Texas · Affordability

Residential Electricity Price in Texas

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

15.5¢/kWh in 2025

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

Texas is worse than the 50-state median (15.3¢/kWh). That's a gap of 0.1¢/kWh.

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

1970 – 2025 · Texas 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

YearTexasUS median
201611.0¢/kWh12.0¢/kWh
201711.0¢/kWh12.3¢/kWh
201811.2¢/kWh12.2¢/kWh
201911.8¢/kWh12.4¢/kWh
202011.7¢/kWh12.3¢/kWh
202112.1¢/kWh12.6¢/kWh
202213.8¢/kWh13.8¢/kWh
202314.5¢/kWh14.3¢/kWh
202414.9¢/kWh14.8¢/kWh
202515.5¢/kWh15.3¢/kWh

Texas 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
New Mexico 15.1¢/kWh #22 of 50
Oklahoma 13.1¢/kWh #9 of 50
Arkansas 12.8¢/kWh #5 of 50
Louisiana 12.6¢/kWh #4 of 50

How Texas 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 Texas

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