No-Contract & Month-to-Month Electricity in Texas: How Lone Star Flex Works

Texas apartment renter with moving boxes reviewing an electricity bill on a no-contract month-to-month plan

No-Contract & Month-to-Month Electricity in Texas: How Lone Star Flex Works

July 14, 2026
by
Shawn Cornett

Texas apartment renter with moving boxes reviewing an electricity bill on a no-contract month-to-month plan

In Texas, you can use a month-to-month contract electricity plan, meaning for each billing cycle you can purchase electricity without committing to a long-term plan or paying termination fees. In return, you pay a variable rate instead of a fixed rate, meaning your rate can change monthly based on the ERCOT wholesale market. Ambit Energy's Lone Star Flex is a Texas month-to-month plan that offers this service: enroll today, cancel any month, and pay a rate that floats. This guide shows you how a month-to-month plan in Texas prices out, who Lone Star Flex is right for, and where variable-rate plans hurt you the most.

Key Takeaways

  • A no contract electricity Texas plan is a variable-rate product: no term commitment, no early termination fee, and no ETF math to unwind if you cancel.
  • Plans that are month-to-month are typically 10 to 20% more expensive than 12-month fixed plans, around 1.4 to 3.2 cents per kilowatt-hour more (Electric Rates, 2026).
  • Lone Star Flex by Ambit Energy is a statewide Texas no-contract product that passes TDU delivery charges through at cost.
  • Best suited for: renters, people who move often, people repairing their credit, and Texans between fixed contracts. Not a good fit: heavy AC users when variable rates spiked as high as $0.30 per kWh during the July 2026 heat dome (Electricity Plans, 2026).
  • The Public Utility Commission of Texas (PUCT) logged 1,876 customer complaints against retail electric providers between September 2025 and February 2026, many tied to variable-rate bill shock (Electric Rates, 2026).

What is a no-contract month-to-month electricity plan in Texas?

A no-contract month-to-month electricity plan in Texas is a residential power plan sold by a retail electric provider (REP) with a one-month billing cycle that renews every month, no long-term contract, and no fees for early termination. Because there is no contract term, the REP sets energy prices at a variable rate. That means the cents-per-kilowatt-hour figure on your Electricity Facts Label (EFL) can move up or down every billing cycle. You keep the freedom to cancel or change your plan at any time without paying a cancellation fee.

Since Texas deregulated its residential electricity market in 2002, these plans have been available. Approximately 85% of Texas is inside the deregulated ERCOT market, where residents actively compare retail electric providers rather than being served by a single utility (Power Outage US, 2026). Month-to-month plans are listed alongside 12-month, 24-month, and 36-month fixed-rate plans on the Texas Power to Choose marketplace and on individual REP sites.

How does a variable rate on a Texas month to month electricity plan work?

On a Texas month to month electricity plan, a variable rate means the retail electric provider recalculates the per-kWh energy charge every month based on the ERCOT wholesale market, seasonal demand, and the provider's own margin. Your rate can change with each billing cycle, and unless the EFL specifies a cap (rare on flex products), there is no ceiling.

Reading the Electricity Facts Label on a Texas variable-rate month-to-month plan

Where the price actually comes from

Your total per-kWh charge on any Texas retail plan, fixed or variable, has three stacked pieces:

  1. ERCOT wholesale energy cost. The Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) runs the wholesale market. Wholesale prices are projected to rise 45% in 2026 after climbing 21% in 2025 (Nuwatt Energy, 2026). Fixed-rate plans hedge that exposure ahead of time. Variable-rate plans do not.
  2. TDU delivery charges. Your Transmission and Distribution Utility (Oncor, CenterPoint, AEP Texas Central, AEP Texas North, or Texas-New Mexico Power) charges every REP the same regulated rate to move power to your meter. Current Texas TDU volumetric charges run 3.2 to 4.1 cents per kWh, plus a $5.00 to $9.00 monthly base fee (Compare Power, 2026). Lone Star Flex and most Ambit Texas plans pass these through at cost, with no markup.
  3. Retail margin. What your REP adds for customer service, billing, and profit. On a variable plan, this is the piece with the most room to move month to month.

For an anchor on the retail number, Choose Texas Power reports the average Texas residential rate at 15.97 cents per kWh on typical 1,096 kWh monthly usage, which works out to about $175 per month (Choose Texas Power, 2026). Residential rates in Texas run about 12.1% below the national average, based on U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) data, but on a variable plan that discount is not guaranteed month to month.

How often the rate can change

On a Texas variable-rate plan the REP has the right to change the energy charge with almost every bill. In practice, most Ambit brand and competitor variable plans reprice monthly. During calm weather months your rate may drift down or hold. During peak demand months (July, August, February cold snaps) it can jump significantly in a single cycle. That single-cycle change is the entire risk of a no-contract product.

How does Ambit's Lone Star Flex plan work?

Lone Star Flex is Ambit Energy's Texas month to month electricity plan: a no-contract, variable-rate residential product available across the deregulated ERCOT footprint (Oncor, CenterPoint, AEP Texas Central, AEP Texas North, and TNMP service areas). There is no term commitment, no early termination fee, and no penalty if you switch to a different Ambit plan later.

Texas TDU service area map: Oncor, CenterPoint, AEP Texas, and TNMP coverage for retail electricity plans

Here is how a Lone Star Flex bill is built each month:

  • Energy charge: a per-kWh rate set by Ambit for that billing cycle, published on the current Electricity Facts Label (EFL) for your ZIP.
  • TDU delivery charges: the Oncor, CenterPoint, AEP TX, or TNMP volumetric charge (3.2 to 4.1 cents per kWh) plus their monthly base fee ($5.00 to $9.00), passed through at cost.
  • Ambit base charge or monthly service fee, if any: disclosed on the EFL.
  • Taxes and PUCT fees: standard on every Texas retail bill.

Two features set Lone Star Flex apart from the generic marketplace variable plans:

  1. Statewide TDU coverage. Because Ambit is authorized across all five Texas TDU service areas, the same plan follows you if you move within the deregulated zone. You do not have to re-shop when you cross from Oncor into CenterPoint.
  2. No-contract, but a straight upgrade path. If you decide to lock in later (for example, before summer), you can move from Lone Star Flex to a fixed-rate Ambit plan like Lone Star Classic without paying an ETF, because there was no term to break.

For the current per-kWh Lone Star Flex rate in your ZIP code, always check the live EFL: Ambit Energy plans and EFLs. Rates change monthly and any figure quoted in an article is stale within one billing cycle.

Who should choose a Texas no-contract electricity plan?

A Texas no-contract electricity plan is the right choice when the value of flexibility (the ability to cancel or switch any month with no fee) is higher than the roughly 10 to 20% rate premium you pay for it. Concretely, that describes five household types:

  1. Renters on a short or month-to-month lease. If your lease could end on 60 days notice, a 12-month fixed contract creates ETF risk you cannot control.
  2. Anyone planning to move in the next 30 to 90 days. Even with the Texas move-out exemption on most fixed contracts, a no-contract plan removes the paperwork and the "prove the address change" step.
  3. Shoppers between fixed contracts. If your 12-month plan just ended and you refuse to be rolled onto the REP's holdover variable rate (usually the most expensive tier), enrolling in Lone Star Flex parks you on a defined, transparent variable product while you shop.
  4. Credit-repair or no-deposit shoppers. Some REPs waive the deposit on their month-to-month product but require one on the fixed plans. Confirm on the specific EFL.
  5. New arrivals to Texas. If you just moved to Houston, Dallas, or Austin and cannot yet predict your monthly kWh usage, a month or two on a no-contract plan lets you see two real bills before committing to a 12-month or 24-month rate tier.

A Texas no-contract electricity plan is the wrong choice when you are a heavy summer AC user in a home you plan to keep, with stable income and no need for the flexibility. The math on 12 months of predictable fixed pricing almost always beats a variable rate for that household, especially given the 45% projected ERCOT wholesale increase in 2026 (Nuwatt Energy, 2026). For a broader picture of the choice, see our guide to fixed-rate vs variable-rate electricity in Texas.

What are the drawbacks of a month-to-month electricity plan in Texas?

The drawbacks of a Texas month-to-month electricity plan are rate volatility during peak events, difficulty budgeting, and a higher expected 12-month total cost than a comparable fixed plan. Three specific numbers make this concrete:

  • Rate premium. Across the Texas market, variable and no-contract plans price about 10 to 20% above 12-month fixed rates, or roughly 1.4 to 3.2 cents per kWh more (Electric Rates, 2026). On a 1,096 kWh Texas average bill, that is $15 to $35 more per month in a normal month.
  • Peak spikes. During the July 2026 heat-dome event, some Texas variable-rate customers were billed as high as $0.30 per kWh for a full cycle, roughly double the 15.97 cent state average (Electricity Plans, 2026). A single bad month can wipe out several months of savings on a variable plan.
  • Complaint volume. The Public Utility Commission of Texas recorded 1,876 customer complaints against retail electric providers between September 2025 and February 2026, a period that included the winter cold snap. Many complaints tied back to variable-rate bill shock (Electric Rates, 2026).

If you cannot absorb a bill that doubles for one cycle, do not put yourself on a variable-rate product headed into a Texas summer.

Texas variable-rate versus 12-month fixed-rate electricity chart showing the July 2026 heat-dome price spike

Month-to-Month vs 12-Month Fixed vs 24-Month Fixed: side-by-side

Feature Month-to-Month (Lone Star Flex) 12-Month Fixed (Lone Star Classic) 24-Month Fixed
Term 1 month, auto-renews 12 months 24 months
Early termination fee None $150 to $295 typical (Gatby, 2026) $150 to $295 typical
Rate stability Changes monthly Locked for 12 months Locked for 24 months
Typical rate premium vs 12-mo +10% to +20% Baseline Often 0% to +5%
Deposit rules Often waivable REP dependent REP dependent
Move-out flexibility Cancel any time, no fee Move-out exemption with proof Move-out exemption with proof
Best for Renters, movers, contract gap Stable household, 1-year outlook Locking in ahead of expected rate increases

How does Lone Star Flex compare to TXU Flex Rewards, Reliant Month-to-Month, and Chariot Freedom?

All four are variable-rate, no-contract Texas products, but they differ on rewards, TDU coverage, and renewable content:

Plan REP Contract ETF Notable features
Lone Star Flex Ambit Energy Month-to-month None Statewide TDU coverage, straight upgrade to Lone Star Classic fixed plan
TXU Flex Rewards TXU Energy Month-to-month None 3% cash-back loyalty reward, 60-day satisfaction guarantee (Texas Electric Rates, 2026)
Reliant Month-to-Month Reliant Energy Month-to-month None Deep Texas footprint, integrated NRG billing platform
Chariot Freedom Chariot Energy Month-to-month None 100% renewable content, single-TDU focus (Chariot Energy, 2026)

If you value rewards and satisfaction guarantee framing, TXU Flex Rewards is the pitch. If you value 100% renewable content, Chariot Freedom is the pitch. If you value statewide TDU coverage plus a clean upgrade path into a fixed Ambit plan without switching REPs, Lone Star Flex is the pitch.

What happens to variable rates during ERCOT peak demand or a Texas heat wave?

During ERCOT peak demand or a Texas heat wave, variable-rate customers absorb the full wholesale price move in that billing cycle, while fixed-rate customers pay their locked rate no matter what the market does. The ERCOT wholesale price can swing from about $20 per megawatt-hour to as high as $5,000 per megawatt-hour, the market cap, in a matter of hours during a scarcity event (Elite Energy Consultants, citing ERCOT market data).

The July 2026 heat dome is the current textbook example. As ERCOT set new peak demand records above 83,000 MW and lost roughly 501 MW of generation on July 3, wholesale prices ran at scarcity levels for stretches of afternoon load hours (see our summary in how Texas summer bills stack up). Retail variable-rate plans repriced their July energy charge accordingly. Some Texas variable customers were billed at as much as $0.30 per kWh for the cycle (Electricity Plans, 2026). A Lone Star Classic (fixed) customer, by contract, paid their locked rate.

Do no-contract electricity plans require a deposit in Texas?

Whether a Texas no-contract electricity plan requires a deposit depends on the REP's credit policy, not the fact that the plan is month-to-month. Most Texas REPs run a soft credit check at enrollment. If your credit clears the REP's threshold, the deposit is waived. If it does not, the REP can request a deposit before turn-on. Some month-to-month products (for example, prepaid Pogo Energy) are specifically built for the no-deposit and no-credit-check use case, but they price at a premium versus a standard variable plan. Always confirm on the specific EFL for your ZIP code.

How to switch to a no-contract Texas electricity plan

Switching to a no-contract Texas electricity plan takes five steps and typically 24 to 72 hours:

  1. Enter your ZIP code on your REP's site or the Power to Choose marketplace to confirm your TDU service area (Oncor, CenterPoint, AEP Texas Central, AEP Texas North, or TNMP).
  2. Pull the Electricity Facts Label (EFL) for the plan. Read the variable rate history section and the base charge line. If a fixed plan looks cheaper for your usage tier, walk through our EFL walkthrough guide before you enroll.
  3. Confirm there is no ETF and no auto-renewal into a fixed plan. A true no-contract product renews monthly at whatever the variable rate is; it does not silently shift you into a long-term fixed contract.
  4. Enroll. For a standard switch, expect 24 to 72 hours before your new REP is your provider of record; for a same-day switch, expect a higher enrollment fee.
  5. Set a monthly bill-review reminder. The whole value of a no-contract plan is that you can leave. Actually check the rate each cycle and compare it to current fixed offers so you can move when the math changes.

The Lone Star Flex Trade-Off Framework: is a no-contract Texas plan right for you?

The Lone Star Flex Trade-Off Framework is a five-factor decision tool for Texas shoppers weighing a no-contract plan against a fixed contract. Rate each factor as 0, 1, or 2, then add the scores. The higher your total, the better a month-to-month plan fits your situation.

  1. T: Tenure at address. 0 = staying 2+ years. 1 = 6 to 24 months. 2 = under 6 months or unsure.
  2. U: AC-heavy summer usage. 0 = large home, AC running hard, over 1,500 kWh/month in July. 1 = average Texas usage (about 1,096 kWh/month). 2 = apartment or low usage under 800 kWh/month.
  3. E: Contract exit fee owed today. 0 = mid-contract, ETF over $200 owed if you switch to a fixed plan now. 1 = ETF under $100 or nearing contract end. 2 = no current contract, no ETF owed.
  4. R: Rate-shopping bandwidth. 0 = "set it and forget it," never re-shops. 1 = re-shops once a year at renewal. 2 = will review the EFL every month and switch when it makes sense.
  5. C: Credit / deposit status. 0 = clean credit, no deposit required anywhere. 1 = deposit required on some plans. 2 = deposit-waiver only on month-to-month.

Interpretation: score 8 to 10, a no-contract plan like Lone Star Flex is a strong fit. Score 5 to 7, it fits some months, but model a 12-month fixed side-by-side. Score 0 to 4, a fixed-rate plan is almost certainly cheaper for you across a full year.

How to leave a fixed-rate Texas electricity contract early

To leave a fixed-rate Texas electricity contract early, you either pay the Early Termination Fee (ETF) disclosed on your EFL or use the Texas move-out exemption. ETFs on Texas 12-month and 24-month fixed plans typically run $150 to $295 flat (Gatby, 2026), and some providers structure them as a per-month-remaining charge (about $20 per remaining month).

You can waive the ETF entirely under the Texas move-out exemption by providing the REP with proof of a change of address (a lease, deed, or utility bill at the new address) within the required window. That exemption is a statewide right, not a courtesy. Read your EFL for the exact documentation the REP requires. If you have a fixed contract and no move on the horizon, moving to a month-to-month plan usually means paying the ETF and eating that cost; run the math against expected savings before you switch.

Frequently asked questions about no-contract electricity in Texas

Is a month-to-month electricity plan cheaper in Texas?
No. On average, a month-to-month electricity plan is not cheaper in Texas. Variable and no-contract plans price about 10 to 20% above comparable 12-month fixed plans, or roughly 1.4 to 3.2 cents per kWh more (Electric Rates, 2026). You are paying for flexibility, not savings.

Do you need good credit for a no-contract electricity plan?
Not always. Many Texas REPs waive a deposit on month-to-month products even for shoppers with limited credit history, and prepaid REPs like Pogo Energy skip the credit check entirely. If you are turned down at one REP, the next one may accept you.

How often can Ambit change my Lone Star Flex rate?
Ambit can change the Lone Star Flex energy charge every billing cycle, and the current rate is disclosed on the live EFL for your ZIP code. That monthly repricing is the whole trade for the no-contract, no-ETF structure.

Can I move without paying a cancellation fee on a fixed plan?
Yes, under the Texas move-out exemption. Provide your REP with proof of address change (lease, deed, or new utility bill) and the ETF is waived. The exemption is a statewide consumer protection, but the paperwork requirements are set by the REP.

What is the best month to switch electricity in Texas?
The best months to switch electricity in Texas are typically March through May and September through October, when wholesale prices sit below summer and winter peaks and REPs promote fresh fixed-rate offers. Locking a 12-month plan in shoulder season protects you from the July and August bill shock that variable-rate customers absorb.

Can I lock into a fixed rate later if I start on Lone Star Flex?
Yes. Because Lone Star Flex has no term commitment, you can move from Lone Star Flex to a fixed-rate Ambit plan (for example, Lone Star Classic 12) at any time with no ETF. Many Texas households use Lone Star Flex as a bridge until they are ready to commit to a 12-month rate.

Ready to switch to a no-contract Texas electricity plan?

If a Texas no-contract electricity plan fits your situation, Lone Star Flex from Ambit Energy is a clean way to try one without giving up your future options. Sign up in your ZIP code and cancel any month with no fee: Get an Ambit Energy quote for Lone Star Flex. If you want to see the fixed-rate side of the ledger first, compare the same ZIP against a locked plan in our Texas electricity plans comparison guide.

Plan details and rates subject to change. Energy facts label available for every advertised plan on the REP's site. Subject to credit approval. Ambit Energy is a licensed retail electric provider in Texas (PUCT REP certification on file). Earnings vary; nothing in this article is an earnings representation for the Ambit Consultant program, and individual results as an Ambit Independent Consultant are not guaranteed.

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