ISO New England6-State Power Grid

New England Residential Electricity

One of the highest-priced electricity markets in the US—which means the biggest savings opportunities. All six New England states have full retail choice.

MACTNHRIMEVT
18-22¢
Avg Commercial Rate
20-30%
Potential Savings
6
States with Full Choice
Since 1997
Deregulated

kW High Rates = High Savings

New England has some of the highest electricity rates in the nation due to transmission constraints and natural gas dependence. This creates significant savings opportunities for commercial customers willing to shop competitively.

❄️ Winter Pricing Strategy

Why Winter Matters

New England relies heavily on natural gas, which also heats homes. During cold snaps, electricity prices can spike dramatically. Fixed-rate contracts protect against this volatility.

Lock In Before November

The best time to negotiate commercial contracts is late summer/early fall before winter premiums are baked into supplier pricing. Our auction process can help you lock in competitive rates.

TEMP February 2026 Winter Market Update

ISO-NE wholesale prices remain elevated this winter. The Day-Ahead Hub averaged $226/MWh and Real-Time averaged $220/MWh during the first week of February. Real-Time prices exceeded $330/MWh on February 3rd due to high fuel costs and heating demand.

Natural gas prices (Transco Zone 6) surged 120% year-over-year, and the January 25 winter storm pushed prices above $1,800/MWh in some zones — reinforcing the critical importance of fixed-rate contracts for commercial customers.

Source: ISO-NE Mid-Week Market Update, Feb 2-5 2026
NG

New England Commercial Natural Gas

New England sits at the "end of the pipe." With no indigenous production and limited pipeline capacity (Algonquin/Tennessee Gas Pipeline), the region relies on LNG imports (Everett Terminal) during winter peaks.

This structural constraint means New England has the most volatile natural gas basis in the nation. Algonquin Citygate prices can jump from $3/MMBtu to $20+/MMBtu in days.

Basis Risk
Extreme
Supply
Pipe + LNG

The "Winter Cliff"

Commercial gas contracts in New England should explicitly address winter basis. Floating rates in January/February are a massive financial risk. We strongly recommend locking in basis for the winter term.

Read our Gas Procurement Guide →

State-by-State Guide

GOV Massachusetts

Largest New England market. National Grid and Eversource territories. Strong renewable energy mandates. Very competitive supplier market.

Full choice since 1998

🎭 Connecticut

Eversource and UI territories. Highest rates in the region, creating the biggest savings opportunities for commercial customers.

Full choice since 2000

⛰️ New Hampshire

Eversource, Unitil, and Liberty utilities. Active commercial switching market with multiple competitive suppliers.

Full choice since 1998

⛵ Rhode Island

First state to deregulate. National Grid territory. Small but active commercial market.

Full choice since 1997

🦞 Maine

CMP and Versant territories. Lower rates than southern New England. Growing renewable energy options.

Full choice since 2000

🍁 Vermont

Smallest market. Green Mountain Power dominant. Limited supplier options but choice available.

Choice available

Calculate Your New England Savings

High rates mean high savings potential—see yours now

Calculate Your Savings

See how much you could save by switching electricity providers

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Stop Overpaying for New England Electricity

With rates 40%+ above the national average, New England commercial customers have the most to gain from competitive procurement.

Get Competitive Quotes →