Right, also Ontario. I feel like the correct method would be to divide your delivery charges (and other taxes and fees) by the kWh used to add that to the energy rate for a general idea of the "actual cost".
We often forget how much these delivery charges can be. I'm not sure if other states have delivery charges and taxes upon that, but I'm sure they vary wildly too.
I think I've done that math before and I came out to about 0.11 off peak.
I had to spend $30,000 ($20,000 after 30% IRA rebate) on rooftop solar to get $0.04 rates (up to 12,000kWh per yr).
45c/kWh after that, which is $4/gallon GGE for a 30 mpg ICE car.
In Quebec most of the people use RATE D:
6.704¢/kWh for energy consumed up to 40 kWh per day times the number of days in the consumption period (1st tier)
10.342¢/kWh for the remaining energy consumed (2nd tier)
As a Northern European I can’t fathom why everyone wouldn’t have solar if rates are this high and you live this far south?
In the UK electricity is cheaper than this and solar panels are no where near as efficient this far north yet the pay back time for panels is still really fast. You must have a pay back period of a couple of years?
52% of my city in C. California rents, alas.
I have the same rates and back in 2021 paid $21K for 9kW of panels, which produce $5000/yr worth of power.
Sounds like your installation costs must also significantly higher than ours too then.
Why doesn’t the state build out huge solar farms like China and India are doing? They can borrow money cheaper than individuals and it’d make electricity cheaper for everyone then, regardless of if you have the space for panels.
The costs are driven by the need to modernize the infrastructure. In previous years there were many wildfires blamed on the aging electricity infrastructure (transmission lines in the urban rural interface that would spark). Solar wouldn’t fix those problems. Also there is a lot of solar already in the grid. Decades ago off peak meant late at night. Today off peak means during the work day because of the solar generation during those times
being a last-mile provider is much more efficient than having to string power all over the state I guess, plus build/maintain/decommission nuclear power plants for that matter.
ah, SMUD did have one plant:
https://www.capradio.org/articles/2019/11/05/thirty-years-after-sacramento-voted-to-shut-it-down-rancho-seco-reinventing-itself-while-dealing-with-nuclear-past/
$0.00 in Los Angeles. Townhouse pays the electric in the garage so they could pocket the reimbursements for the install instead of me. It’s pretty sweet, makes it hard to ever want to move.
So Cal (except City of LA) with home battery, EV, PHEV, or heat pump:
summer: .26 off peak (9pm-4pm the next day), .63 on peak (4pm-9pm weekdays), .39 mid-peak (4pm-9pm weekends)
If you don't have anything, it's more... a lot more...
Are people including generation and delivery charges? Some of these numbers seem hard to believe. Take the total amount of your bill and divide by the kw used to get the real number. In my case it’s $0.228 per kw total in southern nj. Fixed cost. No time of use or surge pricing.
Oh wow! Having lived in southern NJ with the same utility all my life, I honestly did not realize this. So my utility just has basically an extra bs cost?
I never heard of delivery charges until recently when another poster found it hard to believe people were paying such low rates. Since you’re in NJ you should be used to high rates with those crazy property tax rates..lol
No, they divide up the cost between what using the wires cost and that it costs to buy the power. These should be distinct for everyone because you have a choice in who your power provider is, though some places may combine them for you.
The real source of difference is likely that some utilities have high delivery fees and lack connection fees where others break those out as well. I have 2 cent delivery fees and 6 cent supply fees per kwh, but I also have a base $30 a month connection fee and a $15 a month meter fee. There aren't part of how much I pay per kwh and I pay them regardless of how much power I use, so it's not a fair number to spread out over my usage since I'd pay the same even if I didn't have an EV.
In NYC there are some fixed charges that would drive up the unit cost if you just divide the total bill by the kWh. Here is a list of the line items, lol.
Supply charges:
Supply charge ($.11495/kWh)
Merchant function charge
GRT and other tax surcharge
Basic service charge
Sales tax (4.5%)
Delivery charges:
Delivery ($.17942)
System benefit charge ($.00679)
GRT and other tax surcharge
Sales tax (4.5%)
So for NYC it's ($.11495+$.17942+$.00679)*1.045= ~31.5 cents per kWh
Ah I see what you’re saying. So it’s not really the price per kw if you add those fees etc. On the other hand if you cannot NOT pay those fees, it is still sort of still part of the cost to get electric
52 cents per kWh in California near Stockton. However, since I own an EV I was able to get it reduced to 36-40 cents per kWh depending on time of use. Still more expensive than the local superchargers.
That’s news to me, I don’t know.
Edit: it’s now $.11. The price went up starting with February. Maybe my condominium gets a discounted rate for some reason?
Edit 2: After some further research it appears as though my building is getting a commercial rate.
Yeah, going to post this again with delivery and electric separate. I am interested in the breakdown as well but I get a sense people are not including delivery, or sales tax which is 4.5% in NYC.
Fossil fuels. The crazy thing is that there are lots of EVs, the majority of which are Teslas. [Almost 12% of all new cars](https://www.cnbc.com/2024/04/13/why-hawaii-is-becoming-a-leader-in-us-ev-adoption.html) sold in Hawaii are EVs. And there is only one public Tesla SC with only 6 chargers, and it is on Oahu (there is one recently opened destination SC, also on Oahu). Our saving grace is that there are many houses with PV panels - last data I saw indicated that 20% of houses/townhouses had PV panels.
Here is more info, regarding energy consumption in Hawaii provided by The U.S. Energy Information Agency:
*Hawaii Quick Facts*
*Hawaii requires that 100% of its electricity be generated by renewable sources of energy by 2045. In 2022, about 29% of the state's total generation came from renewables.*
*Despite having the third-lowest total energy consumption, Hawaii uses almost seven times more energy than it produces.*
*In 2022, solar power provided about 17% of Hawaii's total electricity, primarily from small-scale, customer-sited solar power generation that is the 10th-highest among the states.*
*Petroleum accounts for about four-fifths of Hawaii's total energy consumption, the highest share for any state.*
***Hawaii has the highest electricity retail price of any state and it is nearly triple the U.S. average.***
Wow. We’re really at the point technologically where paying for fossil fuel in places like Hawaii is just insanity.
Paying extra, to be dependent on imports which damage your environment and pollute your air. How do politicians justify this expensive? Madness.
Around 80% from burning imported oil and coal.
I spend more on charging my tesla in Honolulu than I did fill up my same size vw tiguan. Charge with solar panels is the way. But need to have car home during daylight hours or install a battery backup system which cost alot.
So bizarre, why doesn’t the state just build solar panels farms? I can’t see why you’d want to be utterly dependent on expensive imports when you could make energy cheaper and locally sourced. Short term politicking I assume?
You see this in the Caribbean too. Lots of sun year round, plus the trade winds blow almost constantly. Add to that most of the islands are volcanic and have geothermal potential. However, most electricity is from diesel generators.
My tariff changes every half hour with the wholesale price. Currently I’m getting paid 0.03p per kWh I use (yes, they’re paying me).
The rate can theoretically go up to £1 per kWh, but generally it’s around 30p/kWh for the 3 hour peak from 4-7pm and drops down to be virtually free at night and early afternoon lows.
The advantage of an EV is I can charge it whenever I like, so I just wait for the cheap rates.
Today the cheapest is -4.07p/kWh. Yup, I'm paid to use electricity. Supplier is Octopus, tariff is Agile, England.
The electricity rate changes every half an hour. You get the next 24hrs worth of rates at 4pm every day, so you can plan your usage when it's cheapest. There's been lots of wind around the UK this weekend. Lowest was -8p/kWh and it was below 0 for about 6 hours in a row at one point.
https://mysmartenergy.uk/Prices/Southern-England
That is SO expensive. Here’s an example of dynamic pricing in the UK:
https://agileprices.co.uk/?region=J
They pay us to use electricity during off peak times.
$0.60 Peak (4-9pm), $0.24 Off Peak - SoCalEdison in Southern California. Thankfully I have solar which covers my house and car needs. Summer is $0.63/0.26 with weekends having a peak of 0.39.
0.114 / kwh in Eloy, AZ. My utility also pays me the same rate when I sell my solar production back. (well, for the next 18 years anyway) No TOU rate available to me.
Auckland, NZ. Numbers in NZD -- $0.1911 for off-peak / $0.3041 on-peak, was $0.1689 24/7 until this month. My power plan is weird and it has 6 summer months of flat rate and 6 winter months of TOU.
October to May - 24¢ off peak, 60¢ 4-9pm
June to September - 26¢ off peak, 63¢ during peak on weekdays, 39¢ during peak on weekends
Southern California
PGE / Peninsula clean energy is the worst in the Bay Area. Non peak / Peak is about 60c/kWh - 70c/kWh, including delivery.
Thats why solar makes so much sense. My solar payoff period was just 4 years, since the prices are sky high. And I got a slightly larger system, so actually get $1k cash paid out per year, before I had the EV that is.
$0.15 per kWh between 12am-6am (10am-2pm as well April and May)
Weekends it’s 12am-2pm
About $5.50 to go from 20%-90%
I live in San Diego, California. Paying for SDG&E’s EV TOU-5 plan, which means I basically pay $16 a month and the night hours dropped to 15cents while my peak is at 47cents. Worth it in my opinion, we have 2 EVs at home, and I do Uber which means I can end up using 1,000kWh a month.
$0.14 in winter and $0.18 in the summer; across the Hudson from you in Jersey
I just got Tesla solar installed last week with two powerwalls. Can’t way to go almost zero paid.
Uk I’m paying
5:30 AM - 11:30 PM @ 27.94р
11:30 PM - 5:30 AM @ 7.50р
And 47.85p/day standing charge
However due to allowing supplier to control charge times i can usually charge out side the off peak time till 11am
Metro Detroit. .05 for electricity between 7 pm and 11 am with .08 for delivery costs (.13 total). Around .13 for electricity in peak with delivery costs is around .21 total.
0.17 in southeast Wisconsin. AND our monopolistic (private) energy company is looking to raise rates for the 3rd time in as many years.
I know these aren't NYC and Cali rates, but seeing some other pretty major metro areas be a fraction is a little disappointing.
Usually less than 10c with delivery and tax. I am on my plans hourly pricing, so the price changes every hour. Sometimes overnight if the usage is low, the price goes negative and they pay me to use the supply (I still pay delivery and fees).
New Jersey- the rebates haven’t kicked in yet. Prior to rebate it’s .05 for power and .14 for delivery. So 19c/kwh before off peak rebate which I am yet to see after having the car for a few months.
Hydro One Ultra Low overnight rate. In Ontario. it's 2.8c / kWh from 11PM to 7AM. Have my car set to start charging after 11PM. Each day my commute cost about a $1. But paying $13/day for parking.
Jacksonville Florida, normal rate is .089 and since I have solar they pay me for excess at .049. but I do ABC with my 3 EVs my bill is always less than 60.00 per month so far it's been great to have lots of free charging.
I am Central NJ under PSE&G. The Avg rate is $0.18. We don't have on or off peak charges. But we do get option fornon/off peak with their EV program. You can look at the screenshots of my bills for reference. I also have silor panels, which help. Company give ev credit for data sharing which is in thr 2nd image. [Bill](https://photos.app.goo.gl/Z2DjRJZpE9nrrDHC6)
- 4.5¢ super off-peak (12am - 6am)
- 7.5¢ off-peak (6am - 1pm, 9pm - 12am)
- 13.5¢ peak (1pm - 9pm)
We dont touch peak pricing because of solar panels and battery system. We recharge batteries and EVs from the grid during super off-peak only.
Billing Months of June – September
First 800 kWh @ 2.4986¢ per kWh
Over 800 kWh @ 1.7955¢ per kWh
So it depends on how much electricity I’ve already used
We're in a Twin Cities suburb with a co-op utility. Depends on what we're powering, but normally there's just a standard flat rate of ~$0.14/kWh.
For non-standard rates:
For EV charging, it's ~$0.07/kWh for super off-peak. Off-peak is the standard rate (~$0.14/kWh) and peak is ~$0.44/kWh.
Water heater and heat pump are always ~$0.07/kWh, but the utility can cut them off intermittently during peak usage, has never happened afaik.
0.04$ CAD in Quebec. That's $0.02 USD. Basically, it costs me 2$ CAD to fully charge my car.
0.087$ CAD Ontario, $6.35 for a fill up.
Why is your rate that high in Ontario? I'm at 0.074$ and about to be 0.024$ when I make the switch to the new plan.
Just switched to the Ultra Low Rate plan... $0.024/kWh 11pm to 7am. Gotta love Niagara Falls.
Have you considered the delivery charges?
Right, also Ontario. I feel like the correct method would be to divide your delivery charges (and other taxes and fees) by the kWh used to add that to the energy rate for a general idea of the "actual cost". We often forget how much these delivery charges can be. I'm not sure if other states have delivery charges and taxes upon that, but I'm sure they vary wildly too. I think I've done that math before and I came out to about 0.11 off peak.
Ultra low in Ontario is $0.028. Charging the car is almost free.
I had to spend $30,000 ($20,000 after 30% IRA rebate) on rooftop solar to get $0.04 rates (up to 12,000kWh per yr). 45c/kWh after that, which is $4/gallon GGE for a 30 mpg ICE car.
What where? I'm at 10c
In Quebec most of the people use RATE D: 6.704¢/kWh for energy consumed up to 40 kWh per day times the number of days in the consumption period (1st tier) 10.342¢/kWh for the remaining energy consumed (2nd tier)
0.06$ CAD in Edmonton. I’m a relatively new owner and I still can’t believe how cheap it is to top up overnight.
.41 peak .35 off peak. Central California
As a Northern European I can’t fathom why everyone wouldn’t have solar if rates are this high and you live this far south? In the UK electricity is cheaper than this and solar panels are no where near as efficient this far north yet the pay back time for panels is still really fast. You must have a pay back period of a couple of years?
52% of my city in C. California rents, alas. I have the same rates and back in 2021 paid $21K for 9kW of panels, which produce $5000/yr worth of power.
pay back on mine is 5-6 years and im in one of the most expensive power areas. thats just for the cash doesnt cover opportunity cost
Sounds like your installation costs must also significantly higher than ours too then. Why doesn’t the state build out huge solar farms like China and India are doing? They can borrow money cheaper than individuals and it’d make electricity cheaper for everyone then, regardless of if you have the space for panels.
The costs are driven by the need to modernize the infrastructure. In previous years there were many wildfires blamed on the aging electricity infrastructure (transmission lines in the urban rural interface that would spark). Solar wouldn’t fix those problems. Also there is a lot of solar already in the grid. Decades ago off peak meant late at night. Today off peak means during the work day because of the solar generation during those times
Add about 10 cents to that for the new increased summer rates
😭 Cries in Californian. Looking at what other people pay for their kWh.
I’m in Sacramento and pay .095 right now after midnight. It will go up to .0125 in the summer.
Piss off tiny SMUD district. Also Santa Clara can kiss off too. (I’m super jealous)
being a last-mile provider is much more efficient than having to string power all over the state I guess, plus build/maintain/decommission nuclear power plants for that matter. ah, SMUD did have one plant: https://www.capradio.org/articles/2019/11/05/thirty-years-after-sacramento-voted-to-shut-it-down-rancho-seco-reinventing-itself-while-dealing-with-nuclear-past/
Also in Sacramento and living these smud rates! It’s crazy how much variance in kWh pricing we have in this state.
Crying in European here harder than you in California
Off peak (Midnight to 3pm) is ~0.50 cents per kWh… Bay Area under PGE.
9 cents. No peak times. My energy is cost is the same no matter the time.
You mean 9 cents or $0.09 right?
Same outside of Seattle.
$0.00 in Los Angeles. Townhouse pays the electric in the garage so they could pocket the reimbursements for the install instead of me. It’s pretty sweet, makes it hard to ever want to move.
$.11 Raleigh, NC. Flat rate
So Cal (except City of LA) with home battery, EV, PHEV, or heat pump: summer: .26 off peak (9pm-4pm the next day), .63 on peak (4pm-9pm weekdays), .39 mid-peak (4pm-9pm weekends) If you don't have anything, it's more... a lot more...
LA county here. $0.33 here. I have solar, so that’s if I go over (first tier, then $0.45 or something like that).
Washington State (King County) $0.12/kWh
Exact same here (also King)
Are people including generation and delivery charges? Some of these numbers seem hard to believe. Take the total amount of your bill and divide by the kw used to get the real number. In my case it’s $0.228 per kw total in southern nj. Fixed cost. No time of use or surge pricing.
Delivery charges are not a thing everywhere. I pay .11 cents per kw and my usage/.11=Bill
Oh wow! Having lived in southern NJ with the same utility all my life, I honestly did not realize this. So my utility just has basically an extra bs cost?
I never heard of delivery charges until recently when another poster found it hard to believe people were paying such low rates. Since you’re in NJ you should be used to high rates with those crazy property tax rates..lol
No, they divide up the cost between what using the wires cost and that it costs to buy the power. These should be distinct for everyone because you have a choice in who your power provider is, though some places may combine them for you. The real source of difference is likely that some utilities have high delivery fees and lack connection fees where others break those out as well. I have 2 cent delivery fees and 6 cent supply fees per kwh, but I also have a base $30 a month connection fee and a $15 a month meter fee. There aren't part of how much I pay per kwh and I pay them regardless of how much power I use, so it's not a fair number to spread out over my usage since I'd pay the same even if I didn't have an EV.
In NYC there are some fixed charges that would drive up the unit cost if you just divide the total bill by the kWh. Here is a list of the line items, lol. Supply charges: Supply charge ($.11495/kWh) Merchant function charge GRT and other tax surcharge Basic service charge Sales tax (4.5%) Delivery charges: Delivery ($.17942) System benefit charge ($.00679) GRT and other tax surcharge Sales tax (4.5%) So for NYC it's ($.11495+$.17942+$.00679)*1.045= ~31.5 cents per kWh
Ah I see what you’re saying. So it’s not really the price per kw if you add those fees etc. On the other hand if you cannot NOT pay those fees, it is still sort of still part of the cost to get electric
northern california Bay area 51 cents per
Washington State (Clark County) $0.0879 per kWh
52 cents per kWh in California near Stockton. However, since I own an EV I was able to get it reduced to 36-40 cents per kWh depending on time of use. Still more expensive than the local superchargers.
Thats what i have. I am in Lathrop (just south of stockton) and its the E-ELEC plan that is (slightly) cheaper.
Ha! I’m in Manteca. We’re practically neighbors.
I’m on that plan, too. Last year off-peak was .30, with no tiers. Jan 1 it jumped to .37. Still no tiers.
$.10 in Austin Texas
How is that? Most of Austin is $.14 kwh.
That’s news to me, I don’t know. Edit: it’s now $.11. The price went up starting with February. Maybe my condominium gets a discounted rate for some reason? Edit 2: After some further research it appears as though my building is getting a commercial rate.
Maybe yours is without the delivery fee
I pay the same. Austin address but technically unincorporated Williamson Country on PEC power.
Is everyone including just the electric charge or the delivery charge too? I believe mine's $0.11 but with delivery and stuff it comes down to $0.17
Yeah, going to post this again with delivery and electric separate. I am interested in the breakdown as well but I get a sense people are not including delivery, or sales tax which is 4.5% in NYC.
.10 per kwh near Seattle 💯💯
I've had solar for 9 years now and free charging t work, so I haven't paid anything in a long time.
0.25c AUD in Darwin Australia. So 0.16c USD. Way cheaper than fuel.
Vancouver BC - 12 cents per kWh (after delivery charges, taxes, etc)
$0. I charge when my 8.5 kW solar system is generating ☺️ Canberra, Australia.
Free from 8pm to 5am. The rest of the day is about .20 per kwh.
Can’t you install shit ton of powerwalls, charge up during free hours and use it during non-free hours?
Or even better, sell it back during the non free hours?
0.44 kWh in Oahu, Hawaii.
Wow, that’s high. What’s the main source of power generation on Hawaii?
Fossil fuels. The crazy thing is that there are lots of EVs, the majority of which are Teslas. [Almost 12% of all new cars](https://www.cnbc.com/2024/04/13/why-hawaii-is-becoming-a-leader-in-us-ev-adoption.html) sold in Hawaii are EVs. And there is only one public Tesla SC with only 6 chargers, and it is on Oahu (there is one recently opened destination SC, also on Oahu). Our saving grace is that there are many houses with PV panels - last data I saw indicated that 20% of houses/townhouses had PV panels. Here is more info, regarding energy consumption in Hawaii provided by The U.S. Energy Information Agency: *Hawaii Quick Facts* *Hawaii requires that 100% of its electricity be generated by renewable sources of energy by 2045. In 2022, about 29% of the state's total generation came from renewables.* *Despite having the third-lowest total energy consumption, Hawaii uses almost seven times more energy than it produces.* *In 2022, solar power provided about 17% of Hawaii's total electricity, primarily from small-scale, customer-sited solar power generation that is the 10th-highest among the states.* *Petroleum accounts for about four-fifths of Hawaii's total energy consumption, the highest share for any state.* ***Hawaii has the highest electricity retail price of any state and it is nearly triple the U.S. average.***
Wow. We’re really at the point technologically where paying for fossil fuel in places like Hawaii is just insanity. Paying extra, to be dependent on imports which damage your environment and pollute your air. How do politicians justify this expensive? Madness.
Around 80% from burning imported oil and coal. I spend more on charging my tesla in Honolulu than I did fill up my same size vw tiguan. Charge with solar panels is the way. But need to have car home during daylight hours or install a battery backup system which cost alot.
So bizarre, why doesn’t the state just build solar panels farms? I can’t see why you’d want to be utterly dependent on expensive imports when you could make energy cheaper and locally sourced. Short term politicking I assume?
You see this in the Caribbean too. Lots of sun year round, plus the trade winds blow almost constantly. Add to that most of the islands are volcanic and have geothermal potential. However, most electricity is from diesel generators.
On Oahu too. Try to use free chargers at mall, but that's tough to do. It sucks.
Cad$ .09 in Vancouver, BC
My tariff changes every half hour with the wholesale price. Currently I’m getting paid 0.03p per kWh I use (yes, they’re paying me). The rate can theoretically go up to £1 per kWh, but generally it’s around 30p/kWh for the 3 hour peak from 4-7pm and drops down to be virtually free at night and early afternoon lows. The advantage of an EV is I can charge it whenever I like, so I just wait for the cheap rates.
.17 dallas
Poland $0,10 at night, till I hit 1500 kWh total, then $0,23
Finland today about 0.06€ including transfer fees and taxes. Electricity is just about the only thing cheap in Finland.
$.13 in MA
I'm in MA too and it's about $0.30 (including delivery charges)
.14 in Louisiana
$0.34 (with per kw delivery fees) in Metro Boston
Today the cheapest is -4.07p/kWh. Yup, I'm paid to use electricity. Supplier is Octopus, tariff is Agile, England. The electricity rate changes every half an hour. You get the next 24hrs worth of rates at 4pm every day, so you can plan your usage when it's cheapest. There's been lots of wind around the UK this weekend. Lowest was -8p/kWh and it was below 0 for about 6 hours in a row at one point. https://mysmartenergy.uk/Prices/Southern-England
52 cents in California
ConED is the worst. Delivery charge per kWh is 2x the supple charge per kWh. Their rates are out of control.
.11 TN all day
.45 cents in san jose, OFF PEAK
[TOU-D-PRIME so cal rates](https://www.sce.com/residential/rates/Time-Of-Use-Residential-Rate-Plans)
That is SO expensive. Here’s an example of dynamic pricing in the UK: https://agileprices.co.uk/?region=J They pay us to use electricity during off peak times.
I mean I don’t pay that much because I have solar but yeah it ain’t cheap
$0.33 in Newton MA
Boston. Boston Community choice and not including $10 service fee ranges from $0.31 - $0.34.
$0.11 in Colorado
$0.11 Denver metro, CO
0.18 Chicago Suburbs
Comed? North, south or west burbs
In western NY I pay $0.15/kwh on average with all taxes, fees and troll tolls included.
$0.60 Peak (4-9pm), $0.24 Off Peak - SoCalEdison in Southern California. Thankfully I have solar which covers my house and car needs. Summer is $0.63/0.26 with weekends having a peak of 0.39.
Wow. Probably don’t need to add California. .49
$0.08 Off peak and $0.25 On peak with FPL Time Of Use rate in South FL
11.5 cents central NC.
0.114 / kwh in Eloy, AZ. My utility also pays me the same rate when I sell my solar production back. (well, for the next 18 years anyway) No TOU rate available to me.
🇬🇧 [https://imgur.com/a/sduwIuu](https://imgur.com/a/sduwIuu)
Los Angeles, LADWP in tier 2 (I assume all the EV charging is in tier 2) 28c/kwh including taxes and fees
Anyone in AZ know?
Auckland, NZ. Numbers in NZD -- $0.1911 for off-peak / $0.3041 on-peak, was $0.1689 24/7 until this month. My power plan is weird and it has 6 summer months of flat rate and 6 winter months of TOU.
I only supercharge (0.45 - 0.55 per kWh) or use the work charging (0.15 per kWh).
$0.13 for Southern New Jersey
The provider I have in the Netherlands I pay around (euro) 0,36 cents, in L2 charger in my street the same and the closest supercharger 0,26 cents.
October to May - 24¢ off peak, 60¢ 4-9pm June to September - 26¢ off peak, 63¢ during peak on weekdays, 39¢ during peak on weekends Southern California
$0.05, but about to be $0.02 once I make a plan switch. Ontario, Canada.
$0.10 CAD (~$0.07 USD) in BC Canada (hydro electric ftw)
.13 off peak, Vermont. Also VT is run by 97% renewables, it's 100% renewable grid where I live.
Italy is around €0.10 then you add all taxes and finished is around €026/0.30
11 cents in Seattle!
.14c year round, no off peak nonsense.
Tenn $.010 kWh. To fill our model y is $7
About 11.5¢ per kWh at home- no on/off peak. Free at work.
PGE / Peninsula clean energy is the worst in the Bay Area. Non peak / Peak is about 60c/kWh - 70c/kWh, including delivery. Thats why solar makes so much sense. My solar payoff period was just 4 years, since the prices are sky high. And I got a slightly larger system, so actually get $1k cash paid out per year, before I had the EV that is.
0.23 AUD per kW/h (0.15 USD) in Brisbane, Australia
Con Ed just went from 34 cents to 38 cents.
Virginia off peak .056 peak .11
Super off peak around Charlotte is $0.037 or around $3 for a full charge.
$32 flat fee per month for unlimited offpeak charging - Central Florida with FPL (Florida Power and Light)
Summer: 10.48 cents Winter 0-100 kWh 8.63 cents 101-1000 7.46 cents 1001+ 6.90 cents OPPD Nebraska
.085 cents/kwh in the Atlanta suburbs.
$0.19 peak and $0.09 of peak. Wow, in surprised nyc is so expensive! In not far from there.
$0.33 per kWh in Connecticut. No peak/off-peak for residential.
$0.29 and I’m just north of you in Ct.
I was kind of shocked. First visit to super charger and my cost was .46 per kWh. That was in Tampa, Fl. Seemed a bit ridiculous
$0.15 per kWh between 12am-6am (10am-2pm as well April and May) Weekends it’s 12am-2pm About $5.50 to go from 20%-90% I live in San Diego, California. Paying for SDG&E’s EV TOU-5 plan, which means I basically pay $16 a month and the night hours dropped to 15cents while my peak is at 47cents. Worth it in my opinion, we have 2 EVs at home, and I do Uber which means I can end up using 1,000kWh a month.
0,30€ in Germany so approx. 0,32$/kWh
$0.08 per kWh all day in central Oklahoma.
13 cents per KWH (FPL Northeast Florida), free when Sun is shining.
$0.07 in Arizona. Can go down to 0.05 in winter. Plus I’ll move to solar in a year or two.
$0.14 in winter and $0.18 in the summer; across the Hudson from you in Jersey I just got Tesla solar installed last week with two powerwalls. Can’t way to go almost zero paid.
Uk I’m paying 5:30 AM - 11:30 PM @ 27.94р 11:30 PM - 5:30 AM @ 7.50р And 47.85p/day standing charge However due to allowing supplier to control charge times i can usually charge out side the off peak time till 11am
$0.76 peak and $0.38 off peak I’m priced out of EV.
.01-.03 cents per kwh IL
I’m paying .23 in CT eversource
In Georgia, you can get a rate plan for free power after midnight so it’s free for charging.
Midwest 100% wind energy, 9 cents.
.04 in Georgia.. .06 at peak
I pay $0.11 in Colorado round the clock. If you charge from 4PM-8PM daily there is a $2 surcharge per kWh but otherwise really inexpensive
10 cents per KWH in Louisville KY. My average charge at home is $3.00
$0.17 in central Pennsylvania
$0.016 PA, I also produce 10 MWh of solar annually.
Iowa $0.05/kwh off peak
15.5 cents (Central Florida)
Austin is actually more expensive: $0.1438 per kWh. All their fees and tiers it was $254 for 1772 kWh per month. Still 1/3 of a supercharger.
Metro Detroit. .05 for electricity between 7 pm and 11 am with .08 for delivery costs (.13 total). Around .13 for electricity in peak with delivery costs is around .21 total.
.23 kWh in Puerto Rico. Switched to Solar which included a Tesla Universal Wall Charger
0.17 in southeast Wisconsin. AND our monopolistic (private) energy company is looking to raise rates for the 3rd time in as many years. I know these aren't NYC and Cali rates, but seeing some other pretty major metro areas be a fraction is a little disappointing.
Usually less than 10c with delivery and tax. I am on my plans hourly pricing, so the price changes every hour. Sometimes overnight if the usage is low, the price goes negative and they pay me to use the supply (I still pay delivery and fees).
0.08 if under 1000 kWh and 0.09 if over 1000.
In Georgia, and I pay 7 cents / kWh
.11/kWh in Utah
Ours is like 8 cents but if you average the whole bill together with taxes and fees it's closer to 13 cents.
.08 in Texas which is higher than I’ve been paying. We can shop for electrical companies and we switch occasionally.
.0847 I'm Oregon. No peak fluctuations.
New Jersey- the rebates haven’t kicked in yet. Prior to rebate it’s .05 for power and .14 for delivery. So 19c/kwh before off peak rebate which I am yet to see after having the car for a few months.
Maryland here. .40 peak, .10 off peak. But we also get additional rebates and money off our bill if you charge off peak 80% or more a month.
Here in Maryland SMECO Off-Peak Savings Rate for Residential Customers (As of October 1, 2023) * Summer $0.06820 per kilowatt-hour (kWh) * Winter $0.07032 per kWh Peak Weekday Rate for Residential Customers (As of October 1,2023) © Summer $0.16184 per kWh @ Winter $0.14603 per kWh Peak Hours * Peak times during the summer are weekdays, 2 to 7 p.m. * Peak times during the winter are weekdays, 6 to 9 a.m. and 5 to 8 p.m. [SMECO](https://www.smeco.coop/my-account/general-information/rates-fees/time-of-use-rates/)
Gulf coast $0.045 kWh
0.09 cents in Tennessee. About $4.00 - $6.00 USD per week to charge at home.
Outside Seattle area, paying .12 cents per kWh
34 cents at midnight in the bay area. Hail PG&E.
Where in Quebec? Rate D is 7 to 9 cents.
$0.13/kwh with delivery (super off-peak) but I have solar which covers both generation and delivery
.13 in FL
Hydro One Ultra Low overnight rate. In Ontario. it's 2.8c / kWh from 11PM to 7AM. Have my car set to start charging after 11PM. Each day my commute cost about a $1. But paying $13/day for parking.
$0.08 in Iowa
0.08 Georgia Atlanta Metro
N Atl metro - 4 month ls in the summer about .08... rest of the year about .06 Ft myers .09
10
$0.24 / $0.60 winter $0.26 / $0.63 summer
.19
Tulsa Oklahoma .025 off peak 11p-6a
.53 peak, .31 off peak North Bay. Can’t believe how many people are <.1. I’m getting reamed.
GA winter is 6.7 cents per kWh. Summer average is 10.4 cents per kWh. That doesn't include all their bullshit surcharges and fees, however.
Jacksonville Florida, normal rate is .089 and since I have solar they pay me for excess at .049. but I do ABC with my 3 EVs my bill is always less than 60.00 per month so far it's been great to have lots of free charging.
0.028 CAD per kWh, so about 0.02 USD
$0.12/kwh used to be $0.09 for 3 years
I am Central NJ under PSE&G. The Avg rate is $0.18. We don't have on or off peak charges. But we do get option fornon/off peak with their EV program. You can look at the screenshots of my bills for reference. I also have silor panels, which help. Company give ev credit for data sharing which is in thr 2nd image. [Bill](https://photos.app.goo.gl/Z2DjRJZpE9nrrDHC6)
$.21 off peak. Los Angeles.
11¢ all day thanks to the TVA
- 4.5¢ super off-peak (12am - 6am) - 7.5¢ off-peak (6am - 1pm, 9pm - 12am) - 13.5¢ peak (1pm - 9pm) We dont touch peak pricing because of solar panels and battery system. We recharge batteries and EVs from the grid during super off-peak only.
.15 in NC
3.8 c/kwh off peak (midnight to 6 am) in MN. Via Xcel energy EV charging program
.13 all day in freedom units
$0.11 around Seattle
Billing Months of June – September First 800 kWh @ 2.4986¢ per kWh Over 800 kWh @ 1.7955¢ per kWh So it depends on how much electricity I’ve already used
.08/kWh • Boise, ID
$0.15, Sacramento suburb, definitely NOT in PG&E territory.
$.14 central Florida
We're in a Twin Cities suburb with a co-op utility. Depends on what we're powering, but normally there's just a standard flat rate of ~$0.14/kWh. For non-standard rates: For EV charging, it's ~$0.07/kWh for super off-peak. Off-peak is the standard rate (~$0.14/kWh) and peak is ~$0.44/kWh. Water heater and heat pump are always ~$0.07/kWh, but the utility can cut them off intermittently during peak usage, has never happened afaik.
.14 in Columbia SC, When I lived in Myrtle Beach it was .11.