
A practical framework for Texas residential electricity shoppers.
The only honest way to figure out if a Time-Of-Use electricity plan will save your Texas household money is to calculate it using a free nights plan calculator. Every retail provider's marketing page makes its plan look like a great deal. Your Smart Meter Texas data tells a different story, because you only benefit from free nights plans if a significant portion of your kWh usage falls inside the free window, and for most Texas homes, that number is usually surprisingly high.
This guide gives you the calculator framework, walks you through three example households, lists the actual tools available in 2026, and shows you exactly when a free nights plan is the wrong choice. It is written for Texas homeowners and renters comparing residential electricity plans, not for Ambit's independent consultants.
Free nights plans usually outperform fixed-rate plans if 50 to 65 percent of your electricity usage happens during the free window. If your nighttime usage is below 35 percent, you will almost always pay more on a free nights plan than on a fixed-rate plan, because the daytime energy charge is typically 4 to 8 cents per kWh higher to compensate for the free hours.
Greg Steagall, co-founder of Energy Choice Experts, told the Houston Chronicle that free nights and weekends plans are "not very free at all" once you factor in the inflated daytime rates that fund the free hours. That is the entire problem this calculator framework solves: separating the plans that beat your fixed-rate baseline from the ones that just look like they do.
This is heavily mathematical, but the only way to find your answer is to pull the interval data from Smart Meter Texas and run the calculations.
Every honest free nights plan evaluation comes down to five numbers. I built this framework, the Free Nights 5-Number Fit Test, so any Texas household can do the calculations themselves in under ten minutes once the data is in hand. The framework works for any REP, any free-window length, and any usage tier.
Number 1: Your monthly kWh usage. Use the average of your last 12 monthly bills, or pull a 12-month average from Smart Meter Texas. Do not use your lowest month. The 2020 EIA Residential Energy Consumption Survey put the national average at 10,566 kWh per year, or roughly 880 kWh per month, and Texas runs higher than the national average. A typical Texas home lands closer to 1,132 kWh per month, and homes with electric heat or pool pumps can run well above 1,800 kWh per month.
Number 2: Your nighttime usage percentage. Take the kWh used during the candidate plan's free window and divide it by your total monthly kWh. An average home in Texas uses about 30 to 35 percent of its electricity at night, while heavy AC users, EV owners, and pool-pump households often run 40 to 55 percent. ERCOT's 2025 Long-Term Load Forecast confirms residential peak demand falls in the late-afternoon and early-evening hours from June through September, which means the average Texas home's heaviest usage hours are exactly the hours a free nights plan charges you the most.
Number 3: The free-window hours for the candidate plan. A plan with a 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. window (9 hours) gives you a different break-even than one with a 9 p.m. to 9 a.m. window (12 hours). Get this number from the plan's Electricity Facts Label, not the marketing page.
Number 4: The daytime energy charge for the candidate plan, in cents per kWh. Free nights plans always carry an inflated daytime rate. Check the EFL closely and use the rate that corresponds to your actual usage tier (most EFLs report rates at the 500, 1,000, and 2,000 kWh tiers). Texas free nights daytime rates commonly land between 16 and 21 cents per kWh, while comparable 12-month fixed plans land between 12 and 14 cents per kWh.
Number 5: The fixed-rate baseline you would otherwise pay, in cents per kWh. Identify a comparable 12-month fixed plan and take the all-in rate at the same usage tier. This is your control.
Once you have all five, the calculation is simple. Free-window kWh is total kWh multiplied by the nighttime share. Paid kWh is the total kWh minus the free-window kWh. The free nights monthly bill is paid kWh multiplied by the daytime rate, plus TDU charges and base fees from the EFL. The fixed-rate monthly bill is total kWh multiplied by the fixed rate, plus TDU charges and base fees from the EFL. Savings is the fixed-rate bill minus the free nights plan bill. If savings is positive and material (at least 5 to 8 dollars per month), the free nights plan wins. If it is negative or marginal, stay on a fixed-rate plan.
The following is an honest directory of the calculator tools Texas consumers actually have in 2026, and what each one is useful for.
Smart Meter Texas (Free). Smart Meter Texas is the official state-run portal that holds 15-minute interval consumption data for roughly 7.1 million residential and commercial meters in the ERCOT-regulated areas of Texas, with 13 months of rolling history per meter. You can download your interval data as a CSV and sum the kWh used inside any time window. This is possibly the most essential free tool in the entire stack. Every other calculator needs SMT data as its input.
ComparePower SMT Integration. ComparePower lets you input your Smart Meter Texas data via login or CSV. Plans are then compared against your real usage data, and it is the closest option to a one-click free nights plan calculator that uses your actual data instead of the generic 1,000 kWh assumption that most comparison sites publish.
Texas Power Guide TOU Spreadsheet. Texas Power Guide, one of the most-cited independent shopping guides for ERCOT consumers, used to publish a downloadable Time-Of-Use comparison spreadsheet driven by SMT data. The spreadsheet was put on hold in April 2022 because buyback rates were changing too fast to keep current, and the page still shows the pause notice. Treat it as a deprecated tool, not a live one.
Power to Choose. The official plan-comparison site for the state of Texas, Power to Choose, does not run a true TOU calculator. Its monthly cost estimates are based on simple average usage at the 500, 1,000, and 2,000 kWh tiers, which understates exposure to the high daytime rates on free nights plans. Use it for discovering plans, not for break-even math.
The Reddit Free Nights Calculator Thread. A user-built spreadsheet on r/TexasEnergyShopping has reached the top of Google for "free nights plan calculator." If you want the raw formula, it is genuinely useful, but you are relying on the work of an anonymous Reddit user, and the spreadsheet does not update plan prices automatically.
The back-of-napkin method. For those who do not want to install or download anything, the 5-Number Fit Test above is the manual calculator. A pen and a phone calculator will get you a defensible answer in fifteen minutes.
Every credible free nights plan calculation starts with your interval data. Here is the shortest path.
To make an account on smartmetertexas.com, enter your ESI ID from your current electricity bill and verify your address. SMT verifies by paper mail as a security measure, so plan for 2 to 3 business days. Once you receive your code and verify, log in and open the Usage section. Select a full 12-month period for the most accurate average. Export the 15-minute interval data as a CSV. In a spreadsheet, sum the kWh consumed during the free window hours of your candidate plan, divide by the total kWh for that period, and you have Number 2 from the Fit Test.
If the paper verification is a blocker, you can authorize ComparePower or a handful of other services to pull your data directly through the SMT API. That bypasses the paper code but requires you to grant a third party access to your account.
These three examples use realistic 2026 rates and consumption patterns. Run yours the same way.
This household uses 700 kWh per month with a 28 percent nighttime share from 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. The candidate plan is free 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. with a daytime rate of 19.5 cents per kWh, and the fixed-rate baseline is 13.5 cents per kWh. Free-window kWh equals 700 times 0.28, which is 196. Paid kWh equals 700 minus 196, which is 504. Free nights energy cost equals 504 times 0.195, which is 98.28 dollars. Fixed-rate energy cost equals 700 times 0.135, which is 94.50 dollars.
Even before adding TDU charges (identical on both plans), the free nights plan costs more. The apartment's total usage is too low and the nighttime share is too small to overcome the daytime rate premium. Stay on a fixed-rate plan.
This household uses 1,400 kWh per month with a 41 percent nighttime share. The candidate plan is free 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. with a daytime rate of 18.9 cents per kWh, and the fixed-rate baseline is 13.9 cents per kWh. Free-window kWh equals 1,400 times 0.41, which is 574. Paid kWh equals 1,400 minus 574, which is 826. Free nights energy cost equals 826 times 0.189, which is 156.11 dollars. Fixed-rate energy cost equals 1,400 times 0.139, which is 194.60 dollars.
The free nights plan saves approximately 38 dollars per month, or roughly 460 dollars per year. Higher total usage and a 41 percent nighttime share clear the break-even cleanly. This household should switch.
This household uses 2,100 kWh per month (the EV adds about 400 kWh per month) with a 62 percent nighttime share (the EV charges overnight while the home battery discharges during the day). The candidate plan is free 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. with a daytime rate of 21.0 cents per kWh, and the fixed-rate baseline is 14.2 cents per kWh. Free-window kWh equals 2,100 times 0.62, which is 1,302. Paid kWh equals 2,100 minus 1,302, which is 798. Free nights energy cost equals 798 times 0.21, which is 167.58 dollars. Fixed-rate energy cost equals 2,100 times 0.142, which is 298.20 dollars.
The free nights plan saves this household about 130 dollars per month, or 1,560 dollars per year. EV owners are the textbook free nights plan customer, and adding a home battery pushes the nighttime share even higher. For more on this stacking pattern, see the guide on solar, battery, and free nights together.
Some marketing pages claim that any home with 35 percent nighttime usage will save on a free nights plan. The math above shows why that is too optimistic for most homes. The daytime rate premium is what kills the average household, not the free hours. My own analysis in earlier Ambit guides puts the practical break-even closer to a 65 percent nighttime share for the average single-family Texas home on a 9-hour free window.
The honest break-even depends on three variables together: total monthly kWh, the gap between the free nights daytime rate and the fixed-rate baseline, and the nighttime share. As a working rule for a 9-hour free window, below 35 percent nighttime share, free nights almost always loses. Between 35 and 50 percent, it depends on total usage, with high-usage homes (above 1,500 kWh) more likely to win. Above 50 percent, free nights almost always wins, even at modest total usage. Above 65 percent, free nights wins decisively. That is the EV-plus-battery zone.
For a deeper read on the break-even, see the analysis on whether free nights electricity plans are worth it for Texas homeowners.
The free window length is built into the math. Longer windows capture more of your usage and shift the break-even down. Confirm these against the EFL before you sign up, because windows change when REPs reprice.
There are also free weekend variants. If your home runs heavier on Saturdays and Sundays (school-age kids at home, weekend cooking, weekend laundry), a free weekend plan may beat a free nights plan even when your weeknight usage is modest. The two structures are compared side by side in free nights vs. free weekends.
A home battery is the closest thing to a cheat code on a free nights plan. The pattern is simple: during the free window, the battery charges at zero marginal cost. During the day, it discharges to displace paid kWh. A typical 13.5 kWh battery (Tesla Powerwall, Enphase, or Franklin class) can shift roughly 8 to 11 kWh of daily daytime usage to the free window, which on most days pushes a 35 percent nighttime household up to a 50 to 60 percent effective nighttime share.
The strategy works because of the cost differential between day and night hours. The daytime rate premium on a free nights plan (the 4 to 8 cents per kWh extra you pay during the day) is large enough to fund a meaningful share of the battery's lifetime cost on its own, before you account for outage backup or solar self-consumption. EV owners with overnight Level 2 chargers compound the effect further, because the EV charging is already in the free window. The full stacking math is in the free nights for EV owners guide.
A calculator that only ever says yes is a marketing tool, not a calculator. Skip free nights plans if any of the following describe your home.
If two or more of those describe you, run the Fit Test once to confirm, then stay on a competitive fixed-rate plan. Honest comparisons are on the Texas electricity rates page.
What is a free nights plan calculator?
A free nights plan calculator is any tool, spreadsheet, or framework that uses your actual 15-minute interval electricity data to estimate your monthly bill on a free nights Time-Of-Use plan versus a comparable fixed-rate plan, including the inflated daytime energy charge that free nights plans use to fund the free hours.
Do I have to pay for a free nights calculator?
No. Smart Meter Texas is free and gives you your interval data. ComparePower's SMT integration is free to consumers. The 5-Number Fit Test in this guide runs on a phone calculator. There is no good reason to pay for a free nights calculator.
How accurate are these calculators?
Any calculation is only as good as its inputs. The interval data from Smart Meter Texas is the same data your retail provider bills you against, so the kWh side is exact. The pricing side depends on whether you used the right rate tier from the EFL and whether you captured all the TDU charges and base fees. Account for both sides honestly and the answer is reliable within a few dollars per month.
What if I do not have a smart meter?
Nearly every ERCOT-regulated residential address has a smart meter at this point. If your address falls within one of the few areas without one (mostly municipal utility or co-op territory), you cannot pull interval data and a free nights plan calculator cannot give you a precise answer. In those cases, only the most extreme nighttime patterns (EV owners, battery owners, third-shift workers) justify a free nights plan.
Will a free nights plan calculator tell me which specific plan to pick?
A good calculator narrows the field to the two or three plans that beat your fixed-rate baseline. From there, read each EFL for the contract term, early termination fee, base charge, and minimum usage credits or fees. The cheapest energy charge is not always the cheapest annual cost once those line items are in.
If you pull your Smart Meter Texas data and run the 5-Number Fit Test once, you walk away with an answer you can defend, not a marketing pitch you have to trust. For most Texas homes, the answer is fixed-rate. For high-usage homes with strong nighttime patterns, the answer is decisively free nights. The framework separates the two.
This guide is written for Texas residential electricity shoppers comparing retail electric provider plans. It does not address Ambit's home-based business opportunity. Average earnings vary for independent consultants, and any consultant income discussion lives on the consultant side of vipenergyservice.com, not in this article.



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