Oregon Electricity Price Trends

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Historical rates by sector, 2016–2024

Current Residential

14.70¢/kWh

-10.8% vs US avg

Reading the Oregon Price Trend

Oregon residential electricity moved from 10.66¢/kWh in 2016 to 14.70¢/kWh in 2024, a cumulative change of +37.9% over 9 reporting years. The more recent five-year window tells a slightly different story: +33.5% since 2019, which captures the post-2020 commodity and capacity-cost pressures that reshaped most U.S. utility rate bases. Against the national residential benchmark of 16.48¢/kWh, Oregon now sits 10.8% below the U.S. average for 2024.

Commercial customers in Oregon paid 10.11¢/kWh in 2024, while industrial buyers, typically interruptible, high-load-factor accounts, paid 8.05¢/kWh. That sector spread is informative on its own: a large residential-to-industrial gap usually signals heavy cross-subsidy in the tariff book, while a narrow gap indicates rates closer to marginal cost. Here the residential-to-industrial multiplier works out to about 1.8x, giving planners and ratepayer advocates one quick way to benchmark against peer states.

For consumers and small businesses in Oregon, the most practical takeaway from this dataset is direction, not just level. A 37.9% climb since 2016 means bill-impact planning should assume continued upward pressure unless a structural change, new capacity, fuel-mix shift, or regulatory reset, enters the picture. Pairing this state view with neighbors (Oklahoma, Pennsylvania) helps separate regional fuel-market effects from state-specific policy drivers. EIA publishes these series annually, so each successive year of data progressively sharpens the picture.

2024 Rate

14.70¢/kWh

vs National Avg

-10.8%

5-Year Change

+33.5%

Since 2016

+37.9%

Price Trends, Oregon vs National Average

Residential
Commercial
Industrial
US Average (Residential)
5.7¢ 8.4¢ 11.1¢ 13.8¢ 16.5¢ 20162018202020222024

Annual Average Prices

Year Residential US Avg
2024 14.70¢/kWh +15.5% 16.48¢/kWh
2023 12.73¢/kWh +11.5% 16.00¢/kWh
2022 11.42¢/kWh +0.4% 15.04¢/kWh
2021 11.37¢/kWh +1.8% 13.66¢/kWh
2020 11.17¢/kWh +1.5% 13.15¢/kWh
2019 11.01¢/kWh +0.3% 13.01¢/kWh
2018 10.98¢/kWh +3.0% 12.87¢/kWh
2017 10.66¢/kWh 0.0% 12.89¢/kWh
2016 10.66¢/kWh 12.55¢/kWh

Frequently Asked Questions

Are electricity prices going up in Oregon?
From 2016 to 2024, residential electricity in Oregon changed from 10.66¢/kWh to 14.70¢/kWh (+37.9%). Over the past 5 years, the change was +33.5%.
How does Oregon's electricity price compare to the national average?
Oregon's residential electricity rate of 14.70¢/kWh is 10.8% below the national average of 16.48¢/kWh (2024).
What do businesses pay for electricity in Oregon?
Commercial electricity in Oregon costs 10.11¢/kWh (2024), compared to 14.70¢/kWh for residential customers. Business rates are typically lower due to higher volume usage and different rate structures.
Where does this price trend data come from?
All electricity price data is from the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), the official federal statistics agency for energy data. Prices are annual averages in cents per kilowatt-hour (kWh), reported by sector.

Data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration. Prices in cents per kilowatt-hour (kWh). Annual averages.

Related

Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Electricity (Retail Sales of Electricity to Ultimate Customers). See our methodology for details. Retrieved and formatted by RateWatt Editorial