Illinois electricity rates & utilities

We track 2 Illinois utilities and the rate cases at the Illinois Commerce Commission. You can shop your electricity supplier here — so the bill audit applies.

Illinois electricity prices by the numbers

Avg residential price

17.69¢/kWh

2025 · EIA

Change since 2019

+36%

+8% after inflation

Steepest single year

+18.7%

2021→2022

Price to Compare

10.399–11.326¢

ComEd ↔ Ameren Illinois

Prices: U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA). Real change uses U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (CPI-U).

What's driving Illinois electricity prices

Illinois is split between two grids, and that shapes who pays what. ComEd (northern Illinois, including Chicago) is in PJM, where back-to-back record capacity auctions — with PJM's market monitor attributing about 70% of the cost increase to data-center demand — are raising ComEd residential bills an estimated 10–15% (roughly $10+ a month) in 2025–26. Ameren Illinois (central and southern Illinois) is in MISO and isn't exposed to those PJM auctions. Citizens Utility Board (CUB).

Illinois also funds clean energy through ratepayers: the 2021 Climate and Equitable Jobs Act (CEJA) targets 100% carbon-free power by 2045 and provided roughly $694 million over five years to keep Exelon's Braidwood, Byron, and Dresden nuclear plants running. Citizens Utility Board (CUB).

How electricity rates work in Illinois

In Illinois, your utility delivers the power and is regulated by the Illinois Commerce Commission (ICC). The electricity itself (supply) is competitive — you can buy it from an Alternative Retail Electric Supplier (ARES) or stay on your utility's default rate.

That default rate is the utility's 'Price to Compare,' the per-kWh supply figure you measure a supplier's offer against. The state's official Plug In Illinois site lets you compare offers to it.

One Illinois wrinkle: the two utilities sit on different regional grids. ComEd (northern Illinois, including Chicago) is part of the PJM grid, while Ameren Illinois (central and southern Illinois) is part of MISO — so the wholesale-cost pressure behind 'rising rates' comes from two different markets depending on where you live.

What you can do: Compare your supplier's rate to your utility's Price to Compare. If you're paying more, you can drop the supplier and return to the default rate — usually within 1–2 billing cycles.

Who's who on your Illinois electric bill

Four different players decide what you pay. Here's each one, in plain English:

Your utility — the "distributor"

The company that owns the poles and wires and physically delivers power to your home — the name on your bill (in Illinois, one of the utilities listed below, like Ameren Illinois). This part is a regulated monopoly: only it delivers in your area, and the ICC sets what it can charge for delivery. You can't shop the delivery part.

Generation — the "supply"

The electricity itself (also called supply or generation). You can buy it from your utility's default rate — the Price to Compare — or from a competing third-party supplier. It's the identical electricity either way; only the price differs.

PJM — the "grid operator"

The independent operator that runs the regional high-voltage grid for Illinois and 12 other states. It's like air-traffic control for electricity — it keeps enough power flowing across the whole region. Its wholesale costs flow through your utility into your bill. (More below.)

The ICC — the "regulator"

The Illinois Commerce Commission is the state agency that reviews and approves utility rate increases. When a utility wants to charge more, it files a "rate case" here — which is exactly what we track.

Putting it together: when you turn on a light in Illinois, the electricity was produced by power plants, routed across the region by PJM, and delivered to your house over Ameren Illinois's wires (your distributor). Your bill charges you for both the supply (the electricity) and the delivery (the wires). If you signed up with a third-party supplier, they set the supply price; if not, you pay your utility's Price to Compare. The ICC approves the delivery rates and oversees the default supply rate.

What is "PJM" and its "capacity market"? (plain English)

PJM is the independent operator that runs the high-voltage power grid for 13 states and Washington, D.C. — including yours. Think of it as air-traffic control for electricity: it doesn't own power plants or your wires, but it makes sure enough electricity is flowing across the whole region every second of the day. The wholesale costs PJM sets get passed through your utility into your bill.

The capacity market is a separate, once-a-year auction PJM runs. Instead of paying for electricity you use, it pays power plants just to promise they'll be ready on the few hottest or coldest days when demand peaks. That promise is called "capacity." It's like paying a backup generator a retainer to stay on standby — you pay even in months you never need it.

Why it matters now: when PJM expects demand to jump, those standby payments spike. Demand is jumping largely because of data centers, and PJM's recent capacity auctions hit record highs three times in a row. Utilities pass that cost straight to customers — which is a big reason bills across all five states we cover are rising. Sources: PJM; PJM Independent Market Monitor (Monitoring Analytics).

Illinois electricity prices over time

The average Illinois residential electricity price went from 13.03¢/kWh in 2019 to 17.69¢/kWh in 2025 up 36%.

Residential electricity price trend 2019 13.03¢/kWh rising to 2025 17.69¢/kWh, up 36%. 17.7 13.0 2019 2021 2023 2025 17.69¢/kWh
Average residential price, cents per kWh. Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA).
Why it's rising: Illinois is in the PJM grid, where capacity prices recently hit a record cap — and PJM's market monitor attributed roughly 40% of those costs, and 97% of the latest demand-growth forecast, to data centers. PJM expects this to add about 1.5–5% to bills. Sources: PJM; PJM Independent Market Monitor (Monitoring Analytics); Utility Dive.

Illinois utilities we cover

Coverage note: We track Illinois's two large investor-owned utilities, ComEd and Ameren Illinois. We don't cover the state's municipal electric systems (such as Springfield's City Water, Light & Power) or rural electric cooperatives, which set their own rates outside ICC retail-choice regulation.

Where to find your supply rate on a Illinois bill

Your utility's standard rate is the Price to Compare. On your bill, find the supply / generation rate in ¢/kWh and compare it to that — if a supplier charges more, you're overpaying. Here's the exact line to look for:

Where is this on my bill?
Your Electric Bill Account ····1234 Supply / Generation Price to Compare 13.147¢/kWh ↑ This is the number you compare Your third-party supplier rate enter this figure in the audit __ ¢/kWh Delivery / Distribution You can't shop this part $ ··.·· Total $ ···.··

On your bill, find the supply rate in ¢/kWh. Your utility's standard rate is the “Price to Compare.” If your supplier charges more than that, you're overpaying.

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Rate cases & increases

No active rate cases in our tracker for Illinois right now. We monitor the ICC dockets — get an alert when one is filed.