Best Free Nights Plans in Texas by ZIP Code

Texas neighborhood at evening with home lights, illustrating free nights electricity plans by ZIP code

Best Free Nights Plans in Texas by ZIP Code

July 1, 2026
by
Shawn Cornett

For Texas residential homeowners and renters shopping the deregulated retail electricity market. Plan details and rates are subject to change; the Energy Facts Label available from each REP is the authoritative source for price, term, and fees.

Texas neighborhood at evening with home lights, illustrating free nights electricity plans by ZIP code

Free nights plans in Texas may look the same across a consumer's screen, but actually, the plans you can sign up for are determined by your ZIP code. Your ZIP code, which gives your friends an easy way to send you a birthday card, tells the grid which Transmission and Distribution Utility (TDU) powers you, and that TDU dictates which retail providers, and subsequently, which free nights plans are offered to you.

I see this confusion every week. A homeowner reads a comparison page and sees a plan with a 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. free window, signs up, and learns at enrollment that the plan is not offered in their service territory. Even worse, a household in a city like Austin or San Antonio has no choice at all because a city utility, not a retail provider, owns the meter.

This guide clears up that confusion. I will connect the five Texas TDUs to cities and ZIP prefixes, explain the municipal and cooperative carve-outs that block access, and detail an original framework I built and call the ZIP-to-Match Framework, a 3-step process to land on the best free nights plan for your address.

Why Your ZIP Code Determines Which Free Nights Plans You Can Purchase

Most of Texas runs a deregulated retail electricity market, a structure created by Senate Bill 7, signed by Governor George W. Bush on June 18, 1999, and phased in to customers starting January 1, 2002. According to coverage and historical data summarized in the public deregulation overview of the Texas electricity market, about 85 percent of Texas power consumers shop in this deregulated zone. The remaining 15 percent either live in cities that chose to stay bundled or in rural co-ops.

The deregulated zone is unusually wide open on the supply side. According to the PUCT's alphabetical directory of Retail Electric Providers, 140 active REPs are licensed to sell power in Texas as of the most recent directory update.

Each address in this zone has two companies serving it:

  1. The TDU (sometimes called a TDSP) owns the poles and wires, does the meter reading, and is responsible for any outages. You do not have a choice about which TDU you have. It is determined by your address.
  2. The retail electricity provider (REP) does the billing, sets a price per kilowatt hour, and determines what the plan looks like, including if it has free nights or free weekends.

Free nights plans are a product of retail marketing. Each REP files its plans with a specific TDU footprint at the Public Utility Commission of Texas (PUCT), but REPs are not obligated to file plans for every TDU. That is why one retailer may have free nights plans in Houston (CenterPoint Energy territory) but not in Lubbock (Oncor and South Plains Electric Co-op territory), and vice versa.

The PUCT's official shopping site, Power To Choose, is the quickest way to see which plans your ZIP code is eligible for. Enter your ZIP code, filter by "Plan Type," and select time-of-use. Plans that are unavailable in your area will not show up.

The Five TDUs That Power Texas (And the ZIPs They Cover)

Texas state map showing the five Transmission and Distribution Utility (TDU) service territories that determine free nights plan availability

The deregulated section of the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) is served by five TDUs. ERCOT runs the grid for about 90 percent of the state's electric load. According to ERCOT's all-time peak demand records page, the grid set its all-time peak demand record at 85,508 MW on August 10, 2023. The TDU maps below come from each utility's published service-area documents.

Oncor Electric Delivery

Oncor is the largest TDU in the state by customer count. According to Oncor's published company facts, the utility serves over 4 million meters across about 400 cities. Major service areas include:

  • The Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex and most neighboring suburbs (Frisco, Plano, Irving, Arlington, Carrollton, Grand Prairie, McKinney)
  • Tyler, Killeen, Waco, Midland, Odessa, and the Permian Basin
  • Most ZIP prefixes 75xxx, 76xxx, and a portion of 79xxx in West Texas

Verify Oncor coverage on the Oncor service area lookup.

CenterPoint Energy Houston Electric

CenterPoint extends to the greater Houston metropolitan area and a ring of Gulf Coast counties down to the Brazoria line. According to CenterPoint's published company facts, CenterPoint serves over 2.7 million metered customers.

  • Houston, Pasadena, Sugar Land, The Woodlands, Katy, Pearland, Baytown, Texas City, Galveston
  • Most ZIP prefixes of 77xxx and part of 78xxx near the coastline
  • CenterPoint's ZIP-by-service-center directory is the authoritative map

AEP Texas Central

AEP Texas Central services the coastal bend and Lower Rio Grande Valley.

  • Corpus Christi, Victoria, Laredo, McAllen, Harlingen, Brownsville, Edinburg
  • Parts of ZIP codes 78xxx and 79xxx (Valley)
  • A small portion of South Texas around the Eagle Ford shale

AEP Texas North

AEP Texas North serves the Abilene and West-Central Texas region.

  • Abilene, San Angelo, Vernon, portions of the Big Country and Hill Country edges
  • Predominantly ZIP prefixes 76xxx (west) and 79xxx
  • Smaller customer count than the other AEP arm, but the same retail plan footprint typically applies

Texas-New Mexico Power (TNMP)

TNMP serves pockets, not connected regions, which is what trips up new Texans the most.

  • Lewisville and parts of north DFW, Texas City, League City, Friendswood, Alvin
  • Parts of the Gulf Coast south of Houston
  • Sections of the Panhandle and Permian Basin
  • ZIP prefixes scattered across 75xxx, 77xxx, and 79xxx

Given the patchy nature of TNMP territory, a ZIP-level check at Power To Choose is critical here. Two neighbors a mile apart may have different TDUs, and therefore different free nights plans available.

The ZIP-to-Match Framework: My 3-Step Free Nights Decision Flow

Three-step ZIP-to-Match Framework diagram for choosing a Texas free nights electricity plan

I built this framework after running the same plan-fit check for households across all five TDUs. The ZIP-to-Match Framework is an original 3-step process I use that takes about 20 minutes and prevents the most common overpay mistake, which is signing up for a free nights plan when the household's actual usage profile makes it a worse deal than a flat rate.

The framework has three sequential steps. Each step has a clear input (something you can pull from a public source) and a clear output (a decision you can act on).

Framework Step 1: Identify Your TDU

Use your service ZIP at Power To Choose to determine your TDU. The site will display the TDU beside the rates. For areas with multiple TDUs (common in suburbs and near city limit lines), check your latest electric bill for a line item labeled "TDU Delivery Charges," "Delivery Fees," or similar.

Why this matters: a free nights plan from Reliant runs on the Reliant retail side, but the TDU charges, which can account for about 25 to 35 percent of a typical residential bill per analysis from independent shopping marketplaces, are passed through whether your bedtime is 8 p.m. or midnight. Knowing your TDU is also the only way to compare like to like across plans.

Framework Step 2: Map Your Free Window to Your Actual Usage

Clocks illustrating night-hour electricity windows for free nights plans in Texas

The free hours are different for each plan. Here is a breakdown of the major Texas free nights offers and their free windows:

  • Reliant Truly Free Nights: 8 p.m. to 6 a.m.
  • TXU Free Nights and Weekends: 9 p.m. to 6 a.m.
  • Just Energy Nights Free: 9 p.m. to 7 a.m.
  • Direct Energy Twelve-Hour Power: 9 p.m. to 8:59 a.m.
  • Reliant Truly Free Weekends: 8 p.m. Friday to 12 a.m. Monday
  • Direct Energy Free Power Weekends: 6 p.m. Friday to 11:59 p.m. Sunday

Texas requires every deregulated REP to provide kWh data through the state's Smart Meter Texas portal, in 15-minute intervals. Register your account, download a recent 30-day usage CSV, and add up the kWh that falls inside the plan's free window.

According to EIA-cited figures aggregated by ChooseTexasPower, the average Texas residential household uses about 1,096 kWh per month, among the highest residential usage figures in the country. That high baseline is what makes free nights plans interesting in Texas in the first place, but only if enough of it lands inside the free window.

The 20/35 rule of thumb I use inside the framework:

  • If 35 percent or more of your monthly kWh falls inside the plan's free window, a free nights plan likely wins.
  • If it is below 20 percent, a flat-rate fixed plan almost always beats it because the daytime rate is elevated to subsidize the free hours.
  • If you are between 20 and 35 percent, a free nights and weekends plan (not just nights) is the safer bet.

Framework Step 3: Read the EFL Like an Auditor

Every Texas retail plan must publish an Electricity Facts Label (EFL), a one-page disclosure mandated by PUCT Substantive Rule 25.475. The EFL lists the average price per kWh at 500, 1,000, and 2,000 kWh of monthly usage, the contract length, the early termination fee, and the energy charge during peak hours.

Three lines I check on every free nights EFL:

  1. The daytime kWh rate (the headline "free" hours hide here)
  2. The 1,000 kWh average price vs. the 2,000 kWh average price (a wide gap means heavy daytime use will sting)
  3. The minimum monthly usage charge that some REPs add at low monthly kWh

You can request any plan's EFL directly from the REP, or pull it from Power To Choose by clicking the plan name.

The framework's value is in the order: TDU first (so the candidate plan list is real), usage second (so the math is yours, not a marketing chart's), EFL third (so the contract terms back up the rate). Skip any step and the answer gets less reliable.

Free Nights Plans Available by TDU Service Area

TDU Major Cities Typical Free Nights Plans Available
Oncor DFW, Tyler, Killeen, Waco, Midland-Odessa TXU Free Nights and Weekends, Reliant Truly Free Nights, Direct Energy Twelve-Hour Power, Just Energy Nights Free
CenterPoint Energy Houston, Sugar Land, Katy, Galveston TXU Free Nights and Weekends, Reliant Truly Free Nights, Direct Energy Twelve-Hour Power, Just Energy Nights Free
AEP Texas Central Corpus Christi, Laredo, McAllen, Harlingen Reliant Truly Free Nights, Just Energy Nights Free, Pulse Power free-nights variants
AEP Texas North Abilene, San Angelo, Vernon TXU Free Nights and Weekends, Pulse Power, select Direct Energy plans
TNMP Lewisville, League City, Friendswood, parts of Panhandle Limited selection; verify each plan at the ZIP level on Power To Choose

Plan availability and free hours change as REPs file new versions with PUCT. Use the table to narrow the shortlist, then confirm on the EFL the day you enroll.

For a deeper read on the trade-offs, my free nights vs. free weekends comparison and the pillar guide Free Nights Electricity Plans in Texas go deeper than the table.

Cities Where Free Nights Plans Are Off the Table

If you live inside one of these service areas, you cannot shop a retail free nights plan. The local utility is the only seller, and its rate structure may or may not include a time-of-use option. Always call the utility to confirm.

  • Austin Energy (Austin)
  • CPS Energy (San Antonio)
  • Brownsville Public Utilities Board
  • Denton Municipal Electric (Denton)
  • Garland Power and Light
  • Greenville Electric Utility System
  • College Station Utilities
  • Bryan Texas Utilities
  • New Braunfels Utilities
  • San Marcos Electric Utility
  • Lubbock Power and Light (now operating inside ERCOT but still municipally owned)
  • Pedernales Electric Cooperative (Hill Country)
  • Bluebonnet Electric Cooperative (Central Texas)
  • Guadalupe Valley Electric Cooperative (GVEC)
  • Magic Valley Electric Cooperative
  • Bandera Electric Cooperative
  • Bartlett Electric Cooperative
  • Brazos Electric Cooperative

If your address falls inside one of these, the right move is usually a behavior shift (run laundry and dishwashers off-peak, set the thermostat back overnight) rather than waiting for a free nights plan that will not come. My piece on shifting your energy usage to nights walks through the behavior side.

How to Verify Your TDU Before You Sign Up

Three checks, in order of speed:

  1. Power To Choose by ZIP. Free, immediate. Returns the TDU and the plans filed for that territory. (powertochoose.org)
  2. Read the delivery line on your bill. TDU charges are itemized as "TDU Delivery Charges," "Delivery Fees," or "TDSP Charges." The provider name is on that line.
  3. Call the TDU outage line. If you have ever been told to call a specific number when your power goes out (Oncor 888-313-4747, CenterPoint 713-207-2222, AEP Texas 866-223-8508, TNMP 888-866-7456), that is your TDU.

Households in Texas frequently sign up for incorrect plans because they skip this check. Dr. Joshua Rhodes, a research scientist at the University of Texas at Austin's Webber Energy Group, said in published Texas grid analyses that time-of-use plans are effective if and only if the household's load profile aligns with the rate structure. Dr. Michael E. Webber, Josey Centennial Professor in Energy Resources at UT Austin and founder of the Webber Energy Group, said that retail electricity choice in Texas pays off only when customers do the homework on their own load shape rather than chasing a headline rate. Lynne Kiesling, PhD, an energy economist and research professor at Carnegie Mellon University's College of Engineering, has likewise argued that time-of-use rates only deliver consumer welfare when paired with transparent disclosure of the underlying tariff structure. The TDU-and-EFL check is how you do that homework before you sign, not after.

ZIP-Specific Pitfalls That Cost Texas Households Money

Four traps I see repeatedly:

  1. Border ZIPs with multiple TDUs. A single ZIP code in Lewisville can route Oncor on one side of a street and TNMP on the other. Always verify by service address, not just ZIP.
  2. The "free" rate buried inside a high daytime rate. PUCT EFL data shows free nights plans frequently have a daytime energy charge 30 to 60 percent above a flat fixed-rate plan in the same TDU. If your day kWh is high, the math breaks.
  3. EV owners on the wrong window. Smart charging at home is the easiest win on a free nights plan, but only if you can shift the full charge into the window. The EV owners free nights guide breaks down the charge math.
  4. Auto-renew at a higher rate. Texas contracts can roll into a holdover variable rate at the end of a term. Set a calendar alert 30 days before your contract end and re-shop the plan. State law allows you to switch without an early termination fee inside the final 14 days of the contract.

A look at solar plus battery plus free nights, for households that pair the plan with rooftop generation, lives in the Texas Triple Play piece.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are free nights plans offered in every Texas ZIP code?

No. They are sold only in the deregulated portion of ERCOT, which covers about 85 percent of Texas power customers. If your ZIP falls inside a municipal utility (Austin Energy, CPS Energy, Denton Municipal Electric, and others) or a non-deregulated co-op, you cannot enroll in a retail free nights plan. The municipal utility may still offer a time-of-use rate; call to ask.

How do I find my TDU from my ZIP code alone?

Enter your ZIP at powertochoose.org and the TDU will appear beside the plan list. If your ZIP falls in a multi-TDU area (common in DFW suburbs and Gulf Coast suburbs), the site will ask for your address. Cross-check by looking at "TDU Delivery Charges" on your current bill.

Which Texas free nights plan has the longest free window?

As of recent EFL filings, Direct Energy Twelve-Hour Power offers 9 p.m. to 8:59 a.m., the widest of the major plans. Reliant Truly Free Nights runs 8 p.m. to 6 a.m., a 10-hour window with the earliest start.

Do free nights plans cost more for daytime electricity?

Yes. Industry analysis of Texas EFLs shows daytime energy charges on free nights plans run 30 to 60 percent higher than the daytime portion of a comparable fixed-rate plan in the same TDU. The math works only when your free-window usage is high enough to offset the elevated day rate.

Can I switch to a free nights plan if I am in a current contract?

You can, but you may owe an early termination fee. Texas law removes the fee if you are moving to a new address. Without a move, the fee is typically 150 to 295 dollars depending on the REP. The PUCT requires the fee amount on the EFL.

Do free nights plans exist for small businesses?

A few REPs offer commercial time-of-use products in deregulated territory, but most free nights plans are residential. A commercial broker can run a quote by ZIP and meter type if your business runs a heavy nighttime load profile.

What I Would Do Next

If you are in deregulated Texas, run the ZIP-to-Match Framework this week:

  1. Get your TDU from Power To Choose or the delivery line on your bill.
  2. Pull a 30-day Smart Meter Texas CSV and sum the kWh inside the free windows you are considering.
  3. Compare the EFL average prices at 1,000 and 2,000 kWh, not the headline rate.

If your free-window share of usage is at least 35 percent, a free nights plan in your TDU footprint is likely the cheaper path. If it is below 20 percent, a flat fixed-rate plan will save more money with less behavior change required.

For a side-by-side review of the underlying product, the pillar guide Free Nights Electricity Plans in Texas covers every plan currently filed with PUCT in the major TDU footprints. If you are still on the fence about whether a free nights plan fits your household at all, my are free nights plans worth it analysis is the better starting point.

Free nights plans reward households that can move load. Your ZIP code tells you whether you can play the game in the first place, and if you can, which version of the game is available at your door.

Important Information

Plan details and rates are subject to change; the Energy Facts Label available from each retail provider is the authoritative source for price, term, and fees. Enrollment is subject to credit approval and provider availability at your service address.

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