Why Is My Electricity Bill So Confusing?
Alberta electricity bills are notoriously complex. Between energy charges, delivery fees, transmission costs, rate riders, and admin charges, it can feel like you need an accounting degree just to understand what you’re paying for.
Here’s a plain-language breakdown of every charge on your bill.
The Two Halves of Your Bill
Your electricity bill is split into two main sections:
- Energy charges — the cost of the electricity itself (this is the part you can change by switching providers)
- Delivery and regulated charges — the cost of getting electricity to your home (same regardless of who your provider is)
Energy Charges (You Control This)
Supply/Energy Rate
This is the rate you pay per kilowatt-hour (kWh) for the actual electricity. If you’re with a competitive retailer like Get Energy, this is your contracted rate. If you’re on the RRO (Regulated Rate Option), this rate changes monthly.
This is the only line item you can directly reduce by switching providers. Even a small difference — say 2¢/kWh — saves a family using 600 kWh/month about $144 per year.
Delivery Charges (Regulated — Same for Everyone)
Distribution (Local Delivery)
This covers the cost of delivering electricity from the transmission system to your home through local power lines. Your distribution company (ATCO, ENMAX, EPCOR, FortisAlberta) charges this. It includes a fixed daily charge plus a per-kWh rate.
Transmission
This pays for the high-voltage transmission lines that carry electricity across the province from generators to local distribution systems. It’s set by the Alberta Utilities Commission (AUC) and is the same regardless of your retailer.
Other Charges
Rate Riders
Rate riders are temporary charges (or credits) added to your bill to account for differences between forecast and actual costs from previous periods. They can be positive (you owe more) or negative (a credit). These are regulated and apply to everyone.
Local Access Fee
A fee charged by your municipality for the utility’s use of municipal land and infrastructure. Typically around 10-25% of your distribution charges. This goes to your city, not your energy provider.
Admin Fee
A monthly flat fee from your retailer for account administration. Some providers charge $5-$10/month; others include it in their rate.
GST
The federal 5% GST applies to your total electricity charges. Alberta has no provincial sales tax.
Sample Bill Breakdown
Here’s what a typical monthly bill might look like for a household using 600 kWh:
| Charge | Amount | Can You Change It? |
|---|---|---|
| Energy (600 kWh × 7.25¢) | $43.50 | ✅ Yes — switch providers |
| Distribution | $28.00 | ❌ Regulated |
| Transmission | $18.00 | ❌ Regulated |
| Rate Riders | $4.00 | ❌ Regulated |
| Local Access Fee | $5.50 | ❌ Municipal |
| Admin Fee | $0.00 | Varies by provider |
| GST (5%) | $4.95 | ❌ Federal tax |
| Total | $103.95 |
Note: Actual amounts vary by distributor area and usage.
The Takeaway
While you can’t control delivery and transmission costs, you can control your energy supply rate — and that’s the single biggest variable charge on your bill. Switching from the RRO to a competitive retailer like Get Energy is the fastest way to reduce your bill.
Recent Comments