The price of cooking gas or Liquified Petroleum Gas (LPG) has been raised by ₹50 per cylinder for both subsidised and non-subsidised consumers by distribution companies, Union Oil Minister Hardeep Singh Puri said on Monday, citing the rise in global benchmark prices as the reason.
He said the revision was subject to periodic review, typically every two–three weeks.
The hike applies to both Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana (PMUY) beneficiaries and non-beneficiaries from April 8 onwards.
Considering the current international benchmark of Saudi CP at higher levels, oil-marketing companies (OMCs) are expected to incur losses of around ₹41,338 crore during FY25. Petroleum Secretary Pankaj Jain said the government hopes to find ways to compensate the OMCs this amount during 2025–26.
While the average Saudi CP rose by 63 per cent to $629 per metric tonne between July 2023 and February 2025, the effective price for PMUY consumers was reduced by 44 per cent over the same period, Puri said.
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Introduced back in May 2016 as a flagship scheme with the objective of making clean cooking fuel such as LPG available to rural and deprived households, PMUY has won the current government support in large parts of rural India. It had 103.3 million beneficiaries as of March.
India imports more than 60 per cent of its domestic LPG consumption. Domestic LPG prices are linked to international market prices. The government continues to modulate the effective price to consumers for domestic LPG. Between FY21 and FY23, the average Saudi CP price rose to $712 per metric tonne, from $415 per metric tonne, the government said.
“However, the increase in international prices was not fully passed on to customers. This resulted in public-sector OMCs incurring ₹28,000 crore loss due to under-recoveries. Subsequently, the government approved a one-time compensation of ₹22,000 crore for OMCs to enable them to operate freely,” Puri said.

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