Delhi NCR's water route doesn't end at the Ring Road. It runs from Old Delhi havelis to DLF Phase-5 towers, from Noida's tech parks to Faridabad's industrial zones, from Dwarka's sector grids to Greater Kailash's bungalow lanes. JalYantra replaces the paper khaata with one app that handles every distinct route, generates monthly bills, and sends branded Hindi WhatsApp reminders to every customer — automatically.
DLF Phase 2 in the morning, Vasant Kunj after lunch, Noida Sector 62 evening — every route is different. Tag customers by city and area. Each delivery boy gets only his daily list.
"आपका मासिक पानी का बिल आ गया है — UPI link नीचे" goes out from your business name. Customer taps, pays via PhonePe/Paytm/GPay, you're notified.
Mark 150 customers across DLF Phase 1-5 in under 3 minutes. Numeric keypad, big buttons, designed for thumb-typing while waiting at a society gate.
DLF and Vasant Kunj jars often carry ₹600–₹800 deposits. A 300-customer premium route with 900 jars at 10% annual loss = ₹54,000–₹72,000 unrecovered. JalYantra tracks every jar.
Delhi NCR is geographically vast and economically split — and the water business looks completely different in each pocket. A Vasant Kunj farmhouse customer pays ₹80 a jar and tips the delivery boy; a Faridabad industrial unit buys 200 jars a week at ₹35. DLF Phase 5 is high-rise vertical delivery; Old Delhi's Khari Baoli is narrow-lane bicycle work. One distributor often handles three or four of these zones, with multiple delivery boys, each on a different route.
Paper systems collapse at this scale. You can't run 400 customers across 3 NCR districts on a notebook anymore. JalYantra is the digital replacement — built for water distribution specifically, supporting multi-location, multi-worker operations from day one. See every feature →