Most residential and small business net metering customers are eligible for the time-of-use rate. If you can shift usage – such as doing laundry – to off-peak hours, you could save money. On- and off-peak usage applies to your bank, too.
With a time-of-use plan, you could potentially save by generating renewable energy during peak hours.
How it works:
This is a PPL plan. If you are shopping with an electricity supplier, you would need to switch from your current electricity supplier to PPL. Whether you will save money will depend on your supplier’s current price and how you use electricity. Before deciding whether to switch, please contact your current supplier first and be sure to ask whether there are any early cancellation fees or penalties.
Summer (6/1 - 11/30): 2-6 p.m. weekdays except select holidays*
Winter (12/1 - 5/31): 4-8 p.m. weekdays except select holidays*
Current price:
All other hours on weekdays
Weekends and select holidays*
Current price:
If you're a net metering customer, you sometimes generate more electricity than you use. This excess generation is stored in a “bank" you can use to offset future bills.
Net metering customers with excess generation will be paid at the on- and off-peak rates at the time the usage was added to the bank.
If you generate more than you use, you’ll bank kilowatt-hours at seasonal on- and off-peak rates. Then if there is a month when you use more than you generate, we’ll use some of those banked hours to offset your energy costs.
Here is how we use your bank to offset your usage:
We total your usage and generation by each season. If you generated more than you used, we’ll add these to your bank. You’ll still receive a bill for basic service. If you used more than you generated, we move to Step 2.
In the same bill cycle, you may have usage to offset in one season or time period, and excess generation in another. If this is the case, we use your excess generation first to offset any usage you would be billed for.
If you still have usage you would be billed for, we pull any existing or previously banked hours to offset your bill. Banked hours are used chronologically. You will be billed for any kilowatt-hours used above your banked amount.