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Hidden Charges: What’s on Your Electric Bill?

Power lines at twilight

By Kathiann M. Kowalski

Ohioansโ€™ electric bills charge for more than the cost of making and delivering the electricity.

With different utilities serving specific parts of the state, Ohioansโ€™ electric bills and the tariffs that govern them vary. But they all have one thing in common: Theyโ€™re hard for many people to understand. And the bills donโ€™t clearly detail all charges to consumers.

Hereโ€™s a guide to what all the small print says โ€” and what it doesnโ€™t say โ€” on a sample bill from June for a residential customer of FirstEnergyโ€™s Illuminating Company. Bills from other utilities will vary. However, many of the concepts will be similar. Bills will also jump by a few dollars each month after utilities implement a new law, House Bill 6, meant to bail out two of FirstEnergyโ€™s nuclear plants and two 1950s-era coal plants. It will also scale back the stateโ€™s energy efficiency and renewable energy standards.

Deciphering an electric bill

A. This section tallies charges from the regulated distribution utility, in this case FirstEnergyโ€™s Illuminating Company. The distribution portion of this bill for a single-person household totaled 39% more than the generation charges. 

B. This section shows charges for electricity generation. This customer is covered by the NOPEC (Northeast Ohio Public Energy Council) community aggregation program. Unless individuals in participating communities opt out, such programs let groups like NOPEC choose electricity suppliers for residents. Group purchasing power often provides more favorable rates than people would get on their own.

C. โ€œCustomer Chargeโ€ covers โ€œbilling, meter reading, equipment and service line maintenance,โ€ according to the billโ€™s terms.

D. โ€œDistribution Related Componentโ€ is more than just the billโ€™s description of โ€œmoving electricity over distribution lines to a service location.โ€ In this case, it includes riders with code names like AMI, DCR, DMR, DSE, DUN, PUR, SKT and USF. (See chart below.)

E. โ€œCost Recovery Chargesโ€ includes riders known as EDR, NMB, PIR and RER. (See chart below.)

F. This graph shows the customerโ€™s electric use varying over the course of the year, depending on weather, travel, the number of people in the house, and other factors. 

G. This data shows customer charges for Ohioโ€™s clean energy standards and for demand response programs. The energy efficiency standard paid for utility programs to encourage energy-saving steps, such as efficient lighting, appliances, insulation and more. Programs had to save more overall than they cost. Lower overall demand also produced savings for all consumers in both capacity and wholesale markets. HB 6 effectively guts the standard. Charges for other bill riders are not broken out.

H. This data shows the customerโ€™s usage, also reflected month-by-month in the bar graph below. This single householderโ€™s average monthly use of 420 kilowatt-hours is about half of the 841 kWh/month for the average Ohio customer in 2017, according to the Energy Information Administration.

Rider Alphabet Soup

(based on a sample 2019 bill from FirstEnergyโ€™s Illuminating Company)

Code LettersRider NameWhat it’s for
AMIAdvanced Metering InfrastructureFor smart grid metering, effective July 1, 2019.
DCRDelivery Capital Recovery RiderRecovers costs for investments in the distribution system.
DMRDistribution Modernization RiderAn August 22, 2019, order requires FirstEnergy utilities to refund theunlawfulno-strings-attached credit support rider for the month of July, but earlier charges for the rider arenโ€™t refundable.
DSEDemand Side Management and Energy Efficiency RiderUtility costs for energy efficiency and peak demand reduction programs. The charge does not reflectsavingsfrom those programs. The average has been about $5.61 per month, including about $2 monthly savings even if customers donโ€™t take part in those programs.
DUNDistribution Uncollectible RiderShifts costs for uncollectible charges so paying customers are effectively paying for others who donโ€™t pay their bills.
PURPIPP Uncollectible RiderShifts costs of low-income customers who can only afford to pay a set percentage of their income.
SKTState kWh Tax RiderCustomers using 2,000 kWh or less per month pay about half a cent per kWh. Rates fall for entities using more electricity.
USFUniversal Service Fund RiderAdministrative costs for low-income programs and consumer education programs.
EDREconomic Development RiderEconomic incentives from the utility shift costs to other customers, including various industrial and commercial users.
NMBNon-Market-Based Services RiderGenerally covers costs from grid operator PJM for using the bulk transmission system and related services.
PIRPhase-In Recovery RiderDebt service for refinancing costs for fuel and purchased power, much of which was initially bought at least a decade ago.
RERResidential Electric Heating Recovery RiderShifts costs for FirstEnergy discounts to certain customers who have all-electric heating in their homes.
Stay tunedHouse Bill 6 ridersStill to come are charges to cover subsidies for two FirstEnergy nuclear plants and for coal plants, and to reflect HB 6โ€™s changes to the energy efficiency and clean energy standards. A referendum effort is underway.

SOURCES: PUCO and FirstEnergy.

This guide to deciphering bill rider charges would apply to a sample 2019 residential bill for FirstEnergyโ€™s Illuminating Company. The first eight items are included in the billโ€™s Distribution Related Component, according to FirstEnergy spokesperson Christopher Eck. The next four items fall within the Cost Recovery Charges, Eck said.

Other utilitiesโ€™ electric bills may have the same or different riders and may group them under different parts of the bill. Even where charges have the same names, amounts may vary. For the sample used for the Illuminating Company, the Customer Charge was $4.00, but AEP Ohio customers pay $8.40

Some current costs also reach back to earlier generation activities. For example, FirstEnergyโ€™s Rider PIR pays debt service on fuel and purchased power that apparently were first acquired more than a decade ago. AEP Ohioโ€™s customers also pay a Phase-In Recovery Rider for โ€œfuel that was consumed but not billed to customers from 2009 to 2011.โ€ 

How cross-subsidies affect customer bills

Ohioโ€™s law to deregulate sales of electricity generation passed in 1999, but it took roughly a decade before utilities actually spun off their power plants. Duke Energy sold almost all of its generation assets early on. AEP, FirstEnergy and Dayton Power & Light transferred their utilitiesโ€™ former power plants to affiliates. 

By the time that finally happened, lawmakers passed Senate Bill 221. Among other things, that 2008 law allowed โ€œelectric security plansโ€ with various bill riders. That increased opportunities for cross-subsidies, said energy analyst Noah Dormady at Ohio State University. He and his colleagues reported on their analysis of PUCO price data in the Energy Journal earlier this year.

The point for policymakers isnโ€™t to jump back to regulating retail electricity, Dormady and his colleagues wrote. Rather, they suggest, the study shows the impact of political and regulatory processes on what Ohioans pay for electricity.

A: Some cross-subsidies shifted industrial costs at the expense of consumers or commercial customers. Others let utilities eventually funnel funds from regulated utilities to unregulated affiliates.

B: Cross-subsidies on Ohio residential customersโ€™ bills rose by more than 500 percent since SB 221, Dormady and colleagues found: to about 1.88 cents/kWh versus 0.31 cents/kWh before the lawโ€™s effective date. 

C: โ€œSome territories were harder hit than others,โ€ Dormady noted. For example, cross-subsidies in AEP Ohioโ€™s territory jumped from 0.15 cents/kWh before deregulation to as high as 4.4 cents/kWh after. For a household using 1,000 kWh per month, that would be nearly $45 per month in cross-subsidy charges for supposedly arms-length generation affiliates, Dormady said.

D: Because Duke โ€œfunctionally divestedโ€ by selling almost all its generation for the Cincinnati metro area, it didnโ€™t have โ€œthe same need to seek cost recovery to cross-subsidize the losses of a legacy coal fleet in an era of low gas price[s],โ€ Dormady said. Customers saved money. 

Keeping score

As of June 2019, consumers had paid more than $15 billion in utility subsidies since deregulation began, according to the Office of the Ohio Consumersโ€™ Counsel.

Early payments reimbursed utility companies for the costs of separating generation from distribution. Utilities also got payments for โ€œstrandedโ€ assets they might otherwise have had trouble selling. Duke managed to sell most of its Ohio generating plants by 2009, but other utilities or their affiliates continued to own all or part of various power plants.

Later payments were justified as ways to keep prices steady, so consumers wouldnโ€™t see swings from the market. Utilities have continued to make those arguments as they sought yet more subsidies for noncompetitive coal and nuclear power plants.

 SOURCE: Office of the Ohio Consumersโ€™ Counsel, 2019.

Type of Work:

Explainer A data-driven story that provides background, definition and detail on a specific topic.

News Based on facts, either observed and verified directly by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.

News Article Article pages that do not meet specifications for other Trust Project Type of Work labels and also do not fit within the general news category.

Areas of Expertise:

Accountability Journalism

Location Expertise:

Buckeye State

Phone Number:

(646) 397-7761


12 responses to “Hidden Charges: What’s on Your Electric Bill?”

  1. It would be good to give an analysis of a First Energy Bill with Home Solar and describe how Net Metering works in Ohio. The bills costs calculation is as cryptic as regular bills. For example, when there is a net + KWH usage, there is a per KWH charge. But when the net KWH for the bill is negative, there is no per KWH charge. But the Cost Recovery charges go negative. Very cryptic.

  2. This works for the major suppliers in Ohio. What about the other suppliers and coops in our state? Take Bowling Green Utilities, who has not discounted programs, by law (of PUCO)? Smaller coops and suppliers are denied from giving disabled, seniors and low income peoples special programs the “big 4” can. What’s the breakdown for why it is so expensive in Bowling Green, Ohio, a small town? The fact that you only gave a listing and description of the “big 4,” shows me that this report is not objective, along with PUCO as well.

  3. It is absolutely unacceptable to charge someone $103.97 for using $46.87 use of electricity. If I turned my power off and used no electricity for a month I still would receive a bill for $54.00. The only reason this is done is so the CEO can get a million dollar bonus check every quarter! Yet the system is falling apart and no one does their job. Why do we allow this? This is something we all should be protesting daily about!

  4. My electric bills are a rip off. I am one home occupant and I conserve on my electric usage. My next text will be to the senators and governor of Ohio.

    • Iโ€™m with you , if we need to protest these rider fees. This is insane, iโ€™ve cut the cord to cable, i have to have electric to heat my home, people need to rise up and take a stand

  5. The republicans controlled Ohio house is ripping you off. Stop voting for these people. That’s the only way to get change. Republicans support their donors, period.

  6. Iโ€™m so sad to hear that our current politicians allow this to happen and allow the system to continue. It should be easy to motivate everyone to weigh in since we all use the services form energy companies.

  7. WhatBypassable generation and transmission related commponent? This charge appeared on my resedentialbills beginning in March 2023, starting at $7, $8, then $18, then $34 and now in July it is $69.

    What can consumers do about these ripoffs?

    • Did you ever find out what this charge is for? I’m being billed 300 for 1 months electric and 180 of it is this charge.

  8. I just got a text yesterday from Duke energy and my $118/mo even billing is going to $338/mo effective immediately. We have propane so only use electricity and we used less this year than last year but the price is skyrocketing and Duke says they will continue to go up till next June, government and big business are in bed together and nothing we can do until people wake up.

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