I'd see what they do. They just locked me into a 18 or 24 month contract (can't remember now) for lower than I found on power to choose.
Kenneth_2003 said:Ditch EO. I'm fairly certain they bias toward 12mo contracts. There are cheaper plans out there but you have to get beyond 12 mo. They believe they need/have to be changing your plan every 12 months to justify the fee you're paying them.Bird Poo said:
18.6 cents quoted today from EO. 12 month contract.
Over twice what I normally pay each month.
DannyDuberstein said:Kenneth_2003 said:Ditch EO. I'm fairly certain they bias toward 12mo contracts. There are cheaper plans out there but you have to get beyond 12 mo. They believe they need/have to be changing your plan every 12 months to justify the fee you're paying them.Bird Poo said:
18.6 cents quoted today from EO. 12 month contract.
Over twice what I normally pay each month.
EO just locked me into 20 months
DannyDuberstein said:
Mine is a straight $225. But given how nuts things are, I'm happy with the rate given what is out there (14.6 500, 13.8 1000, 13.3 2000). New contract starts at the end of next week
topher06 said:
If your company exits (I assume you meant bankruptcy), they just end your contract?
Bird Poo said:
What did you use to search rates/deals?
I have used this one for the past few years. You can still enter your monthly usage, but you have to pay the $10(?) fee to see the list of providers.JobSecurity said:
There used to be a website called awesomepowertexas that let you put in your monthly usage and it would run the calcs for you. I guess they don't exist any more.
It used to be more valuable when there was a lot of variety in the shorter contracts. Now most plans seem to have dropped the usage credits, tiers, etc and are just straight per kwh
BUwolverine29 said:
My REP exited the market. EO was slow to transition me and I got stuck with Reliant as my POLR and got charged out the ass for 10 days. EO then signed me up for a 12 month plan @ 16.9, 16.6, and 16.5. I check PTC.org today and found much better rates available albeit for a longer term.
I have now cancelled EO and signed up with the Constellation 36mo, $99 cancellation plan. I'll eat the $200 cancellation fee with my current REP and consider it a lesson learned.
EO is not worth their price in this environment.
Or just click on the "database" tab and all the information is shown for free…drewser95 said:
I have used this one for the past few years. You can still enter your monthly usage, but you have to pay the $10(?) fee to see the list of providers.
https://www.texaspowerguide.com/
jamey said:DannyDuberstein said:Kenneth_2003 said:Ditch EO. I'm fairly certain they bias toward 12mo contracts. There are cheaper plans out there but you have to get beyond 12 mo. They believe they need/have to be changing your plan every 12 months to justify the fee you're paying them.Bird Poo said:
18.6 cents quoted today from EO. 12 month contract.
Over twice what I normally pay each month.
EO just locked me into 20 months
Look at your cancelation terms. Mine is 12 months but at $20 a month.
I think at some point over the next year energy costs will come down, the cancelation will be worth it and I get a new contract at a lower rate
Sorry, I done goofed. The rate was 10.8cents+3.8cents pass through for a rate of 14.6cents a kilowatt hour PLUS the 4.89+4.39 per month flat fee billing. Which gives a yearly average of 15.3 total cost.Diggity said:
that's strange....the rates they showed me were definitely "all in"
sounds like a bug in his software. Might want to give him a heads up.
TommyGun said:
That's interesting that some you are getting Energy Ogre deals longer than a 12 month contract. We contacted them earlier this week inquiring about a new contract and the rep we spoke with told us that their algorithms do not include contracts longer than 12 months. We have been out of contract since the end of May and EO kept telling us that they were waiting for a feasible deal and left us out of contract all during June. Well our June bill came in at $0.24/kwh so we found the best option available to us on Power to Choose and got a 24 month contract at $0.159/kwh. We probably should have acted sooner but I just figured I would let EO do what they're supposed to. In this case they failed us pretty bad and we paid almost $150 over what we could have gotten in a contract for the month of June. Our new deal is a $200 early cancellation so it was a no brainer to go ahead and switch with our two highest utilization months coming up.
Futures still show $5.50+ for the majority of the next 12 months which is double what it was a year ago and for several years prior. Europe is thirsty for energy.Dan Scott said:
Natural Gas prices have been essentially cut in half but power prices are still high around .14kwh for 1 year. What else drives pricing