Provo City Power (Provo City Corporation) Rate Selection Guide

Provo City Power is the municipal electric utility for Provo, Utah, serving 40,057 electric customers alongside city water, wastewater, stormwater, and garbage services. C&I customers access billing and 13-month consumption history through the MyUsage portal, with EDI available for commercial billing transactions and third-party access governed by Utah Admin. Code R746-460-3 written-consent rules.

Utah · Municipal Utility·Regulated market·Last updated May 27, 2026

Provo City Power (Provo City Corporation) Rate Schedule Comparison

ScheduleTypeRateBest For
Schedules 2-6commercialPer FY26 published tariffs (effective Sept 1, 2025)Commercial and industrial service at various voltage levels
Schedule 3.1 (EV TOU Pilot)evTime-of-use pilot pricingFacilities with EV charging (limited to 100 customers)
Schedule 22 / 22.1 (RenewChoice)commercialVoluntary renewable rider pricingOrganizations with renewable procurement goals
01

Market Overview

Municipal utility with city-set rates and no retail choice. Net metering (Schedule 1.1) and renewable options (RenewChoice SelectGreen Wind, SharedSolar) are offered, and an AMI opt-out fee applies for customers declining smart meters.

Market Type
Regulated (Monopoly)
Supplier Choice
Not Available

Need to pull your actual usage data to compare rates? See the Provo City Power (Provo City Corporation) Data Access Guide →


02

Current Rate Schedules

Provo City Power, Utah's largest municipal electric utility (~35,000 meters), bills commercial customers on General Service schedules differentiated by delivery voltage: Schedule 2 at distribution voltage, Schedule 4 at primary voltage, and Schedule 6 at high voltage. The FY26 rate summary shows Schedule 2 with a $31.00/month service charge, $0.047/kWh energy, and a two-block demand charge ($8.50/kW for the first 5 kW, $15.00/kW above); Schedule 4 primary-voltage accounts pay $50.00/month, $0.047/kWh, and a flat $14.00/kW demand charge. All schedules carry an Energy Cost Adjustment (ECA) reset roughly every six months (March/September) to true up wholesale costs from the Utah Municipal Power Agency. A DC Fast Charger schedule (2.1) and a commercial SharedSolar opt-in (Schedule 22.2, at 20/50/80/100% of consumption) round out the C&I offerings; rate schedules are reviewed annually by the city.

Effective: September 1, 2025 · Full Tariff Book →

ScheduleTypeApplicabilityStructureRate
Schedule 2 — General Service, Distribution VoltagecommercialStandard commercial accounts served at distribution voltage (billing codes EL15–EL18)$31.00/month customer service charge; energy $0.047/kWh; demand $8.50/kW first 5 kW, $15.00/kW all additional; ECA applies$0.047/kWh energy+ $8.50/kW (first 5 kW), $15.00/kW above
Schedule 4 — General Service, Primary VoltageindustrialLarger commercial/industrial accounts taking service at primary voltage (EL20/EL21, kVA-billed)$50.00/month customer service charge; energy $0.047/kWh; flat demand charge $14.00/kW; ECA applies$0.047/kWh energy+ $14.00/kW
Schedule 6 — General Service, High VoltageindustrialProvo's largest loads taking service at high/transmission voltageVoltage-differentiated service with lower delivery cost reflecting customer-owned transformation; see the FY26 Schedule 6 PDF for current charges
Schedule 2.1 — DC Fast ChargerevCommercial DC fast-charging installationsEV-specific rate design mitigating demand-charge impact for fast-charging loads; see FY26 Schedule 2.1 PDF (city EV charging rate posted at $0.1209/kWh)~$0.1209/kWh (city EV charging rate)
Schedule 22.2 — Commercial SharedSolar (Opt-In)commercialCommercial customers electing 20, 50, 80, or 100% of monthly kWh from the SharedSolar programElected percentage of consumption billed at the SharedSolar rate in place of the standard energy charge; remaining kWh at the standard rate; all other schedule charges unchanged

03

Rate Recommendations by Use Case

🏪

Small commercial / retail / office

Provo storefronts, offices, and restaurants take Schedule 2 General Service at distribution voltage.

Recommended:
Schedule 2 — General Service, Distribution Voltage

Energy is cheap at $0.047/kWh, but the second demand block at $15.00/kW means peaky usage gets expensive fast — demand discipline matters even for small accounts.

Tips:
  • Avoid simultaneous HVAC, kitchen, and equipment startups that spike the billed kW
  • Watch the ECA line item, which resets around March and September with UMPA wholesale costs
  • Verify your billing code (EL15–EL18) matches your service configuration
🏭

Industrial / large facility (primary voltage)

Manufacturers, data facilities, and large campuses should evaluate Schedule 4 primary-voltage service, and Schedule 6 at the largest scale.

Recommended:
Schedule 4 — General Service, Primary VoltageSchedule 6 — General Service, High Voltage

Schedule 4's flat $14.00/kW demand charge beats Schedule 2's $15.00/kW second block for sizable loads, and primary-voltage service avoids distribution-level markups — if you can own the transformation.

Tips:
  • Model Schedule 2 vs 4 at your load: the crossover depends on demand size and transformation costs
  • Flatten peaks aggressively — demand charges dominate bills at $0.047/kWh energy
  • Coordinate with Provo Power engineering on service voltage at new-build or expansion time
🔌

EV fleet / charging site host

Fleet operators and charging hosts in Provo should use Schedule 2.1 rather than absorbing fast-charger spikes on standard demand charges.

Recommended:
Schedule 2.1 — DC Fast Charger

DC fast chargers create exactly the short, high-kW peaks that Schedule 2's $15/kW block punishes; the dedicated 2.1 schedule restructures that exposure for charging loads.

Tips:
  • Separate charger metering from building load where practical
  • Use managed charging software to cap simultaneous charger output
  • Compare 2.1 economics against on-site battery buffering for high-utilization sites
🌱

Sustainability-driven commercial customer

Businesses with renewable targets can enroll a fixed share of consumption in Commercial SharedSolar (Schedule 22.2).

Recommended:
Schedule 22.2 — Commercial SharedSolar (Opt-In)Schedule 2 — General Service, Distribution Voltage

SharedSolar lets you claim 20–100% solar supply without rooftop capital or PPAs — the elected percentage simply replaces the standard energy charge on your bill.

Tips:
  • Start at 20% or 50% to test the bill impact before scaling to 100%
  • Document the program terms for Scope 2 market-based GHG reporting
  • Demand charges are unaffected by SharedSolar — keep managing peaks

04

Cost Optimization Strategies

Provo Power's rate design — cheap energy ($0.047/kWh) with steep block demand charges (up to $15/kW) — makes peak demand the dominant C&I cost lever, followed by voltage-level optimization and ECA tracking. The city reviews schedules annually, so structures move.

Peak demand management

For: All demand-billed commercial and industrial accounts

$14–15/kW-month per kW of peak reduction

With the second demand block at $15.00/kW on Schedule 2, a single coincident 15-minute peak costs more than 300 kWh of energy. Stagger equipment starts, interlock HVAC stages, add VFDs, and consider battery peak-shaving — every kW shaved off the monthly peak returns $14–15.

Voltage-level optimization

For: Loads large enough to justify primary-voltage service

$1.00/kW-month on demand above 5 kW, plus delivery savings

Schedule 4 primary service trades a higher service charge ($50 vs $31) and customer-owned transformation for a flat $14.00/kW demand rate — below Schedule 2's upper block. Large loads should model the switch at expansion or equipment-replacement milestones.

Track the semiannual ECA

For: All retail customers

The Energy Cost Adjustment trues up UMPA wholesale costs against base rates, recalculated roughly every March and September using the published formula (with a 1.245 retail multiplier). Treat it as a variable budget line and review each reset announcement.

Dedicated EV charging rate

For: Fleet operators and charging site hosts

Move DC fast-charging load to Schedule 2.1 instead of letting charger spikes set the building's billed demand. For depot charging, managed-charging controls that cap aggregate kW deliver similar protection.

Efficiency and load factor improvement

For: All commercial accounts

Demand-side payback often 2-3x the energy-only estimate

Because energy is only $0.047/kWh, efficiency measures that also flatten load (high-efficiency HVAC with staging, LED retrofits reducing cooling load) pay back primarily through demand savings. Prioritize measures by kW impact, not just kWh.

To implement these strategies, you need your 15-minute interval data. Learn how to download Provo City Power (Provo City Corporation) interval data →


05

Frequently Asked Questions

How do commercial customers access billing and usage data from Provo City Power?

Register at the MyUsage portal (https://myusage.provo.org/app/login.jsp) with your most recent bill. The portal shows current and historical bills, payment history, and 13 months of kWh consumption with year-over-year comparison. Bills download as PDF; contact 311 Customer Service at (801) 852-6000 for export format details.

Does Provo City Power support EDI for commercial billing?

Yes. Provo City is listed in the DOE EERE Energy Data Management Guide as offering EDI to commercial customers. There is no public spec or enrollment portal — call 311 Customer Service at (801) 852-6000, request EDI enrollment, and provide your company details, EDI contact, and intended transaction types.

How can a consultant or aggregator get authorized access to a customer's Provo data?

Utah Admin. Code R746-460-3 requires express written customer consent. Obtain a signed authorization specifying the data scope, then submit it with a cover letter to Provo City 311 Customer Service (445 W Center St, Provo, UT 84601). Processing takes roughly 5-10 business days; data is delivered by email, secure transfer, or mail. Plan 2-4 weeks for initial setup.

Is interval smart meter data available from Provo City Power?

Provo has deployed AMI smart meters system-wide, but interval granularity is not publicly documented and there is no formal interval download program, Green Button support, or aggregator integration. For granular data, make a special request through 311 Customer Service or the Key Accounts Manager at (801) 852-6802.

Does Provo offer Green Button or a public API?

No. Green Button DMD/CMD and ESPI are not documented as available, and there is no public API or developer portal. The Cayenta CIS platform (implemented 2020) has REST API capabilities that could support future programs — contact the Key Accounts Manager to discuss API partnerships or the data access roadmap.

What C&I rate schedules does Provo City Power offer?

Schedules 2-6 cover commercial and industrial service at various voltage levels, with FY26 rates effective September 1, 2025, published at https://www.provo.gov/1178/Electric-Rates. Optional programs include the Schedule 3.1 EV time-of-use pilot and RenewChoice renewable energy riders (Schedules 22 and 22.1).

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