Electricity Rate in Ohio (2026): 14.47c/kWh Average
Ohio Electricity Rate: What You Need to Know
Ohio electricity averages 14.47 cents per kWh for residential customers as of April 2026, according to the EIA Electric Power Monthly. This is 3.18c below the US average of 17.65c/kWh. The average monthly bill for Ohio households is $129 based on typical usage of 891 kWh.
Ohio has the highest deregulated-market switching rate of any US state at 57%, driven heavily by government aggregation: townships, cities, and counties negotiate bulk electricity supply contracts and automatically enroll residents who don't opt out. The PUCO Apples to Apples comparison portal (energychoice.ohio.gov) facilitates individual choice for consumers not covered by municipal aggregation. AEP Ohio, Duke Energy Ohio, and FirstEnergy serve delivery (wires only) in different parts of the state; the competitive supply portion is provided by dozens of retail suppliers. Ohio's average rate of 14.47c/kWh is modestly above the national average.
Generation mix: Natural gas 45%, nuclear 20%, coal 20%, renewables 15%. The fuel mix is a primary driver of electricity rates - states with abundant hydro or nuclear tend to have lower rates, while states dependent on imported petroleum (Hawaii) or natural gas pay more.
Year-over-year change: Ohio rates rose 4.6% year-over-year as of April 2026. This compares to the US average increase of 5.4% over the same period.
Deregulated: You Can Shop for a Better Rate
PUCO Apples to Apples (energychoice.ohio.gov) - 57% switching rate driven by government aggregation; AEP, Duke, FirstEnergy wires stay local
How to shop for a better rate ->Your Ohio Electricity Bill Components
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