TXU Energy's Beat the Heat program just returned for 2026, and for Texas homeowners that headline is a useful signal: summer bill season has arrived. On June 8, 2026, the company announced cooling aid across more than 30 events in cities including Houston, Dallas, Fort Worth, Corpus Christi, Lubbock, and Midland. Emergency help matters, but the households that save the most each summer are the ones who plan ahead. This guide pulls together practical Texas summer electricity bill tips every homeowner can use to stay comfortable without watching their July and August statements climb. With ERCOT projecting record demand this season, the time to review your plan is now, before the worst of the heat lands.
TXU Energy's 2026 Beat the Heat is a charitable cooling-assistance effort, not a rate discount. The company is donating $150,000, distributing more than 5,000 box fans and over 600 window air-conditioning units, and hosting 30-plus community events across Texas this summer.
These resources go to seniors and vulnerable households most at risk during extreme heat, and the effort connects eligible Texans to bill-payment help through TXU Energy Aid, which the company says has provided more than $140 million in assistance over four decades. You can read the full announcement on PR Newswire. Programs like this exist because summer genuinely strains household budgets. The reassuring part for most homeowners is that you do not have to wait for an emergency. A few proactive moves can keep your bill manageable before the heat peaks.
Air conditioning is the single largest driver of summer electricity use in most Texas homes, and that load compounds quickly. Residential usage commonly rises 40 to 50 percent in peak summer, so a home that uses roughly 1,000 to 1,200 kWh in spring can climb toward 1,400 to 2,000 kWh in July and August, according to U.S. Energy Information Administration data.
At today's Texas residential prices of about 14 to 16 cents per kWh, that jump can add well over $100 in a single month, pushing energy charges past $250 to $320 before delivery fees and taxes. As a rule of thumb, every additional 100 kWh you use runs about $14 to $16.
If you are on a variable-rate plan, summer carries a double exposure: you use more electricity at the same time the wholesale market tightens. ERCOT has projected the potential for record demand in 2026, with peak forecasts near 92,000 MW, which would top last year's record by close to 10 percent. That combination is exactly when an unlocked rate can move against you.
Your metro shapes the risk too. Houston homeowners deal with humidity that keeps air conditioners running longer through the day and night, which lifts total kWh. Dallas-Fort Worth homes face more extreme peak-temperature afternoons that strain the grid during the priciest hours. The same plan can perform very differently in Houston than in DFW, which is why matching your plan type to your local usage pattern matters. For solar homeowners, June through August is peak production season, so a plan with strong 1:1 solar buyback returns the most credit exactly when your panels generate the most.
The fastest way to control summer costs is to pair a smart plan choice with a lower cooling load. We built a simple framework, the Summer Electricity Readiness Checklist, to walk through both in the right order before the heat peaks.
Pair the checklist with a few quick cooling habits: set your thermostat to about 78 degrees when you are home and 85 when you are away, as the U.S. Department of Energy recommends, seal air leaks, close blinds on sun-facing windows, and turn on usage alerts so a spike never catches you off guard.
Before you sign or renew this summer, a few direct questions reveal whether a plan truly fits Texas heat. The right answers protect you from surprise charges during the highest-usage months.
We help Texas homeowners get ahead of summer instead of reacting to it. Our role is to match your home, usage, and metro to a plan that holds up when temperatures climb.
For households that can move usage to off-peak hours, our Free Nights options turn overnight cooling and chores into savings. For solar homes, our 1:1 solar buyback returns full credit during peak June-through-August production. And no-deposit options give budget-conscious families a flexible way to start service without a large upfront cost. Rates vary by location and usage, so we always point you to the EFL for the full details before you decide. Ready to compare? Get your free energy quote and we will help you find the right fit for your home this summer.
Summer bills climb mainly because air conditioning becomes the largest load in your home. Texas residential usage often rises 40 to 50 percent in peak months, so even at the same per-kWh rate, your total bill grows with the heat. Homes with older insulation or leaky ducts feel it most.
For most homeowners who want price certainty, a fixed-rate plan offers the strongest protection against summer market swings. Free Nights plans suit households that can shift big loads to overnight, and solar buyback plans reward homes producing power during peak daylight. Match the plan to how and when you actually use electricity.
Yes. In deregulated areas of Texas, you can shop and switch providers year-round, though you should check your current contract for any early-termination fee. Review the EFL on any new plan and confirm the start date so you stay covered through the hottest weeks.
They can, when you move enough usage into the free overnight window. Shifting laundry, dishwashing, pool pumps, and EV charging to nighttime can offset roughly 30 to 40 percent of daytime cooling costs. Read the daytime rate and any minimum-usage fees on the EFL before switching.
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