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Understanding How to Read and Calculate Your Electricity and Natural Gas Bills – Calculator Included!
Fully understanding the energy charges and fees on your electric or natural gas bills each month is an important part of keeping your energy budget under control. When reading your electricity bill or natural gas bill, you might wonder what the electricity or natural gas supply charges are about, what a kWh is, how they’re calculated, or you might be having other problems understanding your energy bills. ɫ wants to help you manage your energy expenses by teaching you about energy costs and how power usage might affect your overall monthly bill.
Table of Contents
- Your Electricity Bill Explained: Charges, Fees & How They’re Calculated
- What are the Charges and Fees on My Electricity Bill?
- How Are Electricity Bills Calculated?
- Electricity Bill Calculator - Quickly Estimate Your Monthly Electricity Cost
- Your Natural Gas Bill Explained
- A Few of the Most Common Natural Gas Bill Terms
Electricity Bill Calculator - Quickly Estimate Your Monthly Electricity Cost
Your Electricity Bill Explained:Charges, Fees & How They’re Calculated
The key to understanding your electric bill is understanding your energy costs and the line items that are shown on your bill. Grab a copy of your electricity bill, or find a sample electric bill from the supplier you will be using (your bill may come from your utility). Each bill is typically broken down into several home energy charges, which might vary slightly from your supplier or utility.
- Electricity Cost: On your bill (or this sample electric bill), you will see a listing of the amount of electricity your home used for the month, listed in kilowatt-hours, or kWh. You have control over this portion of your bill in two ways. First, you can work to cut home energy charges by . Second, you can gain more control by selecting a supplier that offers a fixed-rate plan to avoid fluctuations in electricity rates that happen due to the change of seasons, energy supply changes, or other outside factors.
- Capacity Cost: Another important fee to understand on your electric bill is capacity cost. This fee, usually incurred by commercial customers, ensures that the electric utility has enough capacity available to cover the total power use demand of their customers.
While you don’t get much input on how this rate is assessed, you can do your part to help lower these costs for all users by using major appliances and machinery during off-peak times and reducing your energy consumption during peak hours. Peak hours vary by location and season, so contact your electricity provider for information about how to avoid peak usage times in your area.
- Utility Delivery Charge on Electric Bills: Another common question about electricity billing concerns the electricity delivery charge.The delivery fee on your electric bill is your portion of line maintenance and upkeep, which helps to ensure that consistent power is delivered to your home or small business. Your bill (like this sample electric bill) might show a different term such as “transmission fee” or something similar, but the impact on your electricity bill remains the same.Across the country, transmission and distribution fees make up nearly 40 % of a typical residential electric bill, covering the poles, wires, and upkeep that bring power to your meter.1
ɫ’s electricity bills are designed to give our Texas customers all the important billing information needed, in an easy-to-read format.
In all other states served by ɫ, customers will receive electricity bills from their utility.
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How Are Electricity Bills Calculated?
Understanding how your electric bill is calculated is more than knowing the rates you pay — you also need to understand how much energy you are using, because that’s what ultimately determines your home electric charges. When reading your electricity bill, you will see the total cost of energy usage that month. This is calculated by multiplying the rate you pay per kWh by how many kilowatt-hours your home has used during the month. Knowing this formula (provided below) will give you a basic way of understanding your energy costs.

What Are kW and kWh on Your Electric Bill?
In order to understand how your electricity bill is calculated, you’ll need to know the difference between kW vs. kWh. It's easy to use the terms kW and kWh interchangeably, but they are two separate units of measure. A kW simply means a kilowatt — a unit of measure for electricity that equals 1,000 watts. A kWh (kilowatt-hour) is a unit of measure calculated to determine how many kilowatts an electric device uses per hour.
To find out more about kW vs. kWh and the formula used for kWs to kWhs conversion, watch our video!

How To Calculate Your Electric Bill Using the kWh Calculation Method
When you look at your electricity bill, you will see the total number of kWhs you used in the month, but you can’t tell how much electricity each appliance is using.To calculate the electricity usage of each appliance or device, you’ll need the following: the wattage of the appliance, the average number of hours you use it per day, and the price you pay per kilowatt-hour (kWh) of electricity.
To calculate power consumption estimates, find the general number of kWhs you use per month for each appliance, using this method:
- Find the silver energy label on your appliance. The wattage should be on this silver label.
- Divide that wattage by 1,000 to get your appliances energy use in kilowatts.
- Multiply kilowatts by the average amount of hours the appliance is in use.
- Multiply that number by 30 days to calculate the average kWh your appliance uses each month.
- Multiply that number by your kWh rate to estimate your electric bill for the month.
- Repeat these steps to find the cost of energy for each appliance and then add them together to find the cost of energy of your entire house each month
Calculations for Some Common Household Appliances:
- 55-inch Smart TV:If you have a 55-inch smart TV, it is about 77 watts while powered on. If you watch it for four hours a day, it consumes about 308 watt-hours per day (77 x 4 = 308). To convert that to kWh, divide 308 by 1000 (308÷ 1000 = .308). If your current electricity rate is 11 cents per kWh, take .308 and multiply that by 11 cents (.308 x .11 = .03388) and your TV usage would account for approximately $1.02 (.0338 x 30 = $1.02) of your overall monthly electric bill.
- Video Game System:A video gaming system is anywhere from 165 to 310 watts. If you play video games for 3 hours a day, it would consume up to 930 watt-hours per day (310 x 3 = 930). Divide 930 by 1000 to get your kilowatt hours (930÷ 1000 = .93). If your electric rate is 11 cents per kWh, it would cost you .1023 cents per day to play video games. Using your video game system would account for about $3.07 of your monthly electricity bill.
- Laptop:A 17-inch laptop runs about 90 watts. If you're working from home and use it for 9 hours a day, it would consume 810 watt-hours per day. To determine your kilowatt hours, divide 810 by 1000 (810÷ 1000 = .81). With an electric rate of 11 cents per kWh, it would run you about .0891 cents per day to use your laptop and account for approximately $2.67 of your monthly electric bill.
The average U.S. household used about 861 kWh of electricity each month in 2023 at an average retail price of 15.98 ¢/kWh, so even small efficiency tweaks can move the needle on your bill.2
Get more information on household appliances in our Guide to Energy-Efficient Appliances.
ɫ customers can find a more in-depth view of their bill here:
Your Natural Gas Bill Explained
Understanding your energy costs doesn’t end with understanding your electricity bill. Your natural gas bill can be a big part of your home energy charges, and depending on where you live and your supplier, there might be several terms you need to become familiar with to understand your natural gas bill.
According to the latest Residential Energy Consumption Survey, U.S. homes consumed 10,566 kWh of electricity and about 669 CCF (66,900 ft³) of natural gas on average in 2020, providing a useful yard‑stick for comparing your own usage.3
Fixed rates and variable rates are different billing plans, and will affect your natural gas bill. Understanding your natural gas bill becomes a little more complex when you are billed a variable rate that may change monthly. Fixed-rate billing is less complex than variable rates, and keeps the rate you pay for gas the same each month -- the only thing that varies is your usage.
Space heating remains the biggest energy expense, accounting for roughly 45 % of the average family’s annual utility costs, so efficiency upgrades here deliver outsized savings.4 Natural‑gas price reality check – During the 2022–23 heating season, residential natural‑gas retail prices averaged $14.85 per Mcf, the highest winter price in the past decade.5
A Few of the Most Common Natural Gas Bill Terms:
- What is a CCF?CCF is the reading of the amount of natural gas you have used within the month, measured by hundreds of cubic feet.
- What is a BTU? A British thermal unit, or BTU, is a measurement of energy that is used to calculate the amount of energy needed to raise the temperature of a pound of water 1 degree Fahrenheit.
- What is a Therm? A therm is the equivalent of 100,000 BTUs. Typically this is the unit used to calculate the amount of energy used when determining your monthly charge for natural gas.
- What is a price per therm? This is the rate you pay per therm, per your contract. This rate might vary due to time of year, supply and other cost factors if you are on a variable rate plan.
- You might also have customer service charges, transmission fees, capacity fees and other similar charges based on the requirements of your state or utility.
ɫ’s natural gas bills are designed to give our Georgia customers all the important billing information needed, in an easy-to-read format.
In all other states served by ɫ, customers will receive natural gas bills from their utility.
ɫ customers can find a more in-depth view of their bill here: ɫ's Gas Bill
Additional resources for Natural Gas
- When to Lock In Natural Gas Rates
- Why Is My Natural Gas Bill So High?
- How to Shop for an Electricity or Natural Gas Plan
- Natural Gas Safety Tips for Your Home
Sources:
1 U.S. Energy Information Administration. “Even in deregulated states, distribution and transmission costs make up nearly 40 % of electric bills.” Today in Energy, September 12 2024.
2 U.S. Energy Information Administration. “Increases in U.S. residential electricity bills in 2023 were outpaced by price inflation.” Today in Energy, March 26 2024.
3 U.S. Energy Information Administration. “EIA releases consumption and expenditures data from the 2020 Residential Energy Consumption Survey.” Press Release, March 29 2023.
4U.S. Department of Energy. Energy Saver 101 Infographic: Home Heating.
5U.S. Energy Information Administration. “Average U.S. natural gas bills expected to decrease this winter.” Today in Energy, October 12 2023.
How to Lower Your Electricity and Natural Gas Bill
Saving energy may help you save money while also reducing your impact on the environment. By making some small changes around your house, you can potentially see financial savings.
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