Electricity prices in CitiPower (VIC) — 2026–27

Victorian Default Offer (ESC) · effective 1 July 2026

$1,481 /year derived at 4,000 kWh

Usage 26.0c/kWh · supply 121.1c/day (GST incl.) · -4.2% vs 2025–26

Melbourne CBD & inner suburbs · source: ESC Victorian Default Offer 2026–27 · annual figure is a derived estimate from the published rates

CitiPower reference rates, 2026–27 (GST inclusive)
TariffDaily supplyUsageAnnual
Residential (flat rate)121.1c/day26.0c/kWh$1,481*
Controlled load16.6c/kWh
Small business (flat rate)152.2c/day24.8c/kWh

* Derived estimate — published rates × 4,000 kWh + supply × 365, not a figure the regulator publishes.

Cheapest VDO zone on usage rate (Melbourne CBD/inner).

Electricity bill estimator

CitiPower

A 2-person household uses roughly 4,000–5,500 kWh a year.

$1,481 per year ≈ $370/quarter
Supply charge (121.1c/day × 365)
$442.16
Usage (26.0c/kWh × 4,000 kWh)
$1,038.40

Rates: ESC Victorian Default Offer 2026–27, effective 1 July 2026 (GST inclusive). This is the government reference/standing rate for Melbourne CBD & inner suburbs — market offers can sit below it. Full CitiPower price breakdown →

How CitiPower compares

Residential flat-rate usage charge by zone, 2026–27
ZoneRegionUsage c/kWhSupply c/day
CitiPowerVIC26.0c121.1c
AusgridNSW33.1c166.2c
Endeavour EnergyNSW33.7c185.1c
Essential EnergyNSW35.0c272.2c
PowercorVIC28.2c138.1c
United EnergyVIC27.4c119.1c
JemenaVIC27.5c127.1c
AusNet ServicesVIC32.0c128.2c
EnergexQLD28.0c192.0c
Ergon EnergyQLD28.9c180.5c
SA Power NetworksSA41.9c180.1c
Western Power (SWIS)WA33.3c119.2c
Horizon PowerWA33.3c119.2c
TasNetworksTAS28.0c167.7c
EvoenergyACT37.0c134.2c
Power and WaterNT31.7c62.5c

Frequently asked questions

Why is a CitiPower bill different from other areas?
Poles-and-wires costs differ by network. CitiPower covers Melbourne CBD & inner suburbs, and its network charges are built into the Victorian Default Offer (ESC) figures for this zone — so the same usage costs a different amount on a neighbouring network. Compare the other VIC zones or the national table below.
Is this what I actually pay?
This is the regulated standing rate — the default if you have never chosen a market plan. Market offers in CitiPower's area can price below it, so treat these rates as the benchmark your own plan should beat.
What's controlled load?
A separately metered circuit — usually electric hot water — that the network can energise off-peak in exchange for a cheaper rate. In CitiPower's zone the controlled-load usage rate is 16.6c/kWh, well under the anytime rate of 26.0c/kWh.
When do these prices change?
Every 1 July. The ESC Victorian Default Offer 2026–27 applies from 1 July 2026 to 30 June 2027; the next reset is 1 July 2027. This page is re-verified against the new determination each year.

Related

Sources — figures current as at 17 July 2026.

Rates apply 1 July 2026 – 30 June 2027 and reset every 1 July. Figures are the government reference/standing rates for this zone — retail market offers can differ.