US Electricity Rate History 2000-2026
US average residential electricity rate, cents per kWh. Source: EIA Electric Power Monthly. 2026 data: April 2026 release.
2000 rate
8.24c
starting point
2026 rate
17.65c
current
26-yr increase
+114%
nominal
Avg annual rise
+3.0%
CAGR 2000-2026
Rate Trend 2000-2026 (US Average Residential, c/kWh)
8.24
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
9.45
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
11.54
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
12.65
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
13.2
2020
2021
2022
2023
2024
17.2
2025
17.65
2026
2000-2019
2020-2025 (acceleration)
2026 (current)
Annual Rate Data with Year-Over-Year Change
| Year | Rate (c/kWh) | YoY Change |
|---|---|---|
| 2000 | 8.24 | - |
| 2001 | 8.58 | +4.1% |
| 2002 | 8.44 | -1.6% |
| 2003 | 8.72 | +3.3% |
| 2004 | 8.95 | +2.6% |
| 2005 | 9.45 | +5.6% |
| 2006 | 10.40 | +10.1% |
| 2007 | 10.65 | +2.4% |
| 2008 | 11.26 | +5.7% |
| 2009 | 11.51 | +2.2% |
| 2010 | 11.54 | +0.3% |
| 2011 | 11.72 | +1.6% |
| 2012 | 11.88 | +1.4% |
| 2013 | 12.12 | +2.0% |
| 2014 | 12.52 | +3.3% |
| 2015 | 12.65 | +1.0% |
| 2016 | 12.60 | -0.4% |
| 2017 | 12.89 | +2.3% |
| 2018 | 12.87 | -0.2% |
| 2019 | 13.01 | +1.1% |
| 2020 | 13.20 | +1.5% |
| 2021 | 13.72 | +3.9% |
| 2022 | 14.92 | +8.7% |
| 2023 | 15.98 | +7.1% |
| 2024 | 16.77 | +4.9% |
| 2025 | 17.20 | +2.6% |
| 2026Current | 17.65 | +2.6% |
What Is Driving the 2020-2026 Acceleration?
Rates rose 34% in 6 years, compared to 12.6% in the prior decade. Four overlapping causes:
Natural gas price volatility
2021-2023 primary driver
Natural gas generates ~40% of US electricity. Gas prices spiked 2x-4x in 2021-2022 following the Ukraine conflict and European demand surge. Utility fuel cost increases flow into customer rates on a 6-18 month lag via fuel adjustment clauses. Rates rose sharply in 2022-2023 even as gas prices later moderated.
Grid modernization spending
Structural, ongoing
US utilities are spending $100B+ per year on grid upgrades: undergrounding lines in fire-risk zones, replacing aging transformers, installing smart meters and grid sensors, and upgrading substations for bidirectional power flow. All prudent capital expenditures flow into rates via rate cases, adding 1.5-2.5% per year of rate pressure.
Renewables build-out
2022-2030 investment cycle
State renewable portfolio standards are requiring rapid solar and wind additions. While renewable generation costs are now cheaper per MWh than new gas, the transmission buildout, grid storage, and interconnection costs are substantial. The Inflation Reduction Act accelerated this investment cycle, adding capital costs to rates now for benefits that arrive later.
Load growth reversal
2024-2030 trend
After a decade of flat electricity demand (2010-2020), demand is rising again: EVs, heat pumps, and AI data centers are adding load faster than efficiency gains can offset. EIA projects US electricity demand to grow 2-3% per year through 2030. Utilities must build or contract for new capacity — at higher capital costs than 2010-era builds.
What Rate Forecasters Expect Through 2030
+3-5% per year
EIA Short-Term Energy Outlook (Q1 2026)
2026-2027 near-term. EIA does not publish long-range rate forecasts by sector.
+4.2% avg (2024-2030)
Lawrence Berkeley National Lab
LBNL utility rate tracker: grid investment cycle adds 1.5-2.5%/yr; demand growth adds 1-2%/yr.
+3.8%/yr real
Wood Mackenzie (2025 North America Power Outlook)
Inflation-adjusted rate increase driven by capacity buildout and transmission investment.
At +4%/year: what rates look like in 2030
2026
17.65c
2027
18.36c
2028
19.09c
2030
20.65c
Projection at 4% CAGR from 2026. Actual rates will vary by state and utility — some states (CA, NY) may see higher increases, coal-heavy states may see lower increases if gas prices stay moderate.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much have electricity rates increased since 2000?+
US residential electricity rates have risen from 8.24 cents/kWh in 2000 to 17.65 cents/kWh in 2026 — a 114% nominal increase over 26 years. Adjusting for general CPI inflation over the same period (roughly 90%), electricity has risen about 13% in real terms. Most of the real increase has occurred since 2020, when rates accelerated from 13.20c to 17.65c (+34%) in just 6 years.
Why did electricity rates rise so much between 2020 and 2026?+
Three compounding factors drove the 2020-2026 acceleration: (1) Natural gas price spike in 2021-2022 following the Ukraine conflict increased generation costs, which feed directly into utility rates on a 6-12 month lag. (2) Post-pandemic supply chain inflation increased transformer, cable, and equipment costs for grid maintenance — these capital costs flow into rates via rate cases. (3) Accelerating renewable investment: utilities are spending heavily on solar, wind, and grid upgrades under state mandates. These prudently incurred costs are ratebased, adding 1-2% annually.
Will electricity rates keep rising?+
The EIA's Short-Term Energy Outlook projects US residential electricity prices to rise 3-5% per year through 2027. Key factors: continued grid modernization spending, growing electricity demand from EV adoption and AI data centers, continued natural gas price volatility, and rising debt costs for utilities. The EIA does not forecast a return to the flat 2010-2019 rate environment.
Have electricity rates ever gone down?+
Nominally, US residential rates have never declined for more than a year or two at a time since the 1970s. The mid-2010s saw near-flat rates (2014-2016: 12.52c to 12.60c) due to low natural gas prices following the shale gas boom. Real inflation-adjusted rates did decline modestly in the 1990s and 2010s. But consumers experienced higher nominal bills because usage grew faster than efficiency gains.
How do electricity rate increases compare to inflation?+
Over the 2000-2026 period, electricity rose 114% nominally vs. roughly 90% CPI inflation — so electricity slightly outpaced general inflation. But over the 2010-2020 decade, electricity (12.6% nominal increase) lagged behind general CPI (22%). The 2020-2026 acceleration (34% nominal in 6 years vs. ~23% CPI) is notable: electricity is now clearly outpacing inflation, driven by grid investment cycles.