West Penn Power Price to Compare: May 2026 Rate Update and How to Beat It

West Penn Power Price to Compare: May 2026 Rate Update and How to Beat It

John Spencer

John Spencer

|May 30, 20268 min read

West Penn Power's Price to Compare is 10.947 cents per kilowatt-hour through May 31, 2026. On June 1, it jumps 10.3% to 12.075 cents.

West Penn Power currently has the lowest default rate among major Pennsylvania utilities — but the 10.3% increase is one of the steeper jumps this quarter. Competitive suppliers are offering fixed-rate plans starting at 9.49 cents per kWh, more than 1.4 cents below the current PTC. This guide covers what the Price to Compare means, why rates are climbing double digits, and how customers in southwestern Pennsylvania can lock in a lower rate before summer bills peak.

What is the Price to Compare

West Penn Power, a FirstEnergy subsidiary, serves customers across southwestern Pennsylvania, including Greensburg, Washington, Indiana, and parts of Westmoreland, Washington, Fayette, and Indiana Counties. If you've never chosen a competitive electricity supplier, you're paying West Penn Power's default supply rate — the Price to Compare (PTC).

The PTC covers the cost of generating electricity and transmitting it across high-voltage lines, plus Pennsylvania's gross receipts tax and Alternative Energy Portfolio Standards compliance. It does not include distribution charges, which West Penn Power collects regardless of your supplier.

Here's why this number matters: the PTC is your benchmark for shopping. If a competitive supplier offers 9.49 cents per kWh and the PTC is 10.947 cents, you save nearly 1.5 cents on every kilowatt-hour. At average usage, that's $130 or more per year.

For a deeper breakdown of how this benchmark works across Pennsylvania utilities, see our guide to understanding Price to Compare.

Current rate and the June 2026 increase

West Penn Power's residential Price to Compare has climbed through 2025, though it started from a lower base than other Pennsylvania utilities.

PeriodRate
June 20248.92¢
December 20249.54¢
June 202510.22¢
December 202510.947¢
June 202612.075¢

The December 2025 rate of 10.947 cents per kWh represents a 7.1% increase over June 2025. The June 2026 rate of 12.075 cents adds another 10.3% on top — one of the larger single-quarter percentage increases in the state.

West Penn Power Price to Compare, June 2024 through June 2026. Source: FirstEnergy published rate filings.

West Penn Power, like all FirstEnergy utilities in Pennsylvania, updates the Price to Compare quarterly: March 1, June 1, September 1, and December 1. Each update reflects wholesale market conditions from the prior period. The Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission published the official June 1, 2026 rate updates on May 20.

At average West Penn Power usage of roughly 900 kWh per month, the supply charge exceeds $108 at the June rate. Combined with distribution charges and other fees, total bills run closer to $175. During summer months with heavy air conditioning use, bills can exceed $250.

Why West Penn Power rates keep rising

The 2024 PJM capacity auction increased prices by 833%. That is not a typo.

PJM Interconnection manages the power grid across Pennsylvania and 12 neighboring states, serving 65 million people. Every year, PJM runs a capacity auction to ensure enough power plants exist to meet peak demand. The auction sets a price that generators receive for being available, and utilities like West Penn Power pass these capacity costs directly to customers.

In the 2024 auction, capacity prices jumped from $28.92 per megawatt-day to $269.92. The June 2026 auction pushed prices even higher, to $329.17 per megawatt-day — a 22% increase over 2024.

PJM capacity auction clearing prices. The 2024 auction increased prices by 833%. Source: PJM Interconnection.

Three factors drove the spike:

  • Coal plant retirements. Older generation facilities are shutting down faster than new ones come online. The grid has less buffer capacity than it did five years ago.
  • Data center growth. Electricity-hungry facilities across the region have increased peak demand forecasts. Northern Virginia and surrounding areas host some of the world's largest data center clusters, all drawing from PJM.
  • Electrification trends. EV adoption and heat pump installations add load that the grid must accommodate. These technologies shift demand patterns in ways that require more standby generation.

FirstEnergy's Pennsylvania utilities are phasing in these capacity costs across multiple billing periods: June 2025, December 2025, June 2026, and December 2026. Each quarter brings another slice of the bill.

Governor Josh Shapiro filed a complaint with federal regulators, arguing the auction process is flawed and results in higher prices without guaranteeing reliability. His administration reached an agreement with PJM to cap future capacity prices, projected to save Pennsylvania ratepayers $4 billion through 2028. But that relief applies to future auctions. The June 2026 rate is already locked in.

For more on how deregulation shapes these market dynamics, see our Pennsylvania electricity deregulation guide.

How to beat the Price to Compare

Switching suppliers takes about five minutes and costs nothing. Your service continues without interruption.

Know your benchmark

The current PTC is 10.947 cents per kWh. After June 1, it becomes 12.075 cents. Any fixed-rate plan below these numbers saves money.

Current plans that beat the PTC

Several suppliers are offering rates below West Penn Power's default as of late May 2026:

PlanRateTerm
American Power & Gas Fixed9.49¢/kWh3 months
nTherm Variable10.29¢/kWh1 month
American Electric Rates Fixed10.40¢/kWh3 months

Rates vary by ZIP code and change frequently. Check current availability for your address before making a decision.

Savings math

At 900 kWh per month (typical West Penn Power household usage):

  • West Penn Power default (10.947¢): $98.52 supply cost
  • American Power & Gas (9.49¢): $85.41 supply cost
  • Monthly savings: $13.11
  • Annual savings: $157

After June 1, the math improves substantially:

  • West Penn Power June rate (12.075¢): $108.68 supply cost
  • American Power & Gas (9.49¢): $85.41 supply cost
  • Monthly savings: $23.27
  • Annual savings: $279

The 10.3% rate increase makes locking in now even more valuable.

How to switch

  1. Visit PA Power Switch (the state's official comparison tool) or a licensed comparison site
  2. Enter your ZIP code to see available suppliers
  3. Compare rates against the current Price to Compare
  4. Enroll online with your West Penn Power account number (found on your bill)
  5. Wait one to two billing cycles for the switch to complete

No phone calls to West Penn Power are required. The switch happens automatically once you enroll with your new supplier.

What does not change

Switching suppliers only changes who supplies your electricity. West Penn Power still:

  • Delivers power to your home
  • Handles all outage repairs
  • Sends your monthly bill
  • Maintains the poles and wires

There is no service interruption during the switch. Your lights stay on. If the power goes out during a storm, you call West Penn Power, not your supplier.

For step-by-step instructions, see our guide to switching suppliers in Pennsylvania. To understand whether a fixed or variable rate makes sense for your situation, see our fixed vs. variable rate comparison.

You can also view all current plans in your area on our West Penn Power utility page.

At nearly 1.5 cents per kWh below the current PTC, the savings compound every month you stay locked in. The rate goes up June 1 whether you act or not.

FAQ

What happens if I switch suppliers and there's an outage?

West Penn Power handles all outages regardless of your electricity supplier. Your supplier only provides the generation portion of your bill. West Penn Power owns the poles, wires, and transformers, and dispatches repair crews when something goes wrong.

Is there a fee to switch suppliers?

No. Switching is free. The process takes one to two billing cycles to complete. Early termination fees may apply if you leave a fixed-rate contract early, so check your plan terms before canceling.

Should I choose a fixed or variable rate?

Fixed rates protect against the quarterly increases we've seen. Variable rates can be cheaper during mild months but carry risk during summer peaks when wholesale prices spike. For most West Penn Power customers, fixed rates offer more predictable bills and better protection against continued rate increases.

When does the next West Penn Power rate change happen?

June 1, 2026. The new Price to Compare of 12.075 cents per kWh will remain in effect through August 31, 2026. West Penn Power updates quarterly, so the next change comes September 1, 2026.

Topics

West Penn PowerFirstEnergyPrice to ComparePennsylvania electricityswitching suppliers

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