What is the Cross Subsidy Program?
The Cross Subsidy Program — abbreviated CSS and administered through the Power Information Technology Company (PITC) on css.pitc.com.pk — is a Government of Pakistan initiative to make sure the protected (lifeline) electricity tariff actually reaches the households it was designed for. The way the Pakistan electricity tariff is structured by NEPRA (National Electric Power Regulatory Authority), domestic users whose monthly consumption stays under a defined threshold — typically up to 200 units per month — are entitled to a softer per-unit rate than households that use more. Without an identity check, however, the protected tariff was historically applied to any meter whose recent bills happened to fall under that line — including secondary meters of well-off households, vacant plot meters, and short-let commercial conversions. CSS uses CNIC and OTP-based occupant verification to make sure the subsidy stays inside the homes that need it most.
Practically, that means a verified protected consumer pays meaningfully less for the same units consumed: the energy-charge slab is lower, the fixed-charge component is often waived, and the monthly FPA(fuel price adjustment) pass-through is frequently softened for protected slabs by NEPRA. For a typical 150-unit-a-month household across MEPCO, LESCO, IESCO, FESCO, GEPCO, PESCO, HESCO, SEPCO, QESCO, TESCO, and HAZECO, this can translate to a saving of several hundred to several thousand rupees on every bill — money that adds up to a full month’s groceries over a year.
How does the css.pitc.com.pk flow actually work?
The PITC portal is intentionally simple — there are only two pages the consumer actually sees, not four. checkbillsonline.com handles the front of the funnel — validating that your reference number is the right shape (10–14 digits) and copying it to your clipboard — and then hands you off to the official PITC site for everything that involves your CNIC, OTP, and final registration. We do not store, log, or proxy any consumer data.
- Reference entry on the PITC homepage — there is a single input field on css.pitc.com.pk. You paste your 14-digit reference (or the 10-digit consumer number for newer SAP-based meters) and click submit. PITC’s server runs the eligibility logic instantly — there is no dedicated “eligibility result” page.
- Register page shows your owner details — if the reference is valid and eligible, PITC redirects you to https://css.pitc.com.pk/register. This page displays your meter owner details (consumer name, father/husband, address, sanctioned load, tariff) and contains the occupant CNIC + mobile fields. The registered consumer on the meter is often different from the person actually living there — the portal explicitly asks for the current occupant’s CNIC so the subsidy is anchored to the household paying the bill.
- OTP verification— clicking Send OTP triggers a one-time password by SMS to the mobile you entered. The number must be a PTA biometric-verified SIM in the same household’s name. The OTP closes the loop between the meter, the CNIC, and the mobile.
- Done — your registration is queued for back-end checks by your DISCO and PITC. In most cases the protected tariff begins reflecting on your next billing cycle. If your six-month rolling consumption is already inside the protected band, you should see the lower per-unit rate immediately.
Who qualifies (in plain language)
Cross Subsidy Program eligibility is computed on three intersecting tests. The household must satisfy all three for the protected tariff to be applied. For the full rule sheet — including tenant scenarios, joint-meter cases, and net-metered solar setups — read who qualifies for CSS.
- Tariff category — the meter must be on a domestic tariff (not commercial, industrial, agricultural, or bulk supply).
- Six-month rolling average — your average monthly consumption over the last six months must stay at or below the protected threshold (typically 200 units).
- Single live connection per CNIC — the same CNIC cannot appear as the registered consumer or verified occupant on more than one live domestic connection in the country.
Why was the Cross Subsidy Program created?
Pakistan’s electricity tariff has been progressive for decades — the more you consume, the higher the unit rate climbs. The intent has always been to keep electricity affordable for low-income households while letting heavier industrial and commercial users pay closer to the cost of generation, transmission, and distribution. In practice, however, the slab system was applied automatically based on each month’s metered units, with no check that the cheaper slab was actually flowing to the household it was designed for. The result was leakage: secondary meters in wealthy homes (servant quarters, guest annexes), commercial-as-residential conversions, and even vacant plot meters all collected protected-slab pricing.
CSS closes that leakage by overlaying a CNIC- and OTP-verified occupant on top of each domestic meter. Once a meter is registered, the system can trace protected status to a verified household head rather than to an anonymous reference number. In return for one short registration, the genuine low-usage household keeps the soft tariff month after month, with no paperwork, no fee, and no DISCO visit.
How CSS connects with your monthly bill check
CSS is most useful when you check your bills regularly so you can see the protected tariff being applied. The bill-check pages on this site read the same PITC dataset that CSS uses, so once you are registered you can confirm — on every cycle — that the tariff line on your bill matches the protected slab. If your bill suddenly shows the unprotected rate, that is usually a sign that your six-month rolling average has crept above the threshold.
Many CSS-registered households use these monthly checks before each summer to plan how heavily they can run their air-conditioning without losing protected status. Combine this page with each DISCO’s bill page (linked below) to build a complete picture of your protected slab usage.
Cross Subsidy Program across all 11 DISCOs
CSS is a federal program — it runs identically across every DISCO (distribution company) that bills through the PITC platform: MEPCO, LESCO, FESCO, IESCO, GEPCO, PESCO, HESCO, SEPCO, QESCO, TESCO, and HAZECO. Karachi consumers (K-Electric) follow a separate, similar mechanism not handled by PITC. Use the reference-number lookup at the top of this page no matter which DISCO bills your connection — the portal autodetects your DISCO from the reference. Once registered, cross-link to your specific DISCO’s regular monthly bill check page for the official duplicate:
Is the eligibility lookup safe?
Yes. checkbillsonline.com does not see, store, or transmit any of your data. The form on this page validates the reference shape locally, copies it to your clipboard, and opens the official css.pitc.com.pkhomepage in a new browser tab. Your CNIC and mobile are typed only on the official PITC screen. We never ask you to pay; neither does PITC. If anyone calls or messages you offering to “fast-track” your CSS registration for a fee, it is a scam — report it via our contact page.
