Mon, Mar 30, 2026
Money
E-sewa facilitates online payment of water bills for customers in Itahari
E-sewa, an online payment platform popular among customers in Nepal for mobile recharge, top-up, payment of electricity bills, and purchase of bus, airlines and film tickets, announced that customers in Itahari can pay their water bills through their e-sewa service.bookmark
Published at : March 26, 2018
Updated at : March 26, 2018 08:31
Kathmandu
E-sewa, an online payment platform popular among customers in Nepal for mobile recharge, top-up, payment of electricity bills, and purchase of bus, airlines and film tickets, announced that customers in Itahari can pay their water bills through their e-sewa service.
Itahari Small Town Drinking Water And Sanitation Users Association worked with e-sewa to facilitate payment of drinking water bills online.
Ram Prasad Chaulagain, chairman of the association, said, “Many customers had to come to our office from places far away to pay electricity bills.
Customers had to pay up to Rs50 for paying Rs40 of electricity bill,” adding, “Bill payment through e-sewa, however, has relieved customers from the burden of coming to the office to pay bills.” IT Officer Raju Dangal said, “Along with online payment, we have also digitised meter reading from our office.”
More than two dozen drinking water offices across the country already provide bill payment facility online through e-sewa’s platform. Customers can pay bills through a mobile app named Metremark. (PR)
Most Read from Money
Nepal risks losing up to 132,000 jobs, $1 billion after LDC exit
Global oil shock tests Nepal, but electric cooking cushions blow
Third graft case filed over China-funded Pokhara airport, 21 charged
Nepal’s 17 pride projects may take 41 years to finish, warns World Bank
Inside Nepal’s fake rescue racket
Editor's Picks
Nepal risks losing up to 132,000 jobs, $1 billion after LDC exit
Raped and left to die, teenager’s family wants answers
Bengal tigers move to mid-hills. Sighted in Palpa, Arghakhanchi
Escaping poverty at home, Nepali women fall into the Gulf trap
Once the heartbeat of Nepali democracy, now a ghostly shell
E-PAPER | March 30, 2026
×




16.12°C Kathmandu













