Electricity plans in Dallas, TX
Dallas sits in Oncor’s delivery territory, one of the largest deregulated markets in the state, which means a genuinely large number of retail providers compete for Dallas customers. That’s good for prices, but it also means wading through a lot of plans that look similar on the surface and aren’t — which is exactly the sorting problem our tool exists to solve.
Who delivers your power in Dallas
One honest thing worth knowing up front: Dallas and Fort Worth are both served by the same delivery utility (Oncor), and in Texas’s deregulated market, retail providers set their pricing at the utility-territory level, not neighborhood by neighborhood. So the real plan data below is genuinely identical to what we show for Fort Worth — that’s not a placeholder or a shortcut, it’s how the market actually prices things. What differs by city is which specific address maps to which utility in the first place, which is exactly the kind of thing our tool checks for you.
See real Dallas plans, matched to your actual usage
Real Electricity Facts Label data, no gimmicks hidden in the fine print.
Frequently asked questions
Do I get to choose my electricity company in Dallas?
Yes. Dallas sits in Oncor’s service territory, one of the deregulated parts of Texas where you pick your own retail electric provider instead of being assigned one by default.
Who actually delivers the power to my house in Dallas?
Oncor owns the physical wires and handles outages in Dallas County — that part isn’t something you shop for. The company you do choose is the retail electric provider (REP) that sells you the electricity itself; Oncor’s delivery charge is baked into every plan’s price whether you notice it or not.
How many electricity plans are available in Dallas right now?
We’re tracking 124 real plans from 43 providers in Oncor’s territory, pulled from official plan filings — not a curated top-10 list.
What's the average electricity rate in Dallas?
Across those 124 plans, the price at 1,000 kWh of usage averages 13.7¢/kWh, ranging from 11.8¢ to 16.7¢. Your actual best rate depends heavily on your real usage level, which is exactly what our tool factors in rather than quoting one headline number.
Plan counts, provider counts, and rates on this page are computed directly from our real plan dataset (sourced from official electricity plan filings), not estimated or written by hand. Delivery utility territory per Public Utility Commission of Texas records.