Fuzz_166

Fuzz_166 t1_j63skxt wrote

You should look into their Peak/Off-Peak pricing program. You have to opt-in and pay attention to not use excessive power at certain times, but it can really drop the monthly bill.

Instead of paying the flat $.0985 or whatever it is now per kWh 24-hours a day, my last bill was broken down like this:

  • Peak [2pm-6pm]: $.2581
  • Off-Peak [6am-2pm, 6pm-12am]: $.0582
  • Super Off-Peak [12am-6am]: $.0361

And that is just for weekdays. On weekends/holidays, they drop the peak pricing entirely - so it is just Off-Peak from 6am to midnight.

The trade-off is that the power you use from 2-6pm is a lot more expensive. But if everyone in the house is at work/school then it isn't an issue. Get a smart thermostat to let turn the heat down during those times. Save big power-eating tasks (laundry, dishwasher) for nights or weekends.

We have a decent sized renovated house with lots of open areas and our power bills in the summer were brutal (winter wasn't as bad with a propane boiler feeding radiant heat). Changing to the off-peak program cut the average bill by 70-80%.

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