Pricing

Free in 90% of Texas.
$100 per utility everywhere else.

Deregulated areas
Freeper home

About 90% of Texas electric sites. Retailers cover our costs — you send us your starts file, it costs you nothing.

  • Centerpoint, Oncor, AEP Central + North, TNMP
  • No monthly fees. No per-seat fees.
  • No contracts.

Heads up: gas isn't deregulated, so gas connections are still $100 per home anywhere in Texas — see right.

Regulated, co-ops & gas
$100per home per utility on install

The other ~10% of Texas, plus gas everywhere. $100 per home per utility — no retailer's funding us here, and the work still has to get done.

  • $100 electric · $100 gas · invoiced on install
  • All regulated providers, co-ops & gas utilities covered
  • Same dashboard, same team, same process

Effective for requests submitted from 1 November 2025. Prior requests stay at the previous rate of $125 (electric).

You're still responsible for any utility or retailer fees for the provision of the meter itself. UtilityOn's fee is separate from those pass-through costs.

“OK... so what's the catch?”

Fair question. Here's the honest answer.

Retail electricity providers (Think Energy, Champion, Iron Horse, APG&E, etc.) pay us a small fee when one of your homeowners signs up with them. That fee funds our service.

We're a licensed broker, so the homeowner sees competitive rates across multiple retailers, not a single captive deal. You get to hand over a live electric account at closing without chasing anyone.

Regulated and co-op areas don't have retailer competition — which is why we charge there. It's the difference between “the retailer pays us” and “there is no retailer to pay us.”

What you get back

Time is the real price of doingthis yourself.

Most builders spend 3+ hours per site coordinating utility connections. At $52k/yr for a construction manager, that's about $130/site in admin labor. Here's what that compounds to.

Volume
Time saved
Labour saved / year
20 homesper year
60 hrs saved
$2,600
100 homesper year
300 hrs saved
$13,000
500 homesper year
1,500 hrs saved
$65,000

Based on a $52,000/yr construction manager salary and an average three hours of utility-admin labor per site.

Free is a good price.
Getting your evenings back is a better one.