Electricity Rates Comparison
Data from U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) · November 2025
| Metric | Alaska | Washington | National Avg |
|---|---|---|---|
| Residential Rate (¢/kWh) | 26.18¢ | 13.85¢ | 17.24¢ |
| Commercial Rate (¢/kWh) | 21.61¢ | 11.05¢ | — |
| Industrial Rate (¢/kWh) | 19.79¢ | 6.92¢ | — |
| Avg Monthly Bill | $151.39 | $132.33 | $152.02 |
| Avg Monthly Usage (kWh) | 578 | 955 | — |
| Market Type | regulated | regulated | — |
Washington has a lower residential electricity rate at 13.85¢/kWh compared to Alaska's 26.18¢/kWh — a difference of 12.33¢/kWh (89.0%).
The average monthly electric bill in Alaska is $151.39 (578 kWh/month), while in Washington it is $132.33 (955 kWh/month). The national average is $152.02.
Alaska has a regulated electricity market, while Washington has a regulated market.
The national average residential rate is 17.24¢/kWh. Alaska is above the national average at 26.18¢/kWh, and Washington is below the national average at 13.85¢/kWh.
Alaska pays 26.2 cents per kWh while Washington pays just 13.8 cents — a 12.3-cent gap driven by geography, hydropower, and isolation.
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