Rate increases · Baltimore Gas & Electric (BGE)
Why is my Baltimore Gas & Electric (BGE) bill going up in 2025–26?
Your Baltimore Gas & Electric (BGE) bill went up, and it's not your imagination or just the AC. Higher wholesale supply, driven by PJM capacity — including pricey 'reliability-must-run' contracts for the Brandon Shores and Wagner plants that hit the Baltimore zone especially hard.
The key facts
- Baltimore Gas & Electric (BGE)'s Standard Offer Service (Price to Compare) is now 12.587¢/kWh (from 11.896¢) , effective June 1, 2025.
- For a typical 700 kWh home, that's roughly $4.84 more a month (estimate — your bill depends on your usage).
- The driver is the PJM capacity market, where the price spiked from $28.92 to $269.92/MW-day (about 830%).
- Exelon reported about $2.5 billion in 2024 profit — but not from this supply charge (it's a pass-through). See the Baltimore Gas & Electric (BGE) Report Card →
Source: Maryland PSC — SOS / rate mitigation order (2025). Rates reset on a schedule — confirm the current figure before relying on it.
What's actually driving it
Think of the PJM capacity market as a retainer fee. Every year the regional grid operator pays power plants to promise they'll be available on the worst-demand days — the January cold snap, the August heat wave — even if they sit idle the rest of the time. You're not paying for electricity here; you're paying to keep the plants on call. That retainer spiked, and it flows onto the supply line of your bill.
The price went from $28.92/MW-day to $269.92 (about 830%), and the latest auction cleared even higher at $329.17 — the cap. Why? Electricity demand is rising fast — led by data centers, plus electrification and economic growth. Older power plants are retiring faster than new ones can connect to the grid. Source: PJM Interconnection — 2026/2027 Base Residual Auction results (July 2025).
Is Baltimore Gas & Electric (BGE) pocketing this?
This lands on the supply (generation) part of your bill, which on a default/standard rate is a pass-through — your utility buys the power and bills it through with no markup. The utility's own profit lives in the separate delivery (distribution) charge, set in a rate case.
Where the utility's profit does live: Separately, BGE's distribution case (Case 9692) covers the delivery charge — that's the part BGE earns a return on. That's the part worth scrutinizing — and the part you can comment on at the commission before it's approved.
What you can actually do
- Check usage vs. rate. A higher rate and a hot month stack up. Pull your kWh from last month and compare it to the same month last year — it tells you how much is the rate and how much is the weather.
- Check whether you're overpaying on supply. If a third-party supplier is charging more than Baltimore Gas & Electric (BGE)'s Standard Offer Service (Price to Compare), that's a fixable overcharge — but switching rarely beats a capacity-driven default rate, so compare honestly first. Run the free, private audit → Should you shop in Maryland? → How to use the Maryland OPC shopping guide, Maryland's official comparison tool →
- If the bill is more than you can cover, there's real help — assistance programs, payment plans, and your shutoff protections. Bill help in Maryland →
The fuller picture on Baltimore Gas & Electric (BGE)
A rate increase is one number. Here's the context most coverage skips: in 2024, Baltimore Gas & Electric (BGE) disconnected about 3.9 households per 100 customers for nonpayment. Its parent, Exelon, cleared about $2.5 billion in 2024.
See the full Baltimore Gas & Electric (BGE) Report Card → Compare every utility on rates, reliability, disconnections and profit →Common questions
- How much is the Baltimore Gas & Electric (BGE) rate increase?
- Baltimore Gas & Electric (BGE)'s Standard Offer Service (Price to Compare) rose to 12.587¢/kWh (from 11.896¢) effective June 1, 2025. That's roughly $4.84 more a month for a typical 700 kWh home.
- Why is my Baltimore Gas & Electric (BGE) bill going up?
- Higher wholesale supply, driven by PJM capacity — including pricey 'reliability-must-run' contracts for the Brandon Shores and Wagner plants that hit the Baltimore zone especially hard.
- Is Baltimore Gas & Electric (BGE) making more profit from this?
- Not from the supply increase itself — that's a pass-through with no markup. Exelon (the parent company) reported about $2.5 billion in profit in 2024, but that comes from the delivery/distribution side and its other businesses, not from marking up the power you buy. This lands on the supply (generation) part of your bill, which on a default/standard rate is a pass-through — your utility buys the power and bills it through with no markup. The utility's own profit lives in the separate delivery (distribution) charge, set in a rate case.
- Will switching suppliers lower my Baltimore Gas & Electric (BGE) bill?
- Often not. When the increase is a capacity-driven default rate, a competitive supplier is buying from the same wholesale market — and many switchers end up paying more after a teaser rate resets. Compare any offer against Baltimore Gas & Electric (BGE)'s Standard Offer Service (Price to Compare) first, and only take a fixed, full-term rate that genuinely beats it.
Last reviewed June 18, 2026. Default-supply rates reset on a schedule and rate cases move — confirm the current figure with Maryland PSC — SOS / rate mitigation order (2025) or your bill before relying on it. The state PSC ordered the summer increase spread/flattened over the year, so the peak summer supply rate runs higher than the annual average. Generation portion rose ~16%. This is general consumer information, not legal or financial advice.
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