Electricity bills in the United States have increased by about 30 percent from 2021 to 2025, aligning with broader inflation but varying significantly by region. Factors such as grid upgrades, fuel dependencies, and extreme weather contribute to these rises, straining low-income households. Politicians have responded, with campaigns in states like Virginia and Georgia focusing on affordability.
The average U.S. residential electricity bill reached roughly 30 percent higher in 2025 compared to 2021, mirroring national inflation trends in groceries, gas, and housing. However, regional differences are stark: California and northeastern states saw price hikes exceeding inflation, while some midwestern areas experienced stability or declines.
Low-income households bear a disproportionate burden, spending a larger share of earnings on energy. This issue has fueled political action; in Virginia and New Jersey, governors campaigned on controlling utility costs, and Georgia voters elected Democrats to utility regulator positions for the first time in two decades.
Research from the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and the Energy Information Administration highlights nuanced drivers beyond data centers, including utility structures, fuel price variations, and grid stress from weather events. Grid maintenance for extreme conditions often emerges as a primary factor.
In Alaska, geographic isolation limits imports, pushing rates 40 percent above the national average; a natural gas shortage looms in the Cook Inlet basin. California's prices surged due to wildfire mitigation costs, with monthly bills averaging $160 in 2024—13 percent above the U.S. average—exacerbated by rooftop solar reducing utility revenue bases.
Hawaiʻi faces the highest bills, over $200 monthly, tied to oil dependence and global market fluctuations, including a 2022 spike from Russia's invasion of Ukraine. The Midwest benefits from wind power, supplying over 40 percent in states like Iowa, stabilizing bills at $110–$130.
Northeastern states like Connecticut pay nearly $200 monthly, driven by natural gas demand surges in winter. The Pacific Northwest's hydropower keeps costs near national averages. Southeastern utilities recover hurricane recovery expenses, as in Florida's 9–25 percent increases post-2024 storms. Arizona's hot summers double New Mexico's bills at $160, while Texas's deregulated market exposes consumers to natural gas price swings, despite renewables growth.
These trends underscore challenges in balancing affordability with infrastructure needs amid climate pressures.