Why is your National Grid bill so high?
If you're a National Grid customer in New York & Massachusetts watching your electric bill climb, you're not alone — and the honest answer is almost always a mix of three things: how much electricity you used, the rate and fees National Grid charges, and the weather. The useful question isn't "is it high" — it's which of those is actually driving it, because the fix is different for each.
See what's driving your National Grid bill — free, 60 seconds
Run the Bill X-Ray →
Enter your National Grid bill + kWh; it splits the change into usage vs rate vs fees. Nothing stored unless you choose.
What National Grid customers are reporting
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The most common reasons National Grid bills go up
- Rate & fee increases. National Grid periodically files rate cases and adds riders (fuel, grid, storm recovery). Your effective rate — total bill ÷ kWh — can rise even when you use the same power. The Bill X-Ray shows your ¢/kWh trend.
- Weather. A hot or cold month drives heating/cooling, the biggest swing in most homes. The Weather-Adjusted Usage tool tells you how much of a jump is just weather vs a real change at home.
- Usage creep. A new appliance, EV charging, a pool pump, or aging HVAC can quietly raise kWh.
- Estimated meter reads. If National Grid estimated instead of reading your meter, a "catch-up" bill can spike — worth disputing.
- Grid build-out cost recovery. Utilities nationwide are raising rates partly to fund a grid straining under new demand (including AI data centers). It shows up on your bill as higher delivery charges.
What you can actually do
Thinking bigger picture?
The same grid pressure pushing up bills is reshaping the energy market — power producers, nuclear, natural gas, and water. See energy stocks grouped by theme (educational, not advice).