:57 AM CST

Synopsis

LPG commercial cylinder price: The commercial LPG gas cylinder prices have been hiked significantly from April 1 amid the West Asia conflict. A 19-kg commercial LPG cylinder now costs Rs 195.50 more in Delhi. In big relief, domestic LPG prices remain unchanged. A 14.2-kg household cylinder continues to retail at Rs 913 in Delhi, following the last increase of Rs 60 on March 7.

There has been no change in the domestic cooking gas LPG rates and the prices have remained stable across major Indian cities today
Prices of commercial LPG were hiked today, April 1, 2026, by Rs 195.50 on Wednesday, on back of surge in global oil prices linked to the widening West Asia conflict. A 19-kg commercial LPG now costs Rs 2,078.50 in Delhi, according to state-owned oil companies. Rates were last increased by Rs 114.5 per 19-kg cylinder on March 1. In Kolkata, the 19 kg commercial LPG gas cylinder will now cost Rs 2,208 effective today.

The increase is set to impact hotels, restaurants, and small enterprises that depend heavily on commercial gas supplies.

ALSO READ: Delhi-NCR weather today (April 1)

LPG Commercial cylinder rates in cities

CityPrice (₹)
Delhi2078.50
Mumbai2031.00
Kolkata2208.00
Bengaluru2246.50

LPG Domestic cylinder rates

There has been no change in the domestic cooking gas LPG rates and the prices have remained stable across major Indian cities today. The prices were last hiked by Rs 60 per 14.2-kg cylinder on March 7, remain unchanged. It costs Rs 913 per 14.2-kg cylinder in Delhi. Domestic LPG prices were recently increased by ₹60 across India in March 2026.

ALSO READ: Kolkata weather today

LPG Domestic cylinder rates today

CityPrice (₹)
Delhi913.00
Mumbai912.50
Kolkata939.00
Chennai928.50
Bengaluru915.50
Hyderabad965.00
Jaipur916.50
Lucknow950.50
Patna1,002.50
Chandigarh922.50
Thiruvananthapuram922.00

The price revision on Wednesday is linked to the widening Iran conflict with US-Israel. Since the war began late in February, global oil prices have shot up almost 50 per cent due to disruption of energy supply chains. State-owned Indian Oil Corporation, Bharat Petroleum, and Hindustan Petroleum revise ATF and LPG prices on the first day of every month based on international benchmarks and the exchange rate.

Global oil prices have shot up almost 50 per cent after the war in West Asia disrupted energy supply chains. Petrol and diesel prices continue to remain frozen after a Rs 2 per-litre reduction in March last year; petrol currently costs Rs 94.72 per litre in Delhi and diesel Rs 87.62


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