CoServ (Denton County Electric Cooperative) Rate Selection Guide

CoServ (Denton County Electric Cooperative) is a member-owned cooperative serving 323,000+ electric customers across six North Texas counties. As a Non-Opt-In Entity (NOIE) that opted out of ERCOT retail competition, CoServ sets its own rates and provides data access through the NISC SmartHub portal, with a fully deployed AMI network capturing 15-minute interval data.

Texas · Electric Cooperative·Regulated market·Fully supported by Nectar·Last updated June 3, 2026

CoServ (Denton County Electric Cooperative) Rate Schedule Comparison

ScheduleTypeRateBest For
CommercialSmall commercial (<35 kW)$30/mo + $0.132024/kWh all-in (May 2026)Small businesses under 35 kW with no demand charge
IndustrialIndustrial (>=35 kW)$55/mo + $13.04/$10.04 per kW demand + $0.078336/kWhFacilities at or above 35 kW maximum demand
Public Building (>35 kW)Public/institutional$35/mo + tiered $0.1368/$0.1028 per kWh all-inSchools, churches, community halls over 35 kW
TOU Demand MeteredCommercial TOU$35/mo + $11.15/$8.63 on-peak kW + $4.80 NCP + ~$0.083/kWhCommercial >10 kW able to shift load off peak
Industrial TOUIndustrial TOU$50/mo + $11.15/$8.63 on-peak kW + $2.35 NCP + $0.078336/kWhIndustrial accounts with shiftable load and lower NCP
01

Market Overview

CoServ is a member-owned, vertically integrated cooperative and a Non-Opt-In Entity (NOIE) in North Texas. It opted out of the deregulated ERCOT retail market, so customers cannot shop for a competitive retail electric provider. Rates are set by the member-elected Board of Directors with minimal external rate regulation, and CoServ does not participate in Smart Meter Texas.

Market Type
Partially Deregulated
Supplier Choice
Not Available

Need to pull your actual usage data to compare rates? See the CoServ (Denton County Electric Cooperative) Data Access Guide →


02

Current Rate Schedules

CoServ's non-residential rates are split at a 35 kW demand threshold: the Commercial rate for accounts under 35 kW and the Industrial rate for accounts of 35 kW or more, plus Public Building and Time-of-Use options. The figures below are verified from CoServ's published commercial rate page effective May 2026. All-in energy charges combine a base rate plus the monthly Power Cost Recovery Factor (PCRF) and System Cost Recovery Factor (SCRF); the all-in values shown reflect the May 2026 PCRF/SCRF.

Effective: May 1, 2026 · Full Tariff Book →

ScheduleTypeApplicabilityStructureRate
Commercial RatecommercialAccounts with less than 35 kW of maximum demand for commercial purposes (Tariff Section 202.4).Monthly customer charge $30.00/meter; energy $0.132024/kWh all-in (May 2026: base $0.133524 minus PCRF $0.006 plus SCRF $0.0045). No demand charge.
Industrial RateindustrialAccounts requiring 35 kW or more of maximum demand for commercial, industrial and municipal uses (Tariff Section 202.5).Monthly customer charge $55.00/meter; demand $13.04/kW (May-Oct) and $10.04/kW (Nov-Apr); energy $0.078336/kWh all-in (May 2026).
Public Building Rate (over 35 kW)commercialPublic buildings (schools, churches, community halls; not municipal facilities) over 35 kW.Monthly customer charge $35.00/meter; energy first 150 kWh/kW at $0.136825/kWh all-in, over 150 kWh/kW at $0.102845/kWh all-in (May 2026). Under-35 kW version: $25.00 charge, $0.114575/kWh.
Time-of-Use - Demand MeteredcommercialOptional for commercial customers over 10 kW.Monthly customer charge $35.00/meter; On-Peak demand $11.15/kW (summer) and $8.63/kW (winter); Non-Coincident Peak (NCP) $4.80/kW all months; energy $0.082797/kWh all-in (summer, May 2026).
Industrial Time-of-UseindustrialOptional for accounts eligible for the Industrial rate.Monthly customer charge $50.00/meter; On-Peak demand $11.15/kW (summer) and $8.63/kW (winter); NCP $2.35/kW all months; energy $0.078336/kWh all-in (summer, May 2026). On-peak hours 3-8 p.m. (plus 6-8 a.m. winter).
Non-Demand TOU (Temporary/Construction)commercialTemporary and construction power for Commercial-rate-eligible members.Monthly customer charge $32.50/meter; Off-Peak $0.105592/kWh and On-Peak $0.198976/kWh all-in (May 2026).

03

Rate Recommendations by Use Case

🏪

Small commercial facility (under 35 kW)

Small retail, office and service businesses below 35 kW of demand use the Commercial rate with no demand charge.

Recommended:
Commercial Rate

The Commercial rate is a simple flat $0.132024/kWh (May 2026) with a $30 monthly charge and no demand charge, which is predictable for smaller loads.

Tips:
  • Track maximum demand in SmartHub to confirm you stay under 35 kW
  • Watch the monthly PCRF/SCRF impact on the all-in rate
  • If demand approaches 35 kW, model the Industrial rate before crossing the threshold
Est. monthly: $30 fixed + $0.132024/kWh (May 2026 all-in)
🏭

Industrial / large commercial (35 kW and above)

Manufacturing, large commercial and municipal loads at or above 35 kW use the Industrial rate, where demand charges dominate.

Recommended:
Industrial RateIndustrial Time-of-Use

Energy drops to ~$0.078/kWh, but seasonal demand charges ($13.04 summer / $10.04 winter per kW) make peak demand management the key lever; Industrial TOU can lower NCP exposure to $2.35/kW.

Tips:
  • Request 15-minute interval data to map demand peaks
  • Compare Industrial vs Industrial TOU based on your load shape
  • Shift load out of the 3-8 p.m. on-peak window where possible
Est. monthly: $55 fixed + $10.04-$13.04/kW demand + $0.078336/kWh (May 2026)
🏛️

Public / institutional building

Schools, churches and community halls have dedicated Public Building rates with tiered energy pricing.

Recommended:
Public Building Rate (over 35 kW)

Public Building rates use a tiered energy structure (first 150 kWh/kW at a higher rate, excess lower) and lower customer charges, which suits institutional load patterns.

Tips:
  • Confirm eligibility (not for municipal facilities)
  • Use the under-35 kW version if demand is small
  • Review tiered energy breakpoints against your usage per kW
Est. monthly: $35 fixed + $0.136825/kWh first 150 kWh/kW, $0.102845/kWh over (May 2026)

04

Historical Rate Trends

CoServ sets rates through its member-elected board and publishes annual rate-change notices. The cooperative has described recent changes as broadly revenue-neutral by rate class, with high energy users seeing small decreases and low users small increases. Month-to-month bill variation comes mainly from the PCRF and SCRF adjustments rather than base-rate changes.

January 1, 2025

2025 rate change described by CoServ as revenue-neutral by rate class; high energy users saw a small decrease and low users a small increase depending on usage.

~0% (revenue-neutral)

Overall trend: Base rates relatively stable; monthly variation driven by PCRF/SCRF recovery factors.

Next expected change: Annual rate-change notice published by CoServ; PCRF/SCRF adjust monthly.


05

Cost Optimization Strategies

For CoServ C&I members, the dominant cost levers are the 35 kW demand threshold and, above it, seasonal demand charges. Managing peak demand and considering time-of-use options around the 3-8 p.m. on-peak window are the main savings strategies.

Manage the 35 kW threshold

For: Commercial/industrial accounts near 35 kW

Avoids demand charges entirely if kept below 35 kW; otherwise lower energy rate above the threshold.

Accounts near 35 kW should evaluate whether keeping maximum demand below 35 kW (Commercial rate, no demand charge) or accepting the Industrial rate with lower energy charges is cheaper for their load factor.

Peak demand management

For: Industrial-rate accounts (>=35 kW)

Demand charges are seasonal and substantial; trimming peak kW directly reduces them.

Use SmartHub Usage Explorer or requested 15-minute interval data to identify and reduce peak kW that drives $10.04-$13.04/kW demand charges.

Time-of-use load shifting

For: TOU Demand Metered and Industrial TOU accounts

Industrial TOU has a lower NCP ($2.35/kW vs $4.80/kW); savings depend on load flexibility.

Shift discretionary load out of the 3-8 p.m. on-peak window (and the winter 6-8 a.m. window) under a TOU schedule to reduce on-peak demand and NCP charges.

To implement these strategies, you need your 15-minute interval data. Learn how to download CoServ (Denton County Electric Cooperative) interval data →


06

Frequently Asked Questions

Can my business get 15-minute interval data from CoServ?

Yes, but not as a self-service download. AMI meters capture 15-minute data that you can view in the SmartHub Usage Explorer. For a machine-readable CSV export, submit a formal data request to contact@coserv.com; CoServ typically delivers the file within 3-5 business days. Third parties must provide a Letter of Authorization.

Does CoServ support Green Button or a public API?

No. CoServ has not implemented Green Button (DMD or CMD) or a public developer API. The NISC SmartHub platform underneath has API capabilities, but they are not publicly available for CoServ and would require a custom agreement. The main programmatic path is a formal data request or a partnership.

Which rate applies to my commercial or industrial facility?

CoServ uses a demand threshold of 35 kW. The Commercial rate applies to accounts under 35 kW of maximum demand; the Industrial rate applies to accounts of 35 kW or more. There are also Public Building rates and several Time-of-Use options (Demand Metered, Industrial TOU, and Public Buildings TOU).

How do third parties get authorized to access an account?

CoServ uses a Letter of Authorization (LOA) process rather than a Share My Data portal. The account holder completes an LOA on company letterhead with Sales Tax ID/EIN and an authorized signature, then emails it to contact@coserv.com. Processing takes 3-5 business days.

Can I choose a different retail electricity provider?

No. CoServ is a Non-Opt-In Entity (NOIE) that opted out of ERCOT retail competition, so there is no retail electric provider (REP) choice in its territory. CoServ is the exclusive provider and sets its own rates through its member-elected board.

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