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Utility scam shield

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Electricity scams and high-pressure sales spike whenever rates rise. There are two things to watch for: outright fraud, and legal-but-deceptive sales practices that quietly pad your bill.

Outright scams (always illegal)

How a supplier can quietly pad your bill

These practices are generally legal — which is exactly why they're easy to miss. This doesn't mean every third-party supplier is bad; some offer genuinely good fixed rates. The point is to read the fine print and check the rate yourself.

These are widely documented practices flagged in consumer alerts from state utility commissions and attorneys general. Before signing with any supplier, read the contract's Terms of Service and the disclosure/“electricity facts” label, and compare the rate to your utility's standard rate.

The 30-second check

Compare your supplier's rate to your utility's standard rate. If it's higher, you're overpaying for the identical electricity — and you can switch back.

Run the free bill audit →

If in doubt

Hang up and call the customer-service number printed on your paper bill. Never use a number a caller gives you.