🇺🇸 United States · Compare providers

Why does the same electricity cost 30% different in the same Texas city?

No "winner" — both, not the cheaper. Question, not answer.

Providers — price + speed + image-value

Each row: 1-line social-mirror commentary.

Provider Monthly Speed Image-value
Reliant Energy (Truly Free Nights) $138 Free electricity 9 PM–6 AM — gamified marketing
TXU Energy (Cash Back Loyalty) $165 Brand prestige — the incumbent
Direct Energy (Live Brighter) $152 Centrica-owned, lifestyle marketing
Gexa Energy (100% Green) $145 100% renewable label — value-proof
Constellation Energy (Reliable) $158 Nuclear-backed reliability story

Price gap — bar chart

CSS only, no library (R-004).

  • Reliant Energy (Truly Free Nights) $138
  • TXU Energy (Cash Back Loyalty) $165
  • Direct Energy (Live Brighter) $152
  • Gexa Energy (100% Green) $145
  • Constellation Energy (Reliable) $158

Quality (objective) vs Image (value-proof)

Two axes — separated, not blended.

  • Reliant Energy (Truly Free Nights)

    Quality

    Image Free electricity 9 PM–6 AM — gamified marketing

  • TXU Energy (Cash Back Loyalty)

    Quality

    Image Brand prestige — the incumbent

  • Direct Energy (Live Brighter)

    Quality

    Image Centrica-owned, lifestyle marketing

  • Gexa Energy (100% Green)

    Quality

    Image 100% renewable label — value-proof

  • Constellation Energy (Reliable)

    Quality

    Image Nuclear-backed reliability story

Marketing strategy

Texas runs powertochoose.org — the state literally helps consumers compare. Then providers compete on hooks (free nights, cashback, green label) instead of pure price. The 30% gap is real, but the friction of comparison absorbs most of it.

Social mirror

What price gap reveals about the society.

Texas deregulated electricity is the BE digi-vs-Proximus of the US — same wires, different prices. 17 of 50 states tried this. In 2021, the Winter Storm Uri spiked spot prices to $9/kWh and bankrupted Griddy. The free market did what free markets do — for better and worse.

Try both — same grid, different bill philosophy.

Prices are 2024–2025 standard residential plans for 1,000 kWh/mo. Promotions, demand charges, and TDU rates can shift the actual bill substantially.