Mumbai's water jar goes up 30 floors in a service lift, dodges monsoon flooding, and lands on the doorstep before the family wakes up. That kind of operational discipline deserves better software than a wet notebook. JalYantra digitises every delivery, generates monthly bills automatically, and sends branded WhatsApp reminders to every Mumbai customer — in English or Hindi — under your own business name.
Tag customers by society, wing, and floor. One Powai tower can have 80 customers across 30 floors. JalYantra keeps every flat's ledger separate while letting your delivery boy mark a whole wing in seconds.
Send "Your water bill is ready" or "आपका पानी का बिल आ गया है" with a UPI link, under your business name. Customer taps, pays, you're notified. Direct Meta Cloud API — no BSP markup eating ₹2,000–₹5,000/month.
Andheri to Borivali to Mira Road is a 3-hour route. Hand each delivery boy his daily list by area, with society sequence already organised. No more "kal kya bacha tha?" calls.
Mumbai jars carry ₹400–₹800 deposits per piece. A 400-customer route with 1,200 jars at 10% annual loss = ₹48,000–₹96,000 unrecovered. JalYantra tracks jars per customer so you can chase the difference monthly, not yearly.
Mumbai consumes more packaged drinking water than any city in India — and the typical water jar journey here is unlike anywhere else. Distributors juggle society security gates, service-lift access slots, narrow lane parking, and the unspoken rule that the can must arrive before 9 AM. Routes are long: a single bike covers Borivali to Andheri in one morning, or Thane to Mulund in another.
What hasn't changed in 20 years is the paperwork. A 400-customer route still runs on a notebook that gets soaked in the monsoon, lost in the rush, and copied wrong at month-end. JalYantra is the digital replacement — not generic invoicing software, but a tool built specifically for water distribution: jar tracking, WhatsApp bills under your brand, route-wise rapid entry. See every feature →