Household Electricity Usage in Georgia

A typical home in Georgia uses about 1,050 kWh of electricity a month. At the state's average rate of 15.37 ¢/kWh, that's about $161.38 a month.

Georgia modeled monthly usage
1,050 kWh
Georgia modeled annual usage
12,600 kWh
U.S. monthly benchmark
899 kWh
Georgia average rate
15.37 ¢/kWh
Modeled monthly cost
$161.38

Key metrics

MetricValue
Georgia modeled monthly usage1,050 kWh
Georgia modeled annual usage12,600 kWh
U.S. monthly benchmark899 kWh
Georgia average rate15.37 ¢/kWh
Modeled monthly cost$161.38

Georgia usage vs U.S. household benchmark

Georgia monthly usage
1,050 kWh
U.S. monthly usage
899 kWh
Georgia rate
15.37 ¢/kWh
U.S. benchmark rate
19.32 ¢/kWh

A typical home in Georgia uses about 1,050 kWh a month, about 16.8% above the typical U.S. home of 899 kWh. At 15.37 ¢/kWh, that works out to about $161.38 a month.

Usage-to-cost scenarios in Georgia

Monthly usageEstimated monthly costEstimated annual costCanonical cost page
500 kWh$76.85$922.20Open 500 kWh page
1,000 kWh$153.70$1844.40Open 1,000 kWh page
1,500 kWh$230.55$2766.60Open 1,500 kWh page
2,000 kWh$307.40$3688.80Open 2,000 kWh page

Connected electricity tools

Compare options

Compare electricity options in Georgia

Explore savings options, plan types, and provider offers for Georgia.

View offers in Georgia · Georgia calculator

Stay informed

Track Georgia electricity changes

Get notified about electricity costs rate changes and savings opportunities in Georgia.

Join the newsletter · Georgia alerts

Georgia appliance calculator examples

State cost and bill pathways for Georgia

Historical and trend pages

Fixed-usage and calculator pathways

Appliance and estimator pathways

State comparison pathways for Georgia

Discovery and navigation hubs

Consumer electricity drivers

Source & Method

Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) Retail Sales of Electricity. Updated: April 2026. Estimates use the EIA average all-in residential rate (delivery included); they don't add separately billed taxes, fixed charges, or other utility fees, which vary by utility. For how rates and estimates are defined, see the methodology hub.

Disclaimers

Manifest: 10cf58e6c720…
View release.json·View capabilities.json