Electricity Costs in Portland, Oregon (2026)

Portland households pay Oregon’s statewide average residential rate of 15.78¢/kWh (April 2026), served primarily by PGE / Pacific Power. Below: exact operating costs for the appliances and vehicles most likely to be on your bill, plus solar payback specific to Portland’s latitude.

Rate (April 2026)15.78¢
Typical monthly bill$141
Annual bill$1,691

Based on the EIA U.S. average household consumption of 893 kWh/month. Actual Portland usage varies with climate — Sun Belt cities like Phoenix or Houston average 1,200-1,500 kWh/month; mild-climate cities like San Francisco or Seattle average 400-600 kWh/month.

Top appliance costs in Portland

Each of the biggest household electric loads, at Portland’s rate:

ApplianceAnnual costSee full calculator
Electric Water Heater$778Details →
Tankless Electric Water Heater$726Details →
Level 2 EV Charger$676Details →
Central Air Conditioner$530Details →
Hot Tub$518Details →
Pool Pump$341Details →
Heat Pump (whole-home)$331Details →
Portable Air Conditioner$197Details →

EV charging cost in Portland

Home Level 2 charging costs for popular EVs, at Portland’s residential rate:

EVAnnual home charging costFull breakdown
Tesla Model 3 Long Range$526Details →
Tesla Model Y Long Range$569Details →
Tesla Model S$601Details →
Tesla Model X$701Details →

Solar in Portland

A typical 6 kW rooftop solar system in Portland costs about $18,600 gross ($3.10/W Oregon state avg), $13,020 after the 30% federal tax credit. Estimated annual savings: $1,078. Payback: 12.1 years.

Full Oregon solar payback analysis → · Are solar panels worth it in Oregon? →

Installation costs in Portland

Typical gross install costs for major home energy upgrades, at Oregon averages (Portland may run ±15%):

  • Central AC (3-ton): ~$6,300 — by state
  • Heat pump (whole-home): ~$11,800 — by state
  • Heat pump water heater: ~$3,800 — by state
  • Rooftop solar (6 kW): ~$18,600.0 — by state

About Portland electricity

Primary utility: PGE / Pacific Power. Rate data on this page uses the EIA Oregon residential state average. Your actual utility bill may include time-of-use pricing, tiered rates, or monthly service fees on top of the per-kWh energy charge.