Utility billing errors are more common than most people realize. Estimated meter reads, rate tier miscalculations, charges for disconnected services, and simple data entry mistakes can silently inflate your electricity, gas, or water bill for months or even years before anyone notices.

Unlike medical bills, utility bills arrive every single month — which means a small recurring error compounds fast. An extra $15/month on your electric bill is $180/year. A wrong rate tier on your gas bill could cost you double. This guide shows you exactly how to audit your utility bills and what to do when you find a problem.

Common utility billing errors

Utility billing errors fall into several categories. Some are honest mistakes; others are systemic issues that affect thousands of customers at once. Here are the most frequent ones:

Estimated vs. actual meter reads

When a meter reader can't access your meter — locked gate, bad weather, aggressive dog — the utility company estimates your usage based on historical patterns. These estimates can be wildly off, especially if your usage has changed (new appliances, seasonal shifts, vacancy). The bill will usually say ESTIMATED or EST somewhere on the meter read line.

The real problem comes when estimated reads stack up for several months. When the utility finally does an actual read, they issue a "true-up" that can result in a shockingly high bill — or, less commonly, a credit. Either way, the interim bills were wrong.

Wrong rate tier or rate schedule

Most utilities use tiered pricing: the first block of usage (say, 0–500 kWh) is cheaper than the next block (501–1,000 kWh), which is cheaper than the third block (1,001+ kWh). If the utility has you on the wrong rate schedule — commercial instead of residential, or a time-of-use plan you never enrolled in — every single bill will be incorrect.

This also happens when rate changes take effect. Utilities file new tariffs with your state Public Utility Commission (PUC), and the billing system needs to be updated. Sometimes the old rate persists for months after the new one should have kicked in.

Duplicate charges

Billing system glitches can produce duplicate line items — two identical base service charges, two copies of the same tax, or the same usage charge applied twice. These are less common than in medical billing but do happen, particularly after system migrations or account changes.

Wrong meter assignment

In multi-unit buildings (apartments, condos, commercial strips), meters can get crossed. You end up paying for your neighbor's usage and they pay for yours. This is especially common after construction, renovations, or meter replacements. If your bill suddenly spikes or drops for no reason after a neighbor moves in or out, a crossed meter is a possibility.

Charges for disconnected services

If you've cancelled a service, moved to a different address, or had a meter disconnected, you should stop being billed. But billing systems don't always catch up with physical disconnections. Charges for services you no longer receive — or never used — are a clear error.

Incorrect taxes, fees, and surcharges

Utility bills include various riders, surcharges, and taxes that can be miscalculated. Common issues include:

Demand charges on residential accounts

Demand charges are typically for commercial and industrial customers — they measure your peak power draw in a billing period, not just total consumption. If you see a "demand charge" on a residential account and you haven't enrolled in a demand-rate plan, that's likely an error.

Deposit and connection fees that were never refunded

New customers often pay a deposit that's supposed to be credited back after 12–24 months of on-time payments. If you've been a good-paying customer for years and never received that credit, it's worth asking about.

How to read your utility bill

Utility bills look different from company to company, but they all contain the same core information. Here's what to look for on each section:

Account and service information

Meter readings and usage

Charges breakdown

If your bill only shows a single total with no breakdown, call and request an itemized statement. You have the right to see exactly what you're being charged for and at what rate.

Usage history

Most bills include a 12- or 13-month usage history chart or table. This is extremely useful for spotting anomalies. A sudden spike with no obvious explanation (new appliance, weather event, more people in the home) warrants investigation.

Step-by-step checking process

Here's a systematic process for auditing any utility bill. It takes about 10 minutes per bill once you know what to look for.

1

Verify your account details

Confirm the service address is correct, the meter number matches the physical meter at your property, and the rate schedule is appropriate for your usage type (residential, commercial, time-of-use, etc.). If you're not sure what rate schedule you should be on, call your utility and ask them to review your options — you might qualify for a cheaper plan.

2

Check the meter read type

Look for the word ESTIMATED or EST next to the meter reading. If it's estimated, your bill may not reflect actual usage. One estimated read isn't a crisis, but multiple consecutive estimates are a problem. If you have access to your meter, take your own reading and compare it to what the bill says.

3

Do the math on usage

Subtract the previous meter read from the current meter read. Multiply by the meter multiplier if one is listed. The result should match the "usage" figure on your bill. If it doesn't, that's an error. Then multiply each usage tier by the corresponding rate and add them up. The total should match the usage charge on your bill.

4

Verify the rate per unit

Look up your utility's current tariff rates. These are public records filed with your state PUC and are usually available on the utility's website under "rates" or "tariffs." Compare each per-unit rate on your bill to the published tariff. If they don't match, you're being charged the wrong rate.

5

Check fixed charges, fees, and taxes

Verify the base/customer charge matches the published rate. Check that each surcharge and rider is listed in the utility's tariff. Verify that taxes are calculated on the correct base amount. Look for any charges you don't recognize — Google them or call the utility and ask what they are.

6

Compare to your usage history

Look at the same month last year. Is your usage significantly higher or lower? If so, is there a reason (weather, occupancy change, new appliances)? A usage increase of more than 25% from the same month last year with no obvious cause deserves investigation.

7

Add up all line items

Manually add every charge, surcharge, tax, and fee. The total should match the "amount due" on the bill. Rounding errors of a penny or two are normal. Discrepancies of a dollar or more indicate a calculation error.

Check the math instantly

Our free bill math checker lets you enter your line items and verifies the arithmetic. No uploads, no data stored — everything runs in your browser.

Try the bill math checker

Checking your electricity bill

Electric bills have the most moving parts of any utility bill. Here are electricity-specific things to watch for:

Time-of-use (TOU) rate errors

If you're on a TOU plan, your electricity costs more during peak hours (typically weekday afternoons) and less during off-peak hours (nights, weekends). Smart meters track when you use electricity, and the billing system is supposed to apply different rates to different time blocks. Errors here are hard to spot without access to your interval data — but if your TOU bill is consistently higher than your old flat-rate bill despite shifting usage to off-peak, request your interval usage data from your utility.

Solar/net metering credits

If you have rooftop solar panels, your meter should run backward when you're generating more than you're using, and you should receive credits for exported energy. Common errors include: credits calculated at the wrong rate, exported energy not recorded at all, or credits that mysteriously disappear. Check that your net metering credits match your solar system's production data.

Seasonal rate changes

Many utilities charge higher rates in summer (when air conditioning drives demand) and lower rates in winter. If your per-kWh rate doesn't change when the season changes — or changes at the wrong time — you could be overcharged for months.

Power factor penalties

This is mostly a commercial issue, but some residential customers with large motors (well pumps, workshop equipment) can trigger power factor charges. If you see one on a residential bill and you don't have unusual equipment, question it.

Billing period length anomalies

A standard billing period is roughly 28–32 days. If your billing period is significantly shorter or longer — say, 22 days or 38 days — your bill will look unusually low or high just because of the calendar. This isn't an error per se, but it can mask or exaggerate real errors. When comparing months, always look at the cost per day or kWh per day, not just the monthly total.

How to calculate: divide your total kWh by the number of days in the billing period. If a "normal" month for you is 25 kWh/day and this month shows 40 kWh/day with no obvious reason, that's worth investigating — regardless of whether the monthly total looks reasonable.

Smart meter data discrepancies

If your utility has installed a smart meter, you should have access to detailed interval data (usually 15-minute or hourly readings) through the utility's website or app. Smart meters can occasionally malfunction, transmit incorrect data, or lose communication with the billing system. If your smart meter's online portal shows different usage than what's on your bill, that's a data transmission error between the meter and the billing system.

You can also use smart meter data to identify phantom loads — devices drawing power when you think nothing is running. A baseline of 200–400 watts is normal for a typical home (refrigerator, clocks, standby power). If your overnight baseline is significantly higher, you may have equipment drawing excessive power.

Electric vehicle (EV) charging complications

If you charge an EV at home, it can add 250–500 kWh/month to your electric bill. Many utilities offer special EV rate plans with lower off-peak rates for overnight charging. If you're charging an EV and haven't been moved to the optimal rate plan, you could be overpaying significantly. Call your utility and ask about EV-specific rates.

Also check whether your utility requires a separate meter for EV charging to qualify for the EV rate. If a separate meter is needed and hasn't been installed, you may be charged the wrong rate for all your electricity, not just the EV portion.

Checking your gas bill

Natural gas bills are simpler than electric bills but have their own quirks:

Temperature/pressure adjustment factors

Gas meters measure volume (cubic feet), but gas is sold by energy content (therms or BTUs). The utility applies a conversion factor that accounts for the gas's actual heat content, temperature, and pressure. This factor should be listed on your bill. If it's missing or seems unusual (typically between 1.0 and 1.1 for residential), ask about it.

Budget billing reconciliation

If you're on a budget/level billing plan (paying the same amount each month), the utility reconciles your actual usage against your payments once a year. Check the reconciliation statement carefully — errors in the true-up can result in you owing a large balance or not receiving a credit you're owed.

Gas commodity vs. delivery

In deregulated gas markets, you may buy the gas commodity from one company and pay a separate delivery charge to the local utility. Make sure the commodity rate matches what your supplier quoted. Third-party gas suppliers sometimes advertise low introductory rates that spike after a few months.

Pilot light and standby gas usage

Even when you're not actively using gas appliances, a standing pilot light on a furnace, water heater, or gas fireplace can consume 5–10 therms per month. If your summer gas bill (when heating isn't needed) is higher than expected, check whether your appliances have standing pilot lights that are still burning. Modern appliances use electronic ignition and don't have standing pilots, but older equipment might.

Gas leak safety surcharges

Some gas utilities charge a pipeline safety or infrastructure improvement surcharge to fund pipe replacement programs. These surcharges should be approved by the PUC and should match the published tariff rate. Check your state PUC's website for currently approved surcharges for your gas utility.

Winter vs. summer rate differences

Many gas utilities charge higher per-therm rates in winter (when demand is highest) and lower rates in summer. If your per-therm rate doesn't change seasonally but your tariff says it should, you may be on the wrong rate schedule. Compare your bill's rate to the utility's current winter/summer tariff filing.

Checking your water bill

Water bills are typically the simplest utility bill, but errors can be costly:

Sewer charges based on water usage

Most municipalities base your sewer charge on your water consumption, on the assumption that what goes in comes out. But if you use significant water for irrigation, filling a pool, or other outdoor uses that don't enter the sewer system, you may be overpaying for sewer. Many utilities offer a sewer cap based on winter usage (when outdoor watering is minimal) or allow you to install a separate irrigation meter.

Leak-inflated bills

A running toilet or slow pipe leak can dramatically increase your water bill. While this isn't a billing error per se, many utilities have a leak adjustment policy that provides a partial credit on bills inflated by hidden leaks — but only if you ask. Check your utility's tariff for leak adjustment provisions.

Stormwater and drainage fees

Some water bills include stormwater management fees based on the impervious surface area of your property (roof, driveway, patio). If your property has been reassessed or renovated, the impervious area calculation might be wrong. You can usually appeal to the stormwater authority with a survey or satellite image.

Minimum charges

Water utilities often have minimum charges that apply even if you use no water (e.g., a vacant property). Make sure the minimum charge matches the published tariff for your meter size.

Meter size and base charges

Water utilities set their base charge (the fixed monthly fee regardless of usage) based on your water meter size. Larger meters have higher base charges because they serve properties with higher potential demand. Common residential meter sizes are 5/8-inch and 3/4-inch. If you have a small home with a larger meter (perhaps left over from a previous use of the property), you may be paying a higher base charge than necessary. Ask the water utility whether you can downsize your meter.

Backflow prevention device testing fees

Some municipalities require annual backflow prevention device testing and charge a fee for it. If you see this charge, verify: (1) your property actually has a backflow device, (2) the test was actually performed, and (3) the fee matches the published rate. Some properties are charged for testing that was never done.

Fire hydrant / fire service charges

If your property has a fire suppression system connected to the water main (common for commercial properties and some multi-unit residential), you'll see a fire service charge. This is usually legitimate, but verify the charge matches your meter size and the published tariff. If a previous fire service was disconnected and you're still being charged, dispute it.

Water quality surcharges

Some water utilities add surcharges for water quality improvements (new treatment plants, PFAS remediation, lead pipe replacement). These should be approved by the PUC or local governing body. If you see a new surcharge that wasn't on previous bills, verify it's been properly authorized and the rate matches the approved amount.

Who to contact when you find an error

When you've identified a potential error, here's the escalation path:

Step 1: Call the utility company

Start with customer service. Have your account number, the specific bill date, and a clear description of the error ready. Be specific: "My February bill shows 1,200 kWh, but my meter read was estimated and my actual read shows 800 kWh" is much more effective than "my bill is too high."

Ask for:

Step 2: Request a meter test

If the utility insists the reading is correct but you believe it's wrong, you can request a meter test. Most utilities will test your meter for free (some charge a fee that's refunded if the meter is found to be faulty). An electric meter that's running fast will produce consistently inflated bills, and a meter test is the definitive way to prove it.

Step 3: File a written complaint with the utility

If the phone call doesn't resolve the issue, send a formal written complaint. Include your account number, the specific charges you're disputing, copies of relevant bills, your meter readings if applicable, and a clear statement of what resolution you're seeking. Send it via certified mail or the utility's online complaint portal if they have one.

Step 4: Contact your state Public Utility Commission (PUC)

Every state has a regulatory body that oversees utility companies — typically called the Public Utility Commission (PUC), Public Service Commission (PSC), or Corporation Commission. They handle consumer complaints and have the authority to order utilities to issue corrections and refunds.

To find yours: search for [your state] public utility commission complaint. Most PUCs have an online complaint form. When you file, include all documentation from your previous contacts with the utility.

Filing a PUC complaint is free and often very effective. Utilities take PUC complaints seriously because the PUC is the body that approves their rates and can impose penalties. Many disputes that were unresolved for months get settled within weeks after a PUC complaint is filed.

Step 5: Contact your state Attorney General

If the issue involves deceptive practices (not just a billing error), your state Attorney General's consumer protection division may be able to help. This is more appropriate for situations like unauthorized third-party supplier switches, misleading rate quotes, or systematic overcharging.

Your consumer protections

Utility customers have significant legal protections, though they vary by state. Here are the key ones to know about:

Right to an itemized bill

In all states, you have the right to receive a detailed bill showing how your charges were calculated. If your bill only shows a total, request an itemized statement. The utility must provide it.

Estimated billing limits

Most state PUCs limit how many consecutive estimated bills a utility can send before they must obtain an actual reading. The limit is typically 2–3 consecutive billing periods. If you've received more consecutive estimated bills than your state allows, file a PUC complaint.

Back-billing restrictions

If the utility discovers they've been undercharging you due to their own error (wrong rate, broken meter, billing system bug), most states limit how far back they can bill you for the difference. Common limits are 6 months to 2 years. They generally cannot charge you interest or penalties on back-billed amounts that resulted from their own error.

Disconnection protections

While you're disputing a bill, you generally cannot be disconnected for non-payment of the disputed amount, as long as you've notified the utility of the dispute and are paying the undisputed portion. Many states also prohibit disconnection during extreme weather, for elderly or disabled customers, or for customers enrolled in payment plans.

Payment plan requirements

If you owe a large amount due to billing corrections or true-ups, you have the right to pay it off over time in most states. Utilities are generally required to offer payment plans of 6–12 months for large catch-up bills, especially those caused by utility errors.

Refund and credit rights

If the utility overcharged you, they must issue a refund or credit. In many states, if the overcharge went on for an extended period, they're required to pay interest on the refund. Check your state PUC's rules for the applicable interest rate.

Low-income assistance programs

If you're struggling with utility costs, you may qualify for assistance programs that can reduce your bills:

Utility rate case participation

When your utility files for a rate increase, the PUC holds public hearings where customers can testify. While this doesn't help with individual billing errors, it's an opportunity to advocate for fairer rates and better billing practices. Your PUC's website will list pending rate cases and hearing dates.

How to prevent future errors

Once you've audited your bills, take these steps to minimize future problems:

Real-world examples of utility billing errors

To illustrate how these errors play out in practice, here are common scenarios based on publicly reported cases:

The estimated read cascade

A homeowner's electric meter is behind a locked gate. The utility estimates usage for 5 consecutive months based on the previous year's pattern, but the homeowner has been traveling and the house was mostly empty. When the meter is finally read, the true-up shows a large credit — but the utility only applies it to the next bill instead of issuing a refund. The homeowner has to call and request a refund check for the overpayment.

The crossed meter in a duplex

After a meter replacement, a duplex owner notices one unit's bill tripled while the other's dropped to nearly zero. The meter wires were crossed during installation. The utility corrects the meter assignment but initially refuses to adjust the past bills. After a PUC complaint, the utility issues credits dating back to the date of the meter replacement.

The wrong rate schedule after moving

A homeowner moves to a new house in a different part of the utility's service territory. The new address is in a zone with a different rate schedule, but the billing system carries over the old rate schedule from the previous address. The new rate is actually lower, so the homeowner has been overcharged since moving. This goes unnoticed for 8 months until the homeowner audits the bill and compares the per-kWh rate to the published tariff.

The solar credit that disappeared

A customer with rooftop solar panels notices their net metering credits stopped appearing on their bill after a billing system upgrade. The system migration dropped the flag that identifies the account as a solar net-metering customer. All exported energy for 3 months went uncompensated. After escalation, the utility recalculates and credits the missed net metering value.

In every one of these scenarios, the customer who caught the error was someone who routinely checked their bill. The utility didn't proactively discover or fix any of these problems — the customer had to identify and report each one.

Deregulated markets: additional complexity

If you live in a state with a deregulated energy market (such as Texas, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Illinois, New York, Connecticut, Maryland, New Jersey, or parts of other states), your utility bill may come from two separate companies: the utility that owns the wires/pipes (the "distribution" company) and the energy supplier you chose (the "retail" provider). This adds additional error vectors:

Supply rate vs. what was quoted

Your retail energy supplier sets the commodity rate. Compare it to the rate in your supply contract or the rate that was advertised. Variable-rate plans can change monthly, so also check whether you were supposed to be on a fixed rate. If your contract says "fixed at $0.09/kWh" but your bill shows $0.12/kWh, that's a breach of contract.

Switching errors

When you switch from one retail supplier to another, or from the utility's default service to a retail supplier, the handoff sometimes goes wrong. You might be billed by both suppliers for the same period, or the switch might not take effect when promised, leaving you on the utility's higher default rate.

Slamming (unauthorized supplier switches)

Just as in telecom, there have been cases of retail energy suppliers switching customers to their service without authorization — a practice called "slamming." If your energy supplier changed without your consent, contact your state PUC immediately. You're entitled to be restored to your previous supplier and refunded any overcharges.

Misleading marketing by third-party suppliers

Some retail energy suppliers use aggressive door-to-door or phone sales tactics and make claims that their rates will "always" be lower than the utility's. In practice, variable-rate retail plans frequently end up costing more than the utility's default rate. If you were switched based on misleading claims, file a complaint with your state PUC and state AG.

Business and commercial utility bills

If you run a business, your utility bills have additional elements that need checking:

Demand charges

Commercial electric bills typically include demand charges based on your peak kilowatt (kW) draw during the billing period — usually measured in 15-minute intervals. One spike (from simultaneously starting multiple pieces of equipment) can set a high demand charge for the entire month. Verify that the recorded peak demand is reasonable for your operations. If you had an unusual event (equipment malfunction, testing), ask the utility if they offer demand charge forgiveness for anomalous events.

Power factor charges

If your business uses inductive loads (motors, compressors, fluorescent lighting), your power factor may be below the utility's threshold (usually 0.85 or 0.90), resulting in a penalty charge. Verify that the power factor reading on your bill is accurate. Installing power factor correction capacitors can eliminate this charge — the payback period is often less than a year.

Rate schedule optimization

Commercial customers often have multiple rate schedule options. The optimal schedule depends on your load profile — when you use power, how much you use at peak, and your total consumption. Ask your utility for a rate analysis or hire an energy consultant to review whether you're on the best available rate schedule. Being on the wrong schedule can cost thousands of dollars per year.

Tax exemptions

Certain commercial uses may qualify for sales tax exemptions on utility service — manufacturing, agriculture, and nonprofit organizations are common examples. If your business qualifies for an exemption and you're being charged sales tax, file the appropriate exemption certificate with the utility and request retroactive credits (subject to your state's statute of limitations for tax refunds, typically 3–4 years).

Smart home and time-of-use optimization

If you're on a time-of-use (TOU) rate plan or considering one, here's how to evaluate whether it's working for you:

Analyzing your interval data

Most utilities with smart meters provide 15-minute or hourly usage data through their website or app. Download this data (usually as a CSV) and calculate how much of your usage falls in each time period (peak, off-peak, super-off-peak). Then calculate your bill under your current TOU plan vs. a flat-rate plan. If the TOU plan costs more, switch to flat-rate.

Automating for TOU savings

If you're on a TOU plan, maximize savings by running heavy-usage appliances (dishwasher, washing machine, dryer, EV charger, pool pump) during off-peak hours. Smart plugs and timers can automate this. The savings depend on the spread between peak and off-peak rates — if peak is $0.35/kWh and off-peak is $0.15/kWh, shifting 500 kWh/month to off-peak saves $100/month.

Battery storage and TOU arbitrage

Home battery systems (Tesla Powerwall, Enphase, etc.) can charge during cheap off-peak hours and discharge during expensive peak hours. Whether this makes economic sense depends on the peak/off-peak rate spread, your battery capacity, and the cost of the battery system. Some utilities offer specific rate plans designed for battery owners.

Need to dispute a bill?

Use our free dispute letter template to generate a professional dispute letter. Fill in your details, describe the error, and download a ready-to-send letter.

Create a dispute letter

Frequently asked questions

How far back can I dispute utility billing errors?

This depends on your state PUC's rules. Most states allow you to dispute bills going back 1–3 years. Some states have shorter windows for certain types of errors. Check with your state PUC for the specific statute of limitations on utility billing disputes. Even if the formal dispute window has passed, it's worth asking the utility for a goodwill credit — some will voluntarily credit further back than required by law.

Can the utility shut off my service while I'm disputing a bill?

In most states, no — as long as you've notified the utility of the dispute in writing and are paying the undisputed portion of your bill. However, protections vary by state and you need to follow your state's specific dispute procedures to activate disconnection protection.

Do I need a lawyer to dispute a utility bill?

No. The vast majority of utility billing disputes are resolved through direct contact with the utility, followed by a PUC complaint if needed. Neither of these requires a lawyer. If the dispute involves a large amount or a complex legal issue, a consumer rights attorney can help — but for typical billing errors, the process is designed for consumers to handle themselves.

What if the utility says the high bill is due to my usage and there's no error?

If the utility claims the reading is correct, request a meter test. If the meter tests accurately, investigate other causes: a hidden water leak (for water bills), an appliance malfunction, a change in habits, or weather-related usage changes. Sometimes the bill really is correct but the cause of high usage needs to be addressed.

Can I negotiate my utility rates?

Unlike telecom, you generally cannot negotiate utility commodity rates — they're set by the PUC. However, you can: (1) make sure you're on the best available rate plan, (2) apply for low-income discounts if eligible, (3) take advantage of time-of-use rates to shift usage to cheaper periods, and (4) reduce usage through efficiency improvements.

What if I rent and the utility is in the landlord's name?

If utilities are included in your rent, you don't have a direct relationship with the utility company, and disputes about the amount would be between you and your landlord. However, if the landlord is sub-metering (measuring your usage with a private meter and billing you separately), most states have specific rules about sub-metering, including that the landlord cannot charge you more than the utility's approved rate. Check your state PUC's rules on sub-metering.

Should I switch to paperless billing?

Paperless billing is fine, but make sure you actually review the electronic bills. Set a monthly calendar reminder to review each utility bill when the notification arrives. Download and save PDF copies of your bills — some utilities only keep 12–24 months of history online, and you may need older bills for dispute purposes.

Understanding your utility's tariff

The tariff is the legal document that defines every rate, charge, and rule your utility is allowed to apply. It's filed with and approved by your state PUC. Knowing how to access and read the tariff gives you the ultimate reference for verifying your bill.

How to find your utility's tariff

Key tariff sections to review

When you cite the tariff in a dispute, it carries weight. Saying "Section 6.B.3 of your filed tariff states that back-billing is limited to 6 months for utility-caused errors" is much more effective than saying "I don't think you should charge me for that far back." The tariff is the law of the relationship between you and your utility.

Seasonal and weather-related billing considerations

Weather has a major impact on utility bills, and understanding the relationship helps you distinguish legitimate high bills from errors.

Heating and cooling degree days

Utilities and weather services track "heating degree days" (HDD) and "cooling degree days" (CDD) — measures of how much heating or cooling was needed in a given period. If your utility provides this on your bill or online, compare it to your usage. A month with 30% more HDDs than the same month last year should correspond to roughly 30% more gas or electric heating usage. If your usage increased far more than the degree days justify, investigate other causes.

Post-storm billing spikes

After severe weather events (ice storms, heat waves, extended cold snaps), utility bills spike for legitimate reasons. But they can also spike due to errors: meters damaged by storms giving wrong readings, estimated reads during power outages being too high, or the utility applying emergency/storm surcharges incorrectly. If your bill seems unreasonably high after a weather event, don't assume it's just the weather — audit it using the steps above.

Vacation and vacancy adjustments

If you were away for part of the billing period, your usage should be lower. If it's not, consider: was a house-sitter running more appliances? Did you leave the heating/cooling on? Is there a standby load (security system, refrigerator, etc.) that draws power even when you're away? Or does the reading not match the actual usage — which would indicate an estimated read or meter error?

Special situations

Landlord/tenant utility disputes

Utility billing disputes between landlords and tenants are common. If you're a tenant:

New construction and renovations

After new construction or major renovations, utility bills can be wrong for several reasons:

Check your first few bills after any construction activity very carefully.

Community solar and renewable energy programs

If you subscribe to a community solar program, your bill may include credits from the solar farm that offset your electricity charges. Verify that:

Green pricing and renewable energy programs

Some utilities offer "green pricing" programs where you pay a premium for renewable energy. Verify that: you actually enrolled in the program (some customers are enrolled by default), the premium matches the published rate, and you're comfortable with the additional cost. You can usually opt out of voluntary green pricing programs at any time.

Medical equipment and life support

If someone in your household depends on electrically powered medical equipment (oxygen concentrators, ventilators, dialysis machines), most utilities offer:

Contact your utility to register for medical protection. You'll need a doctor's certification. If you have medical protection and your bill doesn't reflect the baseline allowance, dispute it.

The bottom line

Utility billing errors cost consumers real money — and because utility bills recur monthly, even a small error compounds into a significant overcharge over time. The good news is that utility bills are actually one of the easier types of bills to audit: the math is straightforward, the rates are published, and the regulatory protections are strong.

Here's the minimum you should do every month:

  1. Check whether the meter read is actual or estimated.
  2. Verify the usage (current read minus previous read) matches the bill.
  3. Compare usage to the same month last year.
  4. Check that the per-unit rate matches the published tariff.
  5. Add up all line items and verify the total.

This takes about 5 minutes per bill. If you find an error, start with a phone call, escalate to a written dispute, and if necessary, file a PUC complaint. The system works — but only if you engage with it.

Utility bill audit checklist

Print or save this checklist and use it each month when reviewing your utility bills:

Electric bill checklist

Gas bill checklist

Water bill checklist

What to do with the results

What to say when you call your utility

Having a clear script makes the call faster and more productive. Here are scripts for the most common utility billing disputes:

For an estimated read you believe is wrong

"I'm calling about my [month] [electric/gas/water] bill, account number [X]. The bill shows an estimated meter reading of [amount], but I took a photo of my meter on [date] and the actual reading is [amount]. That's a difference of [X] units. I'd like the bill corrected to reflect the actual reading, and if there's a credit due, I'd like that applied to my account."

For a wrong rate schedule

"I'm calling about my account [X]. My bill shows I'm on rate schedule [name/code], but I believe I should be on [correct schedule] because [reason — e.g., 'I'm a residential customer, not commercial' or 'I have solar panels and should be on the net metering tariff']. Can you review my account and move me to the correct rate schedule? I'd also like retroactive credits for the billing periods where the wrong rate was applied."

For a charge you don't recognize

"I'm looking at my [month] bill, account [X], and I see a charge on line [X] for $[amount] labeled [description]. I don't understand what this charge is for. Can you explain it? [If the explanation doesn't apply to you:] That doesn't apply to my account because [reason]. I need this charge removed."

For requesting a meter test

"I believe my [electric/gas/water] meter may be malfunctioning. My bills have been significantly higher than expected for [X] months, and I've ruled out changes in usage. I'd like to request a meter accuracy test. I understand there may be a fee, but I'd like to proceed. If the meter is found to be reading high, I'd also like retroactive credits for the period the meter was inaccurate."

For a bill after disconnection

"I disconnected my [service] at [address] on [date]. My disconnection confirmation number is [number]. I'm still receiving bills for this address. I need all charges after [disconnection date] removed and a final bill issued reflecting only service through [date]. If I've overpaid, I need a refund of the excess amount."

General tips for calling your utility:

Related resources