Georgia · Affordability

Residential Electricity Price in Georgia

Average retail electricity price paid by residential customers, in cents per kilowatt-hour.

14.7¢/kWh in 2025

#20 of 50 · Middle tier (lower is better)

Georgia is better than the 50-state median (15.3¢/kWh). That's a gap of 0.6¢/kWh.

View interactive chart & trend → See full 50-state ranking →

1970 – 2025 · Georgia only · interactive chart with US median overlay →

About residential electricity price

What this measures: Average retail electricity price paid by residential customers, in cents per kilowatt-hour.

Why it matters: Electricity is a fixed monthly cost most households cannot easily reduce, so price differences directly affect what families have left for other spending.

Watch out: Series methodology changed before 1990. Within-state changes after 2000 are clean; older comparisons should be read carefully.

Recent trend

YearGeorgiaUS median
201611.5¢/kWh12.0¢/kWh
201711.9¢/kWh12.3¢/kWh
201811.5¢/kWh12.2¢/kWh
201911.8¢/kWh12.4¢/kWh
202012.0¢/kWh12.3¢/kWh
202112.5¢/kWh12.6¢/kWh
202213.8¢/kWh13.8¢/kWh
202313.7¢/kWh14.3¢/kWh
202414.1¢/kWh14.8¢/kWh
202514.7¢/kWh15.3¢/kWh

Georgia vs. neighboring states

Same metric (residential electricity price), latest year with full state coverage. Click any name for that state's full report.

StateResidential Electricity PriceNational rank
Florida 15.2¢/kWh #23 of 50
Alabama 16.1¢/kWh #31 of 50
Tennessee 13.2¢/kWh #11 of 50
North Carolina 14.0¢/kWh #17 of 50
South Carolina 15.0¢/kWh #21 of 50

How Georgia compares (2025)

Top 5 best

#1North Dakota11.8¢/kWh
#2Idaho11.8¢/kWh
#3Nebraska12.3¢/kWh
#4Louisiana12.6¢/kWh
#5Arkansas12.8¢/kWh

Bottom 5

#46Connecticut29.4¢/kWh
#47Rhode Island29.5¢/kWh
#48Massachusetts30.5¢/kWh
#49California32.5¢/kWh
#50Hawaiʻi40.6¢/kWh

Source and methodology

Source: EIA · Direction: lower is better · Unit: ¢/kWh

Download raw CSV (all 50 states, all years)

Related Affordability metrics for Georgia

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