Equipment, compliance, location strategy, and revenue models — everything you need to know before you start.
South Africa's energy crisis has turned LPG into one of the most in-demand commodities in the country. Load-shedding, unreliable municipal electricity, and rising energy costs have pushed millions of households and businesses toward gas as their primary or backup energy source.
The result: a lucrative, growing market for LPG refilling and exchange outlets. The barriers to entry are low. The demand is consistent. And with the right equipment and compliance in place, margins are strong.
This guide covers everything you need to get your gas business running — from the equipment checklist to legal compliance to location strategy. And at the end, we'll tell you exactly what it costs to get started.
For a small to medium-scale LPG refilling and exchange outlet, you'll need the following at minimum:
Precision filling requires a certified, calibrated scale. This is not optional — it's a legal and operational requirement. Every gram counts when your customers are paying by weight.
Manual, electric, or solar depending on your volume and power supply. This is the heart of your refilling operation — it needs to be built right, calibrated accurately, and serviced by someone who knows it. This is what we manufacture.
Cadac and Pigtail adaptors to serve the common cylinder types your customers bring in. You'll need the right adaptor for each cylinder type — don't get caught unable to serve a customer.
Class C dry powder or CO₂, rated for flammable gases. These are non-negotiable for compliance — and for your own safety. Inspected regularly, maintained, and positioned correctly.
Proper ventilated, secured storage for both empty and full cylinders. Required for safety and compliance. The fire department will check this during their inspection.
If you plan to offer home or business delivery — a significant revenue opportunity in residential areas — factor in a suitable delivery vehicle from the start.
Working with LPG means working with a regulated, highly flammable product. Compliance protects you, your staff, your customers — and your business.
Our team provides safety compliance guidance as part of our gas shop setup service. We know what fire departments inspect and what SANS requires.
Ask About ComplianceLocation is one of the most important decisions you'll make. Get it right, and the customers come to you.
Position near petrol stations, taxi ranks, or busy township and suburban centres. Volume of passing customers is the single biggest driver of refill revenue.
Domestic LPG customers — 9kg and 14kg cylinders — represent the highest volume market. The closer you are to where people live, the more repeat business you generate.
Areas with no established refilling outlet represent the best opportunity. Scout your target area before committing — talk to residents and businesses about where they currently buy gas.
Confirm LPG storage is permitted before committing to any premises. A great location on the wrong zoning is a non-starter — always verify with your local municipality first.
The customer brings their own cylinder. You fill it to the weight they want and charge per kilogram. Higher margin per transaction, preferred by regular customers who know your price and trust your accuracy.
The customer swaps an empty cylinder for a full one. More convenient for the customer. Requires you to maintain a float of pre-filled cylinders in multiple sizes — but drives faster transactions.
The most common cylinder sizes in South Africa are 9kg (domestic), 14kg (domestic/commercial), 19kg (commercial), and 48kg (industrial/commercial). Make sure your pump and adaptors are spec'd for all of these from day one.
Whether you're planning your first gas shop or expanding an existing operation, we'll help you get it right from day one.
Tell us about your plans — we'll specify the right equipment, walk you through the setup, and give you an honest quote.