Reality check
Is your electric bill normal?
Pick a state, enter your monthly bill, and compare it against a simple state-rate benchmark using editable usage assumptions.
A normal bill check works best when the result gives you a next action.
The benchmark flags whether the entered bill looks low, normal, high, or unusually high, then routes users toward usage, rate, solar, or heating comparisons instead of leaving them with a vague score.
Common questions
What does a high electric bill result mean?
It means the bill is meaningfully above a simple benchmark from your selected state rate and usage. It is a screening result, not a diagnosis; weather, home size, rate plan, electric heating, EV charging, and appliance use can all explain it.
What numbers should I enter for the normality check?
Enter the total monthly bill, monthly kWh from your utility bill, and the cents per kWh if you know it. If you do not know the rate, start with the state default and replace it later.
Can this find the cause of a high bill?
No. It ranks the bill against a benchmark and points you to better next steps, such as checking usage, fixed fees, state rates, solar payback, or heat pump fuel comparisons.