🔴 Breaking News
⚡ Energy Crisis 2026
Updated March 11, 2026
⏱ 10 Min Read
LPG Shortage in India 2026
Causes, Impact on Restaurants, and Government Response — Full Report
India is facing a serious LPG gas shortage in March 2026. The Iran war has disrupted the Strait of Hormuz. India gets 90% of its imported LPG through this route. Commercial supply has nearly stopped. Restaurants in Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, and Maharashtra are on the brink of closure. Here is everything you need to know.
📌 Direct Answer — LPG Shortage India 2026
Why is there an LPG shortage in India right now?
The US-Israel war against Iran has disrupted the Strait of Hormuz. India imports 90% of its LPG through this narrow sea route. So when conflict blocked this route, India’s LPG imports fell sharply. The government then prioritised household supply. As a result, commercial kitchens — restaurants, hotels, dhabas, canteens — across Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra, Delhi, and West Bengal are now running out of gas. Commercial supply has nearly stopped since March 9, 2026.
🔥 What Is LPG and Why It Is Important for India
LPG stands for Liquefied Petroleum Gas. It combines propane and butane. Manufacturers store it as liquid inside metal cylinders under pressure. When you open the valve, it converts to gas and burns cleanly as cooking fuel. So homes, hotels, restaurants, dhabas, canteens, and industrial kitchens across India all rely on it daily.
India is the world’s second-largest importer of LPG. The country consumed 31.3 million metric tonnes in FY2025. India imports about 67% of all the LPG it uses from other countries. Domestic refineries supply the remaining 33%. Furthermore, about 33 crore households and over 5 lakh restaurants and commercial kitchens depend on LPG for daily cooking.
There are two types of LPG cylinders in India. First, the 14.2 kg domestic cylinder — used in homes and subsidised by the government. Second, the 19 kg commercial cylinder — used by restaurants, hotels, canteens, and bakeries at market price. Right now, the commercial cylinder supply has nearly stopped completely. Domestic supply is delayed but still available.
🏠
Domestic LPG — 14.2 kg
Used in homes. Subsidised under PM Ujjwala Yojana. 33 crore households use this. Currently delayed by 2–8 days in some cities. Still available — not fully cut off.
🍽️
Commercial LPG — 19 kg
Used by restaurants, hotels, bakeries. No subsidy — market priced. Price already hiked by ₹115. Supply has nearly stopped since March 9. Most affected by the current crisis.
🌍
India’s Import Dependency
India imports 67% of all LPG. About 90% of these imports come through the Strait of Hormuz. So any blockage at this single route directly threatens India’s entire LPG supply chain.
💡 Key Fact: India’s restaurant industry generates over ₹5.7 lakh crore in annual turnover and employs more than 80 lakh people. About 90% of these restaurants run entirely on commercial LPG. So a gas shortage is directly a threat to jobs, livelihoods, and daily food access for crores of Indians.
📊 3 Key Facts About the 2026 LPG Crisis
⚡
Crisis Started Overnight
Commercial supply nearly stopped on March 9, 2026. A government notification on March 5 created confusion among distributors. Many stopped delivering commercial cylinders as a precaution. So restaurants ran out of gas within days.
🏭
Double Blow — Price Hike + Shortage
Just before the shortage, the government raised commercial LPG prices by ₹115 and domestic prices by ₹60. So restaurants are paying more for a product they can barely get. Black market prices have shot up to ₹2,000 for a cylinder that normally costs ₹910.
📦
India Has 12–16 Weeks of Reserves
The government says India has enough LPG reserves to last 12–16 weeks. All refineries are running at 100% capacity. Refineries have raised LPG production by 10%. So a total shutdown is not imminent — but supply disruption is very real right now.
⚠️ Main Reason
Why Is There an LPG Shortage? — The Iran War Explained
The root cause of India’s LPG shortage is the war between the USA, Israel, and Iran in March 2026. US and Israeli forces launched strikes against Iran. Iran retaliated immediately. As a result, the Strait of Hormuz — the world’s most critical energy shipping lane — came under direct threat of closure.
The Strait of Hormuz is a narrow sea channel between Iran and Oman. About one-fifth of the world’s oil and LPG moves through this route daily. India imports roughly 90% of its LPG through this channel from countries such as Saudi Arabia, UAE, and Kuwait. So when the conflict hit, India’s LPG supply chain broke down almost immediately.
Additionally, a Ministry of Petroleum notification on March 5, 2026 created confusion among LPG suppliers and distributors. Many stopped delivering commercial cylinders to hotels and restaurants as a precaution. This made the shortage even worse than the global disruption alone would have caused.
Step
01
US-Israel Strike on Iran — March 2026
The United States and Israel launched military strikes against Iran in early March 2026. Iran responded with retaliatory attacks on multiple fronts. The entire Middle East entered an intense military conflict and energy instability phase.
Step
02
Strait of Hormuz Threatened
Iran targeted the Strait of Hormuz. Shipping companies became unwilling to risk tankers through the conflict zone. Insurance costs for tankers rose sharply. Consequently, LPG shipments to India slowed dramatically almost overnight.
Step
03
India’s Imports Fall — Government Prioritises Homes
India’s LPG imports dropped. The government prioritised household supply first. So domestic 14.2 kg cylinders were protected. Commercial supply — which restaurants and hotels depend on — was effectively cut off in most major cities.
Step
04
Commercial Sector — Near-Total Shutdown ⭐
By March 9–10, restaurants across Mumbai, Bengaluru, Chennai, Kolkata, Delhi, Tirupati, and Vizag had run out of commercial LPG. Most have only a few days of backup stock. The new 25-day refill rule has made quick restocking impossible. Restaurant associations are warning of mass closures within days.
💡 The Chain Reaction: Iran War → Strait of Hormuz blocked → India LPG imports fall → Government protected homes first → Commercial kitchens ran dry. Every link in this chain happened within one week.
🔴 Most Affected
Commercial LPG Is Most Affected — Here Is Why
While domestic household supply is protected and delayed, the commercial sector has borne the full force of this crisis. The 19 kg commercial LPG cylinder — used in restaurants, hotels, canteens, bakeries, and dhabas — has seen a near-complete supply halt.
There are three main reasons why commercial users are far worse off than households. First, commercial LPG is not subsidised — it is priced at the market rate. Second, the government’s priority order places household and piped gas supply above commercial demand. Third, small distributors stopped commercial deliveries after the March 5 ministry notification created confusion about what was allowed.
❌ No Subsidy — No Protection
Domestic cylinders are subsidised and politically sensitive. So the government protects them first. Commercial cylinders are market-priced. Therefore, when supply falls, commercial users get cut off first — without any safety net.
❌ Priority Order Excludes Restaurants
The government’s Natural Gas Supply Regulation Order 2026 lists four priority sectors: household piped gas, CNG for public transport, LPG production, and essential pipelines. Restaurants are not on this list. So they receive gas only after all priority users are served — and right now, there is nothing left for them.
❌ Small Eateries Hit First
Small and medium eateries typically keep only two to three days of reserve stock. Large hotel chains have some backup. So the corner dhaba, the college canteen, and the small restaurant near your office — these are the first to run out and close.
❌ Induction Cooking Not Viable
Switching to electric or induction cooking is not easy for commercial kitchens. Indian cuisine requires high-intensity, fast-paced cooking that is only efficient on open flame. Most commercial kitchens do not have the electrical capacity for full induction cooking either.
| City / State | Commercial LPG Status | Restaurants Affected | Severity |
|---|
| Mumbai, Maharashtra | Supply halted since March 9 | ~8,000 hotels | 🔴 Critical |
| Bengaluru, Karnataka | Only 10% got supply on March 10 | Majority shut | 🔴 Critical |
| Chennai, Tamil Nadu | Near-total halt warned | ~10,000 to shut | 🔴 Critical |
| Kolkata, West Bengal | 40% eateries disrupted | 2,000+ restaurants | 🟠 Serious |
| Delhi-NCR / Gurugram | Acute shortage reported | Black market at ₹2,000 | 🟠 Serious |
| Hyderabad, Telangana | 2–3 days stock remaining | Ramadan-season crisis | 🟠 Serious |
| Tirupati, Andhra Pradesh | ~1 week stock remaining | Pilgrims at risk | 🟡 Warning |
📍 Where Is the LPG Shortage Being Reported Across India?
The crisis is not limited to one state. It has spread rapidly across India. Here is a complete state-by-state picture as of March 11, 2026. Commercial LPG supply has effectively stopped or severely slowed in every major city.
🔴 Maharashtra
- 8,000 hotels in Mumbai affected
- 50% of restaurants may shut in 2 days
- AHAR warns of mass closures
- Domestic cylinders delayed 2–8 days
- Black market: ₹2,000 per cylinder
🔴 Karnataka
- Only 10% restaurants got gas on March 10
- DY CM DK Shivakumar confirmed hotel impact
- Bengaluru Hotels Association warned shutdown
- Restaurants cutting menus to save gas
🔴 Tamil Nadu
- 10,000 establishments warned of shutdown
- Iconic Annapoorna Hotel reduced its menu
- CM Stalin wrote to PM Modi
- 10,000 small-medium restaurants at risk
🟡 Telangana
- State needs 7–7.5 lakh cylinders per month
- Private distributors: 2–3 days stock left
- Hyderabad hit hard during Ramadan
- Commercial price already up by ₹115
🟡 Delhi-NCR
- Gurugram restaurants facing acute shortage
- Some shifting to induction as backup
- NRAI warned of catastrophic closures
- Black market flourishing at ₹2,000
🟡 West Bengal
- 40% of Kolkata’s 5,000 restaurants disrupted
- 30–40% have only a few days of stock
- NRAI Kolkata warns: “Widespread closures inevitable”
🗺 Situation in Andhra Pradesh — Tirupati, Vizag and Beyond
Andhra Pradesh is among the officially confirmed affected states. The FHRAI has confirmed commercial LPG disruptions in Andhra Pradesh. Karnataka, Telangana, Delhi, and Maharashtra are also on the official list of affected states. For people in Vizag, Vijayawada, Guntur, and Tirupati — this crisis is real and it is happening now.
📍 Tirupati — Temple City on the Edge
Hotels and restaurants in Tirupati are preparing for operational disruption. Many establishments currently have LPG stocks that may last only about one week. If fresh supplies do not arrive soon, eateries may be forced to scale down or shut. This directly affects pilgrims. Thousands travel to Tirumala every day for darshan. Many depend on city eateries for meals.
The Tirupati Hotels and Restaurants Association (THARA) has submitted a formal representation to the District Collector seeking urgent intervention. The association warned clearly. Thousands of small hotels, roadside eateries, and food vendors depend entirely on regular cylinder deliveries. They have no alternative cooking method to fall back on.
Only a few large restaurants in Tirupati have electric cooking facilities or piped gas connections. Smaller and medium-sized eateries — which serve most of the pilgrims — cannot afford or access such alternatives. So if supply is not restored within a week, food access for devotees at one of India’s busiest pilgrimage towns will be directly affected.
📍 Vizag (Visakhapatnam), Vijayawada, Guntur
These cities are also under the same national commercial LPG disruption. Distributors across AP have reduced commercial cylinder deliveries to follow the government’s priority order. Restaurants in Vizag — especially small ones in the steel plant worker colonies, Rushikonda, and the port area — are facing the same supply crunch as the rest of the country. The authorities are monitoring the situation, but no AP-specific government order exists yet.
💡 For AP Residents: Contact your LPG distributor directly for updates. Do not buy from black market sellers — it is illegal and dangerous. Restaurant owners in AP should write to the District Collector and contact FHRAI Andhra Pradesh chapter to register supply complaints collectively.
🌍 Global Supply Disruptions — The Bigger Picture
India’s LPG crisis is not happening in isolation. It is part of a much larger global energy disruption caused by the Iran war. Here is how the global supply chain is breaking down and why it is so difficult to fix quickly.
🛢️ Strait of Hormuz — The World’s Energy Chokepoint
About one-fifth of the world’s oil and LPG moves through the Strait of Hormuz every day. Iran controls the northern coast of this strait. So when Iran targets this route in retaliation against US-Israeli strikes, global energy shipping is directly threatened. India, Japan, South Korea, and China all depend heavily on this route. Therefore, India is not the only country facing supply pressure — the entire Asia-Pacific energy market is affected.
📈 LNG and LPG Prices Surge Globally
Asian LNG prices have surged sharply since the conflict began. The disruption has changed the economics of global gas trade. Suppliers from distant countries such as Australia, USA, and Canada are now viable alternatives for India. Shipping costs are higher and lead times are longer. However, they can help fill the gap. However, these alternative routes take longer. So supply will not normalise overnight even if the conflict eases.
✈️ India Diversifying Sources — But It Takes Time
India is already sourcing LPG from 40 countries. The government has increased non-Hormuz import routes from 55% to 70% of total imports. Additionally, India has increased domestic refinery LPG production by 10%. However, these measures cannot fully replace the volume that was coming through the Strait of Hormuz in the short term. So the supply gap will continue for some weeks.
🍽️ Impact on Restaurants and Small Businesses
The LPG shortage is destroying the hospitality sector’s daily operations. About 90% of India’s restaurants rely entirely on commercial LPG to cook food. The industry employs over 80 lakh people and generates ₹5.7 lakh crore in annual turnover. So this gas crisis is not just a cooking inconvenience — it is an economic emergency.
The NRAI represents over 5 lakh restaurants. It has warned the government of “catastrophic closure” if supply is not restored. Furthermore, students, workers, daily-wage earners, and medical professionals depend on small eateries for affordable meals. If these restaurants close, they lose food access entirely.
❌ Restaurants Reducing Menus
Many hotels and restaurants are cutting down their food menus to conserve remaining gas stock. Even iconic institutions are affected. Annapoorna Hotel in Coimbatore has never shut on festival days. Yet it issued a public apology and cut its menu. So customers are getting fewer choices and are paying more for what remains.
❌ Black Market LPG Spreading Danger
Black market sellers in Delhi and Mumbai now charge ₹2,000 for a cylinder that normally costs ₹910. Some commercial establishments are also misusing domestic 14.2 kg subsidised cylinders — which is illegal and extremely dangerous. Distributors are warning this practice could cause fatal accidents.
❌ Students and Workers Losing Food Access
Students, daily-wage labourers, and construction workers depend entirely on small eateries for cheap daily meals. Medical professionals near hospitals rely on them too. When these restaurants shut, these groups have no affordable alternative. The Bangalore Hotels Association specifically highlighted that the closure would affect “common people, students, and medical professionals.”
❌ IPL 2026 Also Under Risk
IPL 2026 starts on March 28. Hotels hosting IPL teams, broadcast crews, and event staff across multiple cities all depend on commercial LPG for large-scale kitchen operations. BCCI Chairperson Arun Dhumal confirmed the board is actively monitoring the situation and will take action if hotels raise supply problems.
❌ Job Losses and Business Closures
If the shortage continues for more than a week, many small restaurants will not have the funds to survive without revenue. Permanent closures will follow temporary ones. Millions of kitchen workers, delivery staff, and support staff in the hospitality sector face job losses as a result.
🏛️ Government Actions Taken So Far
The government has responded to the crisis with several measures. However, the focus has been on protecting household supply. Commercial restaurants are still waiting for meaningful relief. Here is a complete list of all steps taken as of March 11, 2026.
✔
Refineries Ordered to Maximise LPG Production
All oil refineries are now running at 100% capacity. Refineries have lifted LPG production by 10%. They now channel all extra output to domestic household supply. This ensures that home users continue to get cylinders even as imports slow.
✔
Non-Hormuz Import Routes Increased to 70%
India has diversified LPG imports from routes that bypass the Strait of Hormuz — increasing from 55% to 70% of total imports. India is now sourcing from approximately 40 countries. Petroleum Minister Hardeep Singh Puri stated that “uninterrupted energy imports are flowing in from routes not impacted by the conflict.” The government says India has 12–16 weeks of reserves.
✔
25-Day Refill Rule to Stop Hoarding
The government extended the inter-booking period for domestic cylinders from 21 days to 25 days. This move prevents panic buying and black marketing of domestic cylinders. However, it is a temporary measure and may be reversed once supply stabilises.
✔
Hospitals and Educational Institutions Exempted
Hospitals and schools continue to receive imported LPG without interruption. These are classified as essential services. Additionally, establishments connected to piped gas networks such as GAIL’s city gas distribution are also unaffected by the shortage.
✔
Committee Formed to Review Restaurant Requests
The Ministry has formed a committee of three Executive Directors from Oil Marketing Companies. This committee will review supply representations from restaurants, hotels, and commercial industries. Supply will be prioritised by merit and necessity. However, no timeline has been given for when normal commercial supply will resume.
✔
PM Modi’s Direct Intervention
PM Modi told the Cabinet on March 10 that the war should not impact the common man. Petroleum Minister Hardeep Singh Puri personally briefed the PM on the situation. The government invoked the Essential Commodities Act 1955 to ensure gas distribution for critical needs. The government has also constituted the Natural Gas Supply Regulation Order 2026 to govern gas allocation priority.
💡 Key Government Statement: Petroleum Minister Puri said: “No shortage of energy in India and no cause for concern.” However, industry bodies strongly disagree — and ground reality in restaurants across India tells a very different story right now.
⚡ Possible Effects If the Crisis Continues
If the LPG shortage is not resolved quickly, the consequences will go far beyond restaurants closing. Here is what could happen across India in the short, medium, and long term.
🍽️
Mass Restaurant Closures
50% of restaurants in Mumbai may shut temporarily in 2 days. Similar mass closures could follow in Bengaluru, Chennai, Kolkata, and Delhi if supply is not restored. Permanent closures are likely for small eateries that cannot survive even a few days without revenue.
💰
Food Price Inflation
As fewer restaurants operate and gas costs rise, the price of meals will increase. Food inflation was already a concern in India before this crisis. A prolonged LPG shortage will push food prices up further — hitting low-income households and the middle class the hardest.
🏘️
Domestic Supply Under Threat
Right now, homes are protected. But if the Iran war escalates further and global imports fall more, domestic supply could also face pressure. Delivery delays of 2–8 days in Mumbai and Delhi are early warning signs of growing stress on the household supply chain too.
🗳️
Political Pressure in Election States
Tamil Nadu, Kerala, West Bengal, Assam, and Puducherry are due to go to polls in the first half of 2026. LPG availability and price are politically explosive issues. So the government faces enormous pressure to resolve this crisis before elections. However, quick resolution depends on the Iran conflict — which is outside India’s control.
🏭
80 Lakh Job Losses Possible
The restaurant industry employs over 80 lakh people directly. If closures spread widely, job losses in kitchen staff, delivery workers, waiters, and support staff will be massive. These are largely informal sector workers with no savings cushion or unemployment protection.
⚡
Opportunity: Accelerating India’s Energy Shift
The crisis is pushing restaurants to explore induction cooking, electric burners, and piped gas connections. This could accelerate India’s long-overdue shift away from dependence on imported LPG. In the long term, that is a positive development for India’s energy security.
📝 Conclusion — What You Should Do Right Now
India’s LPG shortage of March 2026 is a serious crisis driven by a geopolitical war that India did not start and cannot fully control. The Iran war has exposed India’s dangerous over-dependence on a single shipping route for a fuel that crores of people and millions of businesses use every day.
The government says India has 12–16 weeks of reserves and is working hard to restore supply. So domestic household supply should remain protected. However, commercial users — restaurants, hotels, dhabas, bakeries — will continue to face serious disruption until the Iran conflict eases and global shipping routes reopen.
For Andhra Pradesh residents — especially in Tirupati, Vizag, and Vijayawada — the authorities are monitoring the situation. It has not yet reached the same severity as Mumbai or Bengaluru. However, act now: book your next refill on time, do not panic-buy, avoid black market cylinders, and keep a backup cooking option ready just in case.
✅ What To Do Now
- Book your refill on time — do not wait till empty
- Use your official distributor only
- Report delays on PGPORTAL or 1906 helpline
- Consider buying an induction cooker as backup
- Restaurant owners: register complaint with FHRAI
- Stay updated — situation is evolving daily
❌ What NOT To Do
- Do NOT buy from black market — highly dangerous
- Do NOT hoard multiple cylinders at home
- Do NOT use domestic subsidised cylinders commercially
- Do NOT spread false rumours of total shutdown
- Do NOT panic if delivery is delayed — it will come
💬 Frequently Asked Questions — LPG Shortage India 2026
Why is there an LPG shortage in India in March 2026?
The US-Israel war against Iran has disrupted shipping through the Strait of Hormuz. India imports about 90% of its LPG through this route. So when conflict blocked this channel, India’s supply fell sharply. The government then prioritised household supply. As a result, commercial kitchens — hotels, restaurants, dhabas, canteens — across India are now running out of gas. Commercial supply nearly stopped since March 9, 2026.
Is domestic LPG supply affected for households in India?
Household supply is still available but delayed. Delivery timelines have stretched to 2–8 days in cities like Mumbai, Delhi, and Bengaluru. However, the government has confirmed that India has reserves for 12–16 weeks. So domestic consumers are protected for now. The new 25-day refill rule also helps prevent hoarding and stabilise supply. Do not panic-buy.
Is the LPG shortage affecting Andhra Pradesh?
Yes. Andhra Pradesh is among the officially confirmed affected states. Tirupati is the most impacted city in AP — where the Tirupati Hotels and Restaurants Association (THARA) has already written to the District Collector. Stocks in many Tirupati eateries may last only about one week. Vizag, Vijayawada, and Guntur are also affected. Residents should book refills on time and avoid black market cylinders.
What has the government done to fix the LPG shortage?
The government has taken several steps. All refineries are running at 100% capacity and Refineries have raised LPG production by 10%. Non-Hormuz import routes now cover 70% of imports, up from 55%. The government introduced a 25-day refill rule to stop hoarding. Hospitals and schools continue to get supply. A committee of Oil Marketing Company directors now reviews restaurant supply requests. PM Modi has directed that the war should not impact the common man.
What should restaurant owners do during the LPG shortage?
Restaurant owners should first register their supply request with the committee formed by the Oil Ministry. Contact your state FHRAI chapter immediately for collective representation. Explore temporary alternatives — induction cooking or electric burners — for essential items while waiting for supply to restore. Do not purchase domestic cylinders for commercial use — it is illegal and dangerous. Reduce your menu to conserve remaining gas stock.
Will LPG prices go up further in India in 2026?
Commercial LPG was already hiked by ₹115 and domestic by ₹60 just before the shortage began. If the Iran war continues and global LPG prices rise further, another commercial price hike is likely. However, the government faces strong political pressure to keep domestic prices stable — especially with five state elections approaching. So further domestic price hikes are unlikely in the very short term. But the situation is evolving rapidly.
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