Last updated: 4 July 2026 · Contacts verified against official sources

FESCO Helpline Numbers & Complaint Guide 2026

Power gone, bill wrong, meter acting up? This page collects every working way to reach FESCO — phone, SMS and office — and shows you how to file a complaint that actually gets resolved instead of getting lost.

Before calling anyone, pull up your latest bill in our free FESCO bill checker so the amount, reading and dates are in front of you.

Verified FESCO Contact Channels

ChannelContactBest for
Head office exchange111-000-118General enquiries, being routed to the right department
Power complaint line118 (from landline in the FESCO region)Outages, no-power complaints, dangerous wires
SMS service8118 (after one-time registration)Bill alerts and complaint updates on a basic phone
Sub-division officeNumber & address printed on your own billBilling corrections, meter issues, detection bills — fastest route
Head office (in person / post)FESCO, West Canal Road, Abdullahpur, FaisalabadEscalations and formal written complaints

The most useful number is already in your hand: every FESCO bill prints the phone number and address of your own sub-division office in its header area. That office physically controls your meter, your readings and your ledger — for billing problems it will always beat any central helpline.

How to Register a Complaint That Gets Resolved

  1. Prepare before you call or visit. Keep your 14-digit reference number, CNIC, and the disputed bill in front of you. For a wrong-reading complaint, photograph your meter display with today’s date visible; for a payment dispute, keep the paid receipt or transaction SMS.
  2. State one problem, clearly. “My present reading is printed as 48,310 but my meter shows 47,655 — photograph attached” gets acted on; “my bill is too much” does not.
  3. Get the tracking ID. Every properly logged complaint generates a reference or complaint number. Write it down — no ID usually means nothing was logged.
  4. Follow up on the same ID. Quote it in every call or visit instead of re-explaining from zero. Ask for the expected resolution date.
  5. Escalate in order, in writing. If the sub-division stalls, move up the ladder below with a short written application referencing your complaint ID and dates.

The Escalation Ladder

LevelOfficer / ForumWhen to use
1SDO — Sub-Divisional Officer (office on your bill)First stop for every billing, reading and meter issue
2XEN — Executive Engineer, Division officeNo response or unsatisfactory reply from the SDO within a reasonable time
3SE — Superintending Engineer, Circle officeDivision level fails to resolve or the amount is significant
4Chief Executive Officer, FESCO head office, FaisalabadSerious unresolved disputes; attach the whole paper trail
5NEPRA Consumer AffairsFinal regulatory forum when FESCO’s own hierarchy has been exhausted

Which Complaint Goes Where

  • No electricity / area outage: 118 or your sub-division complaint office. Report fallen or sparking wires immediately as an emergency, and keep people away from the spot.
  • Wrong meter reading / inflated bill: sub-division revenue office with your meter photo, before the due date if possible.
  • Detection bill: ask the sub-division in writing for the calculation basis and the inspection report it relies on; you have the right to contest it up the ladder and before NEPRA.
  • Dead, burnt or fast meter: sub-division meter section; a testing request can be filed, and the meter can be checked at the lab in your presence.
  • Payment made but still showing unpaid: take the receipt or transaction ID to the sub-division; posting corrections are routine when proof exists.
  • Power theft in your area: report to the sub-division or head office; you may report without giving your name.

Smartphone users can also lodge and track complaints from the official FESCO LIGHT app — our FESCO app guide covers safe download and setup.

Know Your Rights (and Save Your Money)

Filing a complaint with FESCO is free at every level — no official fee exists for lodging, tracking or escalating a complaint, and no genuine FESCO employee will ask for cash to “fix” a bill. Anyone demanding money to correct a reading or restore a connection should be reported. Similarly, never hand your original documents to middlemen; submit copies yourself and keep the receiving stamp. If a complaint drags on, a one-page written application with dates, your complaint ID and copies of evidence — submitted at the next level up — moves files faster than a dozen phone calls.

Helpline FAQs

What is the main FESCO helpline number?
The head office exchange is 111-000-118, and 118 works for power complaints from landlines within the FESCO region. For billing matters, the sub-division number printed on your bill is usually faster than any central line.
Is there a fee for registering a FESCO complaint?
No. Lodging, tracking and escalating complaints is free at the sub-division, division, circle, head office and NEPRA levels. Treat any demand for money as misconduct and report it.
How long does complaint resolution take?
Simple outage and posting issues are often handled within a day or two; billing corrections can take longer because they may need a field visit. Always ask for an expected date against your complaint ID and follow up on it.
Can I complain without visiting an office?
Yes — phone complaints on the lines above and SMS-based follow-up via 8118 registration both work. For disputes involving money, back the phone complaint with a short written application so a paper trail exists.
Where do I complain if FESCO itself doesn’t resolve the issue?
After exhausting the SDO–XEN–SE–CEO ladder, NEPRA’s consumer affairs forum is the regulatory authority for distribution companies. Attach your complaint IDs, applications and evidence when approaching it.
What should I keep ready before calling?
Your 14-digit reference number, CNIC, the disputed bill, and any proof — meter photo, payment receipt or previous complaint ID. Complaints tied to a reference number and evidence get logged and resolved far quicker.