Key Terms
- Kilowatt-Hour (kWh)
- A unit of energy equal to 1,000 watts used for one hour. It is the standard unit utilities use to bill residential customers.
- Wattage
- The rate at which a device consumes electrical power, measured in watts. A 100W bulb uses twice the power of a 50W bulb.
- Utility Rate
- The price your electric company charges per kilowatt-hour. Rates vary by region, season, and usage tier.
- Phantom Load
- The electricity drawn by devices in standby or off mode — chargers, TVs, and game consoles can add 5-10% to your bill.
- Demand Charge
- An additional fee some utilities impose based on your peak power draw during a billing period, common for commercial accounts.
Managing Your Home Electricity Costs
Identify the Biggest Energy Hogs
Heating and cooling typically account for nearly half of a home's electricity bill. Water heaters, clothes dryers, and electric ovens are the next biggest consumers. By focusing energy-saving efforts on these high-draw appliances first, homeowners can see meaningful reductions.
Simple Strategies That Lower Bills
Switching to LED lighting, using smart power strips to eliminate phantom loads, and running appliances during off-peak hours can collectively reduce electricity costs by 15-25%. Programmable thermostats alone save an average of $180 per year according to the U.S. Department of Energy.
Understanding Your Utility Bill
Most residential bills include a per-kWh consumption charge, a fixed customer charge, and sometimes a fuel adjustment surcharge. Time-of-use plans charge higher rates during peak afternoon hours and lower rates overnight, rewarding customers who shift heavy usage to off-peak windows.
Key Terms
Voltage (V) — The electrical potential difference that drives current through a circuit, measured in volts.
Current (A) — The flow of electric charge through a conductor, measured in amperes (amps).
Resistance (Omega) — The opposition to current flow in a material, measured in ohms. Higher resistance means less current for a given voltage.
Power (W) — The rate of energy consumption or transfer, measured in watts. P = V x I.
Ohm's Law — The fundamental relationship V = I x R, linking voltage, current, and resistance in any resistive circuit.
Alternating vs Direct Current — AC reverses direction periodically (standard household power); DC flows in one direction only (batteries, electronics).