Break down your electric bill into energy charges, delivery fees, taxes, and surcharges. Understand each line item and find where your money goes.
Your electric bill consists of several components beyond the simple "kWh used × rate" calculation. Energy charges (the cost of electricity generation) typically make up 40–60% of the bill. Delivery charges (transmitting electricity to your home) add 20–30%. Taxes, fees, surcharges, and regulatory charges make up the remaining 10–30%.
Understanding each component helps you identify which parts of your bill you can control and which are fixed. Energy charges can be reduced through conservation, efficiency, and solar. Delivery charges are generally fixed or per-kWh with little room for reduction. Taxes and fees are typically unavoidable.
This calculator lets you enter each bill component separately to see the total and the percentage breakdown. Use it to understand where your electricity dollars go and prioritize the most impactful cost-reduction strategies.
Quantifying this parameter enables systematic comparison across facilities, time periods, and equipment configurations, revealing optimization opportunities that reduce both costs and emissions.
Electric bills are confusing with multiple line items. This calculator shows what percentage each component represents, helping you focus cost-reduction efforts where they'll have the most impact. Data-driven tracking enables proactive energy management, helping organizations reduce operational costs while progressing toward environmental sustainability goals and carbon reduction targets. This quantitative approach replaces rough estimates with precise figures, enabling facility managers to identify the most cost-effective opportunities for reducing energy consumption.
Total Bill = Energy Charge + Delivery Charge + Taxes + Fees
Result: $146.00/month
Energy: $85 (58.2%), Delivery: $42 (28.8%), Taxes: $11 (7.5%), Fees: $8 (5.5%). Total: $146. The energy charge is the primary controllable component through conservation and efficiency.
A typical residential electric bill breaks down as: Energy charges 45–60%, Delivery charges 20–30%, Taxes 5–10%, Regulatory fees and surcharges 5–15%. The exact split varies by utility, state, and usage level. Low-usage customers pay a higher percentage in fixed fees.
To calculate your true cost per kWh, divide your total bill by total kWh. If your bill is $150 and you used 1,000 kWh, your effective rate is $0.15/kWh even if the published energy rate is $0.10/kWh. Use the effective rate for ROI calculations on solar and efficiency upgrades.
Energy charges: Reduce usage through conservation, efficiency, and solar. Delivery: Limited control; mainly reduced by lowering kWh. Taxes: Scale with total bill, so reducing other components reduces taxes. Fees: Some are per-kWh (reduced by conservation) and some are fixed (unavoidable).
The energy charge covers the cost of generating electricity — fuel, power plant operations, and purchased power. It's typically the largest component (40–60%) and is directly proportional to your kWh usage.
The delivery charge covers transmission (high-voltage long-distance) and distribution (local power lines to your home). It includes infrastructure maintenance, equipment, and utility operations. It's typically 20–30% of the bill.
Common fees include: customer charge (fixed monthly fee), renewable energy surcharge, fuel cost adjustment, nuclear decommissioning charge, public purpose programs, and regulatory charges. These vary by utility and state.
Delivery charges have a fixed component (customer charge) that you can't reduce, and a per-kWh component that decreases with lower usage. Going fully off-grid eliminates delivery charges but requires significant investment in solar and batteries.
Published rates usually show only the energy charge. When you add delivery, taxes, and fees, the effective rate (total bill ÷ kWh) is typically 30–70% higher than the published energy rate. This is the true cost of electricity.
A fuel cost adjustment (FCA) is a per-kWh surcharge that fluctuates monthly based on the utility's fuel costs. When natural gas prices rise, the FCA increases. It can add $0.01–$0.04/kWh to your bill during high-fuel-cost periods.