What’s your electric bill looking like, Texas-GAF?

Celcius

°Temp. member
Normally my electric bill is like $50-$60, but this time my bill is $150 (due to the winter storm we had). I have a one bedroom apartment and this is the largest electric bill I've ever received, but fortunately I'm on a fixed-rate plan. What about the rest of you?
 
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Dunno yet, kinda scared tbh.

Some lady in Houston my mom knows got a 9 thousand dollar bill.

Like wtf.
 
In the US the price for electricity fluctuates with the market????
Texas has the only de-regulated electric grid in the entire country.
(I'm only counting the contiguous 48)

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I would say that's illegal but America finds a way to surprise me. Honestly your electricity companies can change prices on a whim and not give notice?
 
I would say that's illegal but America finds a way to surprise me. Honestly your electricity companies can change prices on a whim and not give notice?

only if you decide to sign up for that type of plan. If you want to pay super cheap rates at the risk of a getting hit with a huge bill during a crisis, you're free to gamble like that. All that information is available to you.

where I live in Texas I don't have that option, but I wouldn't signup for it if I could as I prefer to keep my rates known.
 
$118. Up from $80 for January. But I also had a house guest for a week in Feb. We never lost power during the freeze either. So honestly we lucked out.
 
It's a shit-show. I didn't realize how many options there were for power before moving here. In Oregon, there is usually 1-3 options for a power provider, and it's almost all the same prices. Here, there are about 70 different plans to chose from just for my address.... and they vary from a fixed rate to variable, wind/solar, then there's free days, or highest use day for free, or nights free, $50 credits for over 1000 kWh, and so on. Too many options to list, and generally, you have to sign a 12-24 month contract. It's kind of ridiculous.
 
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Why is the bill higher? Did they raise the rates? Weren't a lot of people without power? So why would the bill be larger?
 
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