Electricity Price History in North Carolina
Electricity cost depends on monthly usage and your state's rate. Below are historical rate trends and price change metrics for North Carolina. Data comes from EIA residential retail sales.
Current rate
14.08 ¢/kWh
1-year increase
-0.3%
5-year increase
+28.2%
Price Trend
Summary
Electricity prices in North Carolina have increased 28.2% over the past 5 years. One year ago the rate was 13.51¢/kWh; it is now 14.08¢/kWh. Five years ago the rate was 10.51¢/kWh.
More Data & Comparisons
- Electricity cost in North Carolina — Rates, value score, affordability
- Average electricity bill in North Carolina — Monthly and annual bill estimates
- Electricity cost calculator for North Carolina — Usage-based estimates
- Full North Carolina knowledge page — Rates, value score, affordability, trends
- All states price history
Frequently Asked Questions
- How much have electricity prices increased in North Carolina?
- Electricity prices in North Carolina have increased 28.2% over the past 5 years. The 1-year increase is -0.3%. The annualized 5-year increase is approximately 5.1% per year.
- Why do electricity prices change?
- Electricity prices change due to fuel costs (natural gas, coal, renewables), transmission and distribution investments, regulatory policies, demand patterns, and weather. State-level rates also reflect local generation mix and market structure.
- Are electricity prices rising faster than inflation?
- It varies by state and period. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that electricity prices have often risen faster than overall inflation in recent years due to grid modernization, renewable mandates, and fuel cost volatility. Compare your state's annualized increase to CPI inflation.