Why Your Electric Bill May Look Different During Extreme Cold
Friday | February 27, 2026

If your electric bill looks different this month, you’re not alone. It doesn’t mean you did anything wrong, and it doesn’t reflect any changes to your REC electric rates. Extreme cold, like we’ve had this winter, changes how both homes and the electric system operate, even when daily routines stay the same.

Extreme Cold Raises the Baseline for Energy Use
In severe cold, your home shifts into a different operating mode. The gap between indoor and outdoor temperatures becomes extreme, and systems that keep your home safe and livable must work more often. Heating rooms, warming water and even everyday routines like laundry require more energy in winter.

Even if your habits don’t change, winter raises the baseline. The environment itself increases how much work your home must do, which means it needs more electricity simply to function.

How Heat Loss and Longer Run Times Add Up
Homes constantly lose heat through walls, windows and doors. During extreme cold, that heat escapes faster. To maintain the same indoor temperature, heating systems must run longer, sometimes nearly nonstop, just to keep up.

What might be a few minutes of run time on a mild winter day can become near-constant operation during a cold snap. That extra run time adds up hour by hour, day by day, increasing overall energy use.

Learn More and Get Support
REC is committed to helping members understand how weather, energy demand and pricing are connected. We also offer tools and resources to help you manage energy use and understand your bill, including:
• Energy-saving tips
• Budget billing options
• Payment assistance programs
• Personalized use insights through your REC account

Learn more at: myrec.coop/heretohelp

Winter simply changes how the system works. Our goal is to provide clear, practical information so you can make informed choices throughout the season.

Snowy woods through window

REC STORIES

REC Warns of In-Person Impersonation Scams

Friday | September 20, 2024
REC has seen an increase in potential in-person scams in the southeast portion of its service area.
Brad Good and his REC line crew headed out to the back country of Berryville on an overcast Thursday, where they replaced three aging poles.
The Swann family lost everything in February 2016 when a tornado roared through Essex County, leaving a sea of destruction in its wake. With September...