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Nepal · Electricity bill

Check your NEA bill online

Enter your sc number to view your latest NEA bill amount, due date, and consumption.

  • Official source — we route to Nepal Electricity Authority.
  • No login required.
  • Free to use, every time.

Service Connection (SC) number on NEA bills, 8 to 12 digits.

Opens official portal · Powered by Nepal Electricity Authority.

NEA complaints — the escalation ladder

Electricity Regulatory Commission's Standards of Performance regulation defines the framework for NEA complaints. This page walks through the levels with statutory turnaround days and what each forum is empowered to do.

  1. NEA customer service

    1150

    Statutory turnaround: 15 days.

  2. Electricity Regulatory Commission

    https://www.erc.gov.np/

    Statutory turnaround: 60 days.

High-voltage power lines silhouetted against a warm dusk sky

Step 1 — NEA customer service

The first stop for any NEA complaint is the operator's own customer service. Call 1150.

Most billing-related disputes resolve at this level. Have the bill in hand when you call, photograph your meter reading and date-stamp the photo on your phone, and have any prior ticket numbers ready.

Always get a complaint reference number. Without it, the complaint does not formally exist in the operator's system. Note it on the bill you are disputing.

Step 2 — regulator: ERC

If NEA does not resolve within the statutory turnaround (typically 5-15 working days), escalate to Electricity Regulatory Commission.

The regulator's consumer-affairs office is at https://www.erc.gov.np/. Most regulators offer an online complaint form; some also accept email and postal complaints.

Document the trail. Include the original bill, your complaint reference at the operator, the operator's response (or lack thereof), and any photographic evidence (meter readings, damaged seal, etc.).

The regulator's office is a quasi-judicial forum empowered to issue binding orders against the operator. Hearings are typically free of cost; you can represent yourself.

High-voltage power lines silhouetted against a warm dusk sky
High-voltage power lines silhouetted against a warm dusk sky

Common complaint categories

Disputed meter reading — Step 1 with photo evidence; typically resolved here. Wrong tariff classification — Step 1, escalate to Step 2 with property documents if denied. Overbilling on percentage levies — Step 1; document the arithmetic mismatch. Disconnection without notice — Step 1 with timestamped photo evidence; escalate to Step 2 if not resolved promptly. Outage compensation — Step 1 with outage log; escalate to Step 2 for binding compensation order.

Frequently asked questions

Is the regulator a court?
It is a quasi-judicial forum. Orders are binding on the operator but appealable to the courts.
Do I need a lawyer?
No. You can represent yourself; most consumer complaints are heard without lawyers.
Is there a fee?
No fee at the regulator level. Operator customer service is also free.

Monthly NEA Bill Guides

Step-by-step guides for checking your bill by month — with tariff context, due dates, and payment tips.