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New York • NYISO • ConEd / National GridMar 30, 2026

New York Energy Costs March 2026: 27.39¢/kWh Residential as ConEd Hike and Gas Constraints Converge

The Bottom Line (New York March 2026)

Average home energy costs in New York have reached 27.39 cents per kWh for residential electricity — 59% above the 17.21¢ national average and the 6th highest rate in the United States, per EIA data through January 2026. Con Edison’s approved 3.5% delivery rate increase (effective January 2026) adds ~$4.50/month to a typical NYC residential bill. Natural gas on the Transco Zone 6 hub trades at $5.41/MMBtu, a 42% premium over Henry Hub ($3.82), reflecting persistent Algonquin pipeline constraints into the lower Hudson Valley.

27.39¢
NYC Residential
Per kWh — 59% above US avg
+3.5%
ConEd Delivery Hike
Effective Jan 2026
$5.41
Nat Gas (Transco Z6)
Per MMBtu — 42% above Hub

New York Electricity Rates: Where the Money Goes

New York electricity bills are split into two components: Supply (the commodity cost of electrons) and Delivery (the wires, substations, and grid operations run by your utility). In New York City, ConEd controls delivery. Here is the current breakdown:

Component¢/kWh% of Typical Bill
Supply (ESCO / Utility Default)8.5–12.5¢~38%
Delivery (ConEd)12.8–14.2¢~52%
Taxes & Surcharges2.0–3.0¢~10%

The critical insight: delivery charges are non-bypassable. Even customers who shop for competitive supply via an ESCO still pay ConEd’s full delivery tariff. The 3.5% delivery increase approved in the January 2026 rate order (NY PSC Case 22-E-0064) adds roughly $4.50/month to a 750 kWh residential bill.

NYISO Zone J: Wholesale Market Pressure

Zone J (NYC) wholesale day-ahead LMPs have averaged $58.40/MWh in Q1 2026, up 14% from Q1 2025. Key structural drivers:

  • Generation retirements: 4,315 MW retired vs. only 2,274 MW added since 2019 — a 2:1 deficit documented in NYISO’s supply crisis white paper.
  • Summer shortfall: NYISO projects a 650 MW capacity shortfall for Summer 2026 after Empire Wind and Sunrise Wind stalled.
  • Gas dependency: Natural gas sets the marginal clearing price in Zone J for 85%+ of hours. With Transco Z6 at $5.41/MMBtu, every $1 increase in gas adds ~$7/MWh to wholesale electricity.

Natural Gas: The Pipeline Problem

While Henry Hub sits at $3.82/MMBtu nationally, New York’s delivered gas costs are structurally higher due to pipeline bottlenecks:

Hub$/MMBtuPremium vs Henry Hub
Henry Hub (National)$3.82
Transco Zone 6 (NYC)$5.41+42%
Algonquin Citygate (NE)$6.18+62%

For average residential natural gas bills in New York, this basis differential translates to $15–25/month more than a comparable household in Pennsylvania or Ohio, even before local utility delivery surcharges are factored in. National Grid’s pending rate case (NY PSC Case 23-G-0225) proposes an additional 4.2% gas delivery increase effective mid-2026.

Commercial Buyer Action Items

  • Lock ESCO supply now: Q3/Q4 2026 forward curves in NYISO Zone J are in contango. Fix 12–24 month electricity supply contracts before summer peak pricing sets in.
  • Demand response enrollment: NYISO Zone J capacity prices cleared at $17.89/kW-month. Combined with ConEd’s DLRP incentives, commercial sites can earn $150–250/kW/year by curtailing during system peaks. See Zone K DR enrollment guide.
  • Gas procurement: Negotiate indexed supply tied to Henry Hub rather than Transco Z6 if your distribution utility allows it. The $1.59/MMBtu basis differential is pure margin for suppliers selling at local hub pricing.
  • Audit delivery charges: Verify your ConEd service classification. Many commercial customers remain on SC-9 (general large) when SC-4 (time-of-use) would be cheaper for day-shift operations.

Source: EIA Electric Power Monthly Table 5.6.a (March 2026); NY PSC Case 22-E-0064; NYISO Day-Ahead Market Reports; CME/NYMEX Henry Hub & Transco Z6 settlements.

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