_____________________________________________________________________________________________________ ++ Associate Professor; *Corresponding author: Email: vineethantkilur@gmail.com; Cite as: T Vineethan, P Babu, MV Praveen, and V T Arathi Pushkaran. 2025. “Judging the Blazes of Satisfaction: An Analytical Study about Domestic LPG Consumers in Kerala, India”. Asian Research Journal of Arts & Social Sciences 23 (9):203–213. https://doi.org/10.9734/arjass/2025/v23i9789. Asian Research Journal of Arts & Social Sciences Volume 23, Issue 9, Page 203-213, 2025; Article no.ARJASS.144006 ISSN: 2456-4761 Judging the Blazes of Satisfaction: An Analytical Study about Domestic LPG Consumers in Kerala, India T Vineethan a++* , P Babu a++ , MV Praveen a++ and V T Arathi Pushkaran a a PG & Research Department of Commerce, Govt. College Madappally (Affiliated to University of Calicut), Kerala, India. Authors’ contributions This work was carried out in collaboration among all authors. All authors read and approved the final manuscript. Article Information DOI: https://doi.org/10.9734/arjass/2025/v23i9789 Open Peer Review History: This journal follows the Advanced Open Peer Review policy. Identity of the Reviewers, Editor(s) and additional Reviewers, peer review comments, different versions of the manuscript, comments of the editors, etc are available here: https://pr.sdiarticle5.com/review-history/144006 Received: 08/07/2025 Published: 16/09/2025 ABSTRACT The present study evaluates the degree of satisfaction of consumers of Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) by focusing on service-related factors like easiness in booking, promptness in delivery, safety precautions, customer care services, and overall satisfaction, as well as demographic factors like gender, age, educational attainment, and monthly income. An organised questionnaire was applied to gather first-hand data from 210 home LPG customers, and chi-square tests, cross-tabulation, and descriptive statistics were used to evaluate the responses. The findings show that while customer care service was the least satisfactory aspect, consumers were very satisfied with the easiness in booking and safety precautions, and moderately satisfied with the promptness in delivery and overall services. Education and monthly income have a considerable impact on satisfaction levels, but gender and age group have lower relationships, according to cross-tabulation and chi-square Original Research Article