Job Recruitment Website - Property management - Can residents only pay the electricity bill in the property with their electricity cards?

Can residents only pay the electricity bill in the property with their electricity cards?

The residential electricity card is not only to pay the electricity bill of the property. ?

If the power supply bureau has asked the property company to help collect the electricity fee, then the owner should pay in the property company, not through the network, and the property company must charge according to the relevant agreements and standards, and can't charge at will.

If the power supply bureau does not authorize the property company to help collect the electricity fee, then the property company has no right to collect the electricity fee. The owner can go to the local power supply bureau to pay the electricity fee, or choose the appropriate way to pay the electricity fee according to his own preferences and convenience, such as WeChat, Alipay, China UnionPay Express and other mobile phone network software.

If the power supply bureau has the authority to entrust the property company to help collect the electricity fee, then the property company has the right to collect the electricity fee, but the property company has no right to interrupt the electricity consumption in the user's home on the grounds of arrears or non-cooperation, or the restriction of supply will damage the legitimate rights and interests of the owner.

If the property company fails to comply with the terms of the property contract, expand the scope of fees or increase or repeat fees, then the owner has the right to refuse to pay the relevant fees and can complain to the relevant departments.

If the user fails to pay the electricity bill on time, he will pay a certain penalty in accordance with the regulations when paying the electricity bill in the future. If the user fails to pay the electricity fee for more than one month and fails to pay the electricity fee after the reminder, the power supply bureau will generally take the power outage treatment, and calculate from the overdue date, and add a penalty of about 1% to 3%.