Your rights & how to complain
Know what you're owed and how to push back — your rights as a consumer, and the step-by-step path from the company's grievance officer all the way up to BERC.
In short
- Rates are set nationally by BERC — a company can't raise them
- There's a clear ladder for complaints: office → GRS → appeal → BERC
- You have a legal right to object to the tariff
What you're owed
Your rights as a consumer
- One meter, a clear bill, and the national per-unit rate set by BERC — a company can't raise the rate on its own.
- The right to ask for a re-check and a meter test if a bill looks wrong.
- The right to be served within the charter timeline for connection, reconnection and the rest.
- The right to lodge a complaint and have it resolved — at the company, and beyond it at BERC.
- The right to object at a tariff public hearing (BERC Act 2003, §34).
How to escalate
If a complaint isn't resolved
Local office
GRS / grievance officer
Appeal officer
grs.gov.bd / BERC
Next
Make it count
If a bill is wrong, start with fix a wrong bill; every number is on hotlines; and how long each service should take is on service timelines.
Frequently asked questions
More citizen services
Pay bill & recharge
Pay your bill or top up a prepaid meter the easy way — which apps work for your company, the fees and minimum recharge, and how to punch in your token.
Get a new connection
Applying for a new meter? Here are the documents, fees and steps for each company — and the official portal to apply on.
Fix a wrong bill
Got a bill that looks wrong or far too high? Here's how to get it re-checked, when a meter test helps, and the deadline the company has to settle your complaint.
Transfer to your name
Moved into a place where the meter is still in someone else's name? Here's how a name correction and a full ownership transfer work, and what each one needs.