Average Household Electricity Bill in Alabama (2026)

A typical Alabama household uses about 893 kWh/month and pays about $155/month — or $1866/year — at the April 2026 residential rate of 17.41¢/kWh.

Monthly use893 kWh
Monthly bill$155
Annual bill$1866

Alabama’s rate is 8% below the U.S. average (18.83¢/kWh). Versus the national typical bill of $168/month, Alabama households pay $13 less each month.

Where does that 893 kWh/month go?

Based on EIA Residential Energy Consumption Survey averages, here is how a typical household’s electricity splits across major loads in Alabama:

Load category~SharekWh/monthCost/month at 17.41¢/kWh
Space cooling17%152$26.43
Water heating12%107$18.66
Space heating12%107$18.66
Refrigeration7%63$10.88
Lighting5%45$7.77
TV & electronics7%63$10.88
Washer & dryer5%45$7.77
Cooking4%36$6.22
Other (always-on, misc)31%277$48.20

Shares vary widely by climate, home size, and what fuels you use (gas vs electric heat, gas vs electric water heater). The split above assumes a fully-electric household; gas-heated homes will see a smaller heating slice and a higher relative share for other loads.

How Alabama compares

The 12 cheapest electricity states are dominated by hydropower, nuclear baseload, or coal-rich regions (Idaho, Washington, Utah, Nebraska, Oklahoma). The most expensive — Hawaii, California, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, New York — typically have higher fuel imports, more expensive transmission, or both. Alabama sits at 17.41¢/kWh, ranking 31 out of 51 (1 = cheapest).

FAQ

Why use 893 kWh/month as the baseline?

That is the most recent U.S. average residential household consumption published by the EIA Residential Energy Consumption Survey. Actual usage varies from ~500 kWh/month in mild-climate apartments to over 2,000 kWh/month in large electric-heated homes.

I use much more / less than that — what should I do?

Multiply your actual monthly kWh (from your bill) by 0.1741 to get your Alabama bill. Or use any of our per-appliance calculators to add up your actual loads.

Does this include fees and taxes?

No — this is the energy-only cost at the average residential rate. Most U.S. utilities also charge a small monthly customer/service fee ($5–$20) and applicable taxes, which add on top of the figures here.