Lincoln Electric System (LES) Rate Selection Guide

Lincoln Electric System (LES) is a municipal, customer-owned electric utility serving roughly 155,000 retail customers (about 137,000 residential and 18,000 commercial) in Lincoln, Nebraska. As public power, LES has no retail supplier choice; it is among the lowest-priced utilities nationally but offers limited programmatic data access (PDF billing portal, AMR meters, no Green Button or API).

Nebraska · Municipal Utility·Regulated market·Fully supported by Nectar·Last updated June 4, 2026

Lincoln Electric System (LES) Rate Schedule Comparison

ScheduleTypeRateBest For
General Service (10 & 13)Commercial$6.50 customer + $31.00 facilities; energy $0.1055 (S) / $0.0655 (W) secondarySmall commercial under 25,000 kWh / 100 kW
General Service-Demand (11 & 12)Commercial$25.00 customer + $14.50/kW demand; energy $0.0277 (S) / $0.0250 (W)Mid-size demand-metered commercial
Large Light and Power (15/16/39)Industrial$450 customer + $17.75/kW demand; energy $0.0255 (S) / $0.0245 (W)Industrial loads > 400 kW
LLP TOU Demand (30/31/32)Industrial$450 customer + on-peak $13.00/kW, off-peak $4.50/kW; energy $0.0265 (S)Large loads that can shift off peak
01

Market Overview

LES is a customer-owned municipal utility in Nebraska's all-public-power market. Rates are set by the LES Administrative Board and Lincoln City Council rather than a state commission. No competitive retail supplier choice is available.

Market Type
Partially Deregulated
Supplier Choice
Not Available

Need to pull your actual usage data to compare rates? See the Lincoln Electric System (LES) Data Access Guide →


02

Current Rate Schedules

LES rate schedules (approved by the LES Administrative Board, effective for services after Dec. 31, 2025) are public and itemized. C&I customers fall on General Service (10/13), General Service-Demand (11/12), Large Light and Power (15/16/39), and a Large Light and Power Time-of-Use Demand option (30/31/32). LES is consistently among the lowest-cost utilities in the U.S. (9th nationally for lowest average all-in price; 2nd residential). Charges below are verified from the published LES rate schedule.

Effective: January 1, 2026 · Full Tariff Book →

ScheduleTypeApplicabilityStructureRate
General Service (10 & 13)commercialCommercial customers using ≤ 25,000 kWh/billing period and ≤ 100 kW summer demand.Customer Charge $6.50/bill; Facilities Charge $31.00/bill (single-phase) or $95.50 (three-phase) or $50.00 (primary); Energy Charge secondary $0.1055/kWh summer, $0.0655/kWh winter; primary $0.0975/$0.0620.
General Service-Demand (11 & 12)commercialCommercial customers > 25,000 kWh/billing period or > 100 kW summer demand; 25 kW minimum billing demand.Customer Charge $25.00/bill; Demand Charge secondary $14.50/kW (primary $14.25); Facilities Charge secondary $7.25/kW (primary $5.25); Energy Charge secondary $0.0277/kWh summer, $0.0250 winter (primary $0.0270/$0.0245).
Large Light and Power (15, 16 & 39)industrialLoads > 100,000 kWh/billing period or demand > 400 kW and < 20,000 kW.Customer Charge $450.00/bill; Demand Charge secondary $17.75/kW (primary/35kV $17.25); Facilities Charge secondary $7.42/kW; Energy Charge secondary $0.0255/kWh summer, $0.0245 winter (primary/35kV $0.0242/$0.0235); Excess kVAR $2.60/kVAR.
Large Light and Power Time-of-Use Demand (30, 31 & 32)industrialLarge loads (>400 kW, <20,000 kW) able to shift load between on-peak and off-peak periods.Customer Charge $450.00/bill; On-Peak Demand secondary $13.00/kW, Off-Peak $4.50/kW (primary $12.50/$4.00); Facilities $5.50/kW; Energy secondary $0.0265/kWh summer, $0.0243 winter (primary $0.0252/$0.0232).

03

Rate Recommendations by Use Case

🏢

Small / mid commercial (offices, retail)

Commercial sites under ~25,000 kWh and 100 kW summer demand.

Recommended:
General Service (10 & 13)

Below demand thresholds, GS avoids demand charges; energy is the main driver with a steep summer rate ($0.1055/kWh).

Tips:
  • Reduce summer consumption — the seasonal energy rate is ~60% higher
  • Stay under 100 kW summer demand to avoid moving to GS-Demand
  • Consider three-phase facilities charge tradeoffs
Est. monthly: $6.50 customer + $31.00 facilities + energy at $0.1055/$0.0655 per kWh
🏭

Demand-metered commercial / light industrial

Sites over 25,000 kWh or 100 kW summer demand on GS-Demand.

Recommended:
General Service-Demand (11 & 12)

Demand charge ($14.50/kW secondary) and the 65% summer ratchet dominate; shaving peaks pays back quickly.

Tips:
  • Manage 30-minute peaks; the summer ratchet carries 11 months
  • Evaluate primary service ($14.25 vs $14.50/kW)
  • Sub-meter to find peak drivers (no LES interval data)
Est. monthly: $25.00 customer + $14.50/kW + energy $0.0277/$0.0250 per kWh

Large industrial (>400 kW)

Large continuous loads on Large Light and Power.

Recommended:
Large Light and Power (15, 16 & 39)Large Light and Power TOU Demand (30, 31 & 32)

TOU Demand can sharply cut demand cost ($4.50/kW off-peak vs $17.75/kW standard) for shiftable load; power factor and voltage level also matter.

Tips:
  • Model TOU Demand vs standard LLP for your load shape
  • Correct power factor to ≥ 93% to avoid $2.60/kVAR
  • Take primary/35 kV service to lower demand & facilities charges
Est. monthly: $450 customer + $17.75/kW (or TOU $13.00 on / $4.50 off) + energy ~$0.025/kWh
🌱

Sustainability / renewable-focused C&I

Customers seeking renewable supply or efficiency incentives.

Recommended:
Renewable Generation Rate options

LES offers virtual solar and renewable rate options plus energy-efficiency programs (energyOrbit-administered).

Tips:
  • Enroll directly with LES Energy Services
  • Combine efficiency incentives with demand reduction
  • Note third parties cannot pull data programmatically
Est. monthly: Varies by program; see les.com/rates

04

Historical Rate Trends

LES rates are set locally through its annual budget process. For 2026, the LES Administrative Board adopted a budget including a 3% systemwide increase to retail electric rates, effective for services after Dec. 31, 2025. LES remains among the lowest-priced utilities nationally.

January 1, 2026

LES 2026 budget: 3% systemwide retail electric rate increase, effective for services after Dec. 31, 2025.

+3%

Overall trend: Modest, steady increases (3% systemwide for 2026); LES remains 9th nationally for lowest all-in price.

Next expected change: Reviewed annually with the LES budget; future increases set by the Administrative Board and Lincoln City Council.


05

Cost Optimization Strategies

Because LES C&I schedules are demand-driven, the biggest levers are peak-demand reduction, load shifting onto the TOU Demand option, and power-factor correction. Note that LES does not provide interval data, so demand management must rely on facility-side metering or sub-metering.

Off-peak load shifting (TOU Demand)

For: Large industrial (>400 kW) with shiftable load

Off-peak demand priced ~65% below on-peak ($4.50 vs $13.00/kW)

Move flexible load to off-peak windows on the LLP Time-of-Use Demand schedule, where off-peak demand is $4.50/kW vs $13.00/kW on-peak (secondary).

Peak demand reduction

For: GS-Demand and Large Light and Power

Each kW shaved saves $14.50-$17.75/month plus ratchet impact

Lower the 30-minute maximum demand to cut the $14.50-$17.75/kW demand charge; also mitigates the 65% summer demand ratchet that carries forward 11 months.

Power-factor correction

For: Large Light and Power (15/16/39, 30/31/32)

Avoids $2.60 per excess kVAR

Keep power factor at or above 93% to avoid the $2.60/kVAR excess-kVAR charge on Large Light and Power schedules.

Voltage-level service (primary/35kV)

For: Large industrial able to take primary service

Lower per-kW demand and facilities charges at higher voltage

Taking service at primary or 35 kV reduces both demand and facilities charges (e.g., $17.25 vs $17.75/kW demand; lower facilities charge) for customers who can own transformation equipment.

To implement these strategies, you need your 15-minute interval data. Learn how to download Lincoln Electric System (LES) interval data →


06

Frequently Asked Questions

Can my consultant get interval (15-minute) data for a load study?

No. LES uses Itron AMR, not AMI, so no interval data exists at any granularity. Only monthly usage (kWh) is available. Demand-metered C&I schedules bill on a 30-minute maximum demand internally, but that data is not exposed to customers. Consultants must work from monthly bill PDFs or request a custom export from LES Business Services at 402.475.4211.

Does LES support Green Button or a data API for our facilities?

No. LES does not implement Green Button (DMD or CMD), ESPI, EDI, or any public API/developer portal. Billing data is PDF-only. For automated third-party access, Nectar provides API access to LES billing data (see docs.nectarclimate.com); otherwise share customer-downloaded PDFs under a signed authorization.

Can we choose a competitive electricity supplier?

No. Nebraska is a 100% public power state with no retail choice. LES is a not-for-profit municipal utility; all customers are served on LES's local rate schedules set by the Administrative Board and City Council.

What rate schedule applies to a demand-metered commercial site?

Sites exceeding 25,000 kWh per billing period or 100 kW summer demand move to General Service-Demand (schedules 11 & 12), which carries a $25.00/bill customer charge, $14.50/kW secondary demand charge, and $0.0277 (summer) / $0.0250 (winter) per-kWh energy charge, with a 25 kW minimum billing demand. See the LES rate schedules for full terms.

How are large industrial sites billed at LES?

Loads over 400 kW (and under 20,000 kW) on Large Light and Power (15/16/39) pay a $450/bill customer charge, $17.75/kW secondary demand charge, and ~$0.0255/$0.0245 per-kWh (summer/winter) energy, plus excess-kVAR charges. A Time-of-Use Demand option (30/31/32) splits on-peak ($13.00/kW) and off-peak ($4.50/kW) demand for sites that can shift load.

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