Fuel rates on November 27: Check how much you have to pay for petrol and diesel prices in your city
The prices of petrol and diesel remain constant for the 23rd consecutive day on November 27th. The fuel rates have remained steady after the Central government had slashed excise duty on fuels resulting in a sharp decline in petrol and diesel prices.
The government has cut Rs 5 per litre on petrol and Rs 10 per litre on diesel, making it the major move in the last 3 years. This has come as a relief for the people battered by record-high retail fuel prices.
Mumbai remains at the top for the highest petrol price among the four metro cities. The petrol in Mumbai is priced at Rs 109.98 a litre whereas the petrol price in Chennai costs Rs 101.40, the lowest amongst the four metro cities.
The petrol costs Rs 103.97 a litre in the national capital while the rate of diesel was Rs 86.67 per litre.
Following are the prices of diesel and petrol in a few metros and Tier-II cities in the country:
- Mumbai
Petrol – Rs 109.98 per litre, Diesel – Rs 94.14 per litre
- Delhi
Petrol – Rs 103.97 per litre, Diesel – Rs 86.67 per litre
- Chennai
Petrol – Rs 101.40 per litre, Diesel – Rs 91.43 per litre
- Kolkata
Petrol – Rs 104.67 per litre, Diesel – Rs 89.79 per litre
- Bhopal
Petrol – Rs 107.23 per litre, Diesel – Rs 90.87 per litre
- Hyderabad
Petrol – Rs 108.20 per litre, Diesel – Rs 94.62 per litre
- Bengaluru
Petrol – Rs 100.58 per litre, Diesel – Rs 85.01 per litre
- Guwahati
Petrol – Rs 94.58 per litre, Diesel – Rs 81.29 per litre
- Lucknow
Petrol – Rs 95.28 per litre, Diesel – Rs 86.80 per litre
- Gandhinagar
Petrol – Rs 95.35 per litre, Diesel – Rs 89.33 per litre
- Thiruvananthapuram
Petrol – Rs 106.36 per litre, Diesel – Rs 93.47 per litre
Prior to the tax cuts, petrol and diesel prices had risen by more than Rs 26 per litre since January 1, 2021. Between March 2020 and May 2020, the excise tax on petrol and diesel was hiked by Rs 13 and Rs 16 per litre, respectively, and was at a high of Rs 31.8 on diesel and Rs 32.9 on petrol when the Centre decided to cut duty.