Average Electric Bill in GeorgiaApril 2026

The average residential electric bill in Georgia is $124/mo as of April 2026, at an average price of 15.37¢/kWh +3.7% versus a year earlier.

Georgia at a glance

Avg monthly bill
$124

U.S. EIA · April 2026

Avg price
15.37¢/kWh

U.S. EIA · April 2026

Avg usage / month
808 kWh

U.S. EIA · April 2026

Price change (YoY)
+3.7%

U.S. EIA · April 2026

vs April 2025

Price history (last 12 months)

MonthAvg residential price
April 202615.37¢/kWh
March 202615.01¢/kWh
February 202614.13¢/kWh
January 202614.46¢/kWh
December 202513.67¢/kWh
November 202514.42¢/kWh
October 202514.53¢/kWh
September 202515.30¢/kWh
August 202515.43¢/kWh
July 202515.56¢/kWh
June 202515.96¢/kWh
May 202514.98¢/kWh
April 202514.82¢/kWh

Residential average retail price by month. Source: U.S. EIA (public domain).

Why your bill is rising

Georgia is not in the PJM footprint, so the locked PJM capacity increases do not apply here. The only forward-looking line we can show honestly is the observed 12-month price trend — context, not a promise.

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Georgia average: $124/mo at 15.37¢/kWh (+3.7% YoY)

Your bill is 20.7% above the state average (≈976 kWh/mo at the state average price).

Where your bill is headed:

  • trendIf the last 12 months' trend continues
    +$5.56/mo

“Locked” = PJM capacity auction prices already cleared (a floor - several utility zones cleared higher). “Trend” = the observed 12-month EIA trend extended, not a promise.

Three ways to fight it:

  1. Find your energy hogs. See what each appliance actually costs to run at Georgia rates: cost-to-run guides.
  2. Get a home energy audit. DOE guide to professional and DIY audits.

Estimate only, based on official data as of April 2026 (U.S. EIA residential averages; PJM auction results). Your actual plan price differs.

Can you switch plans in Georgia?

No. Georgia's residential electricity market does not offer retail supplier choice, so you cannot cut the bill by switching plans. Natural-gas choice only; electricity regulated.

What you can do instead: cut the usage side of the bill. See what each appliance actually costs to run at Georgia rates in our cost-to-run guides, and target the biggest loads first.

Estimate only, based on official data as of April 2026. Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, residential retail sales (public domain), refreshed monthly. Your actual plan price differs.