Entergy Mississippi Rate Selection Guide

Entergy Mississippi, LLC is an investor-owned, regulated electric utility serving roughly 459,000 customers across 45 Mississippi counties as a subsidiary of Entergy Corporation. Regulated by the Mississippi Public Service Commission (MPSC) under an annual Formula Rate Plan, it has deployed AMI smart meters with 15-minute interval capability and offers EDI, DataLink, and myAdvisor data access.

Mississippi · Investor-Owned Utility·Regulated market·Fully supported by Nectar·Last updated June 3, 2026

Entergy Mississippi Rate Schedule Comparison

ScheduleTypeRateBest For
GS-300commercialCustomer + energy charge + riders (per tariff PDF)Small to mid-size commercial sites
B-34commercialCustomer + energy + demand + ridersIntermediate general service loads
C-29industrialDemand-based + energy + ridersLarge general service / industrial
HLF-7industrialHigh-load-factor demand/energySteady, high load factor operations
CI-1evEV charging infrastructure rateCommercial EV charging sites
01

Market Overview

Entergy Mississippi operates in a fully regulated, vertically integrated market with no retail choice. Rates are set by the Mississippi Public Service Commission (MPSC), primarily through the Formula Rate Plan (FRP-7) which adjusts rates annually. Customers cannot choose a competitive supplier; bills combine base rate schedule charges with a series of MPSC-approved riders (fuel/energy cost recovery, MISO, grid modernization, etc.).

Market Type
Regulated (Monopoly)
Supplier Choice
Not Available

Need to pull your actual usage data to compare rates? See the Entergy Mississippi Data Access Guide →


02

Current Rate Schedules

Entergy Mississippi C&I customers are served under MPSC-approved base rate schedules combined with multiple riders. The principal commercial/industrial schedules are GS-300 (General Lighting and Power), B-34 (Intermediate General Service), C-29 (Large General Service), HLF-7 (High Load Factor General Service), ALGS-10 (Alternate Large General Service), and CI-1 (Charging Infrastructure). Each schedule combines a customer charge, energy charge, and (for larger classes) demand charges, then adds riders such as FRP-7, ECR-4, MISO-2, GMR-1, SRC-1, and ATA-3. Per-kWh and per-kW values are set in the individual tariff PDFs and adjusted through the annual Formula Rate Plan and monthly fuel/rider records. Verified context: Entergy Mississippi's average residential price was about 13.21 cents/kWh in 2024 (EIA), roughly 20% below the national average, and the June 2025 MPSC annual plan kept rates essentially flat. Specific commercial $ figures are not published as plain values and should be read from the tariff books cited below.

Effective: July 1, 2025 · Full Tariff Book →

ScheduleTypeApplicabilityStructureRate
GS-300 General Lighting and PowercommercialGeneral commercial lighting and power service for small to mid-size commercial customers.Customer charge plus energy charge (and demand charge for larger usage), modified by applicable riders. Per-unit values are in the GS-300 tariff PDF.
B-34 Intermediate General ServicecommercialIntermediate-size general service commercial customers above the GS-300 class.Customer, energy, and demand charges per the B-34 tariff PDF, plus riders.
C-29 Large General ServiceindustrialLarge general service commercial and industrial customers with substantial demand.Demand-based schedule with customer charge, demand charge, and energy charge per the C-29 tariff PDF, plus riders.
HLF-7 High Load Factor General ServiceindustrialLarge customers with high, consistent load factors.Designed to reward steady high-load-factor usage; demand and energy charges per the HLF-7 tariff PDF.
ALGS-10 Alternate Large General ServiceindustrialLarge general service customers electing the alternate large-service option (revised).Alternate demand/energy structure for large loads per the ALGS-10 tariff PDF, plus riders.
CI-1 Charging InfrastructureevElectric vehicle charging infrastructure loads (revised).Purpose-built rate for EV charging infrastructure; charges per the CI-1 tariff PDF.
MVDR-1 Market Valued Demand ResponseindustrialLarge customers participating in market-valued demand response.Demand response compensation/charges per the MVDR-1 schedule.

03

Rate Recommendations by Use Case

🏪

Small to mid-size commercial site

GS-300 General Lighting and Power with myAdvisor monitoring.

Recommended:
GS-300 General Lighting and Power

GS-300 is the standard commercial schedule for smaller loads; myAdvisor usage analysis helps identify efficiency opportunities without needing DataLink.

Tips:
  • Use myAdvisor bill-driver analysis to target high-usage equipment
  • Set high-usage alerts in myEntergy
  • Review applicable riders on each bill
Est. monthly: Customer + energy charge + riders per GS-300 tariff PDF
🏢

Intermediate general service facility

B-34 Intermediate General Service with demand awareness.

Recommended:
B-34 Intermediate General Service

B-34 fits loads above the GS-300 class; once demand charges appear, peak management becomes worthwhile.

Tips:
  • Confirm B-34 vs. C-29 eligibility with the Business Center
  • Begin tracking demand peaks
  • Evaluate EDI 810 for automated invoice processing
Est. monthly: Customer + energy + demand + riders per B-34 tariff PDF

Large industrial / high load factor plant

C-29 or HLF-7 with DataLink-driven demand management.

Recommended:
C-29 Large General ServiceHLF-7 High Load Factor General Service

Large demand-based loads benefit most from interval-data-driven peak shaving; high, steady load factors may qualify for the more favorable HLF-7 schedule.

Tips:
  • Enroll in DataLink for 15-minute interval data
  • Model C-29 vs. HLF-7 vs. ALGS-10 with the Business Development team
  • Consider MVDR-1 demand response for additional credits
Est. monthly: Demand + energy + riders per C-29 / HLF-7 tariff PDFs
🔌

Commercial EV charging operator

CI-1 Charging Infrastructure rate for dedicated charging loads.

Recommended:
CI-1 Charging Infrastructure

CI-1 is purpose-built for EV charging demand profiles and is generally more favorable than a standard demand schedule for variable charging loads.

Tips:
  • Compare CI-1 against GS-300/B-34 for your profile
  • Shift charging off-peak where possible
  • Review the revised CI-1 tariff PDF for current terms
Est. monthly: Per CI-1 tariff PDF

04

Historical Rate Trends

Entergy Mississippi rates are adjusted annually through the MPSC-approved Formula Rate Plan and monthly through fuel and other rider records. The company has emphasized rate stability, keeping bills roughly 20% below the national average.

July 1, 2025

MPSC approved Entergy Mississippi's annual Formula Rate Plan effective the July 2025 billing cycle, keeping rates essentially flat (about a 0.04-cent decrease for a typical 1,000 kWh residential bill).

~flat

Overall trend: Stable; the June 2025 annual plan kept rates essentially flat with a slight decrease for typical residential usage.

Next expected change: Next annual Formula Rate Plan review expected mid-2026 (MPSC), with monthly fuel/rider adjustments ongoing.


05

Cost Optimization Strategies

C&I customers at Entergy Mississippi can reduce costs by selecting the correct rate schedule for their load factor, managing demand, and leveraging interval data from DataLink.

Right-size the rate schedule

For: Large commercial and industrial customers

Varies by load factor and schedule fit

Match the schedule to your demand and load factor: high, steady loads may save under HLF-7; large loads may compare C-29 versus ALGS-10. The Business Development team can model options.

Demand and load-factor management

For: Commercial/industrial on demand-based schedules

Demand charges are a major share of large-customer bills

Use DataLink 15-minute interval data to identify and shave demand peaks, improving load factor on demand-based schedules (C-29, HLF-7).

Demand response participation

For: Customers able to curtail load during peaks

Bill credits / demand response compensation

Enroll in MVDR-1 market valued demand response or the smart thermostat program to earn credits for reducing load during peak events.

Monitor rider impacts

For: All C&I customers

Improves budgeting and validates bill accuracy

Track ECR-4, MISO-2, GMR-1, and SRC-1 rider records, which adjust periodically and can materially affect total cost independent of base rates.

To implement these strategies, you need your 15-minute interval data. Learn how to download Entergy Mississippi interval data →


06

Frequently Asked Questions

How does a C&I customer get 15-minute interval data from Entergy Mississippi?

Commercial and industrial customers enroll in DataLink (Enerwise Energy Manager) by contacting the Entergy Business Center at 1-800-766-1648. Once provisioned, the DataLink portal at entergyenergymanager.powerportal.com provides raw 15-minute interval curves, daily summaries, and CSV/Excel export. DataLink is subject to the DTK-4 Datalink Rider.

Can a consultant or aggregator receive our usage and billing data directly?

There is no automated Share My Data portal. Third parties obtain data through customer-signed authorizations submitted to the Business Center, DataLink third-party access for interval data, or an EDI aggregator partnership for invoices. A Green Button Connect My Data API has been proposed to the MPSC but is not yet confirmed operational.

Which rate schedule applies to my commercial or industrial facility?

Entergy Mississippi C&I customers are typically served under GS-300 (General Lighting and Power), B-34 (Intermediate General Service), or C-29 (Large General Service), with options such as HLF-7 (High Load Factor) and ALGS-10 (Alternate Large General Service). The applicable schedule depends on demand level and load factor; contact the Business Development team to confirm eligibility.

How are Entergy Mississippi rates set and how often do they change?

Rates are regulated by the Mississippi Public Service Commission, primarily through the Formula Rate Plan (FRP-7) which is reviewed annually. In June 2025 the MPSC approved the annual plan keeping rates essentially flat (a roughly 0.04-cent decrease for a typical 1,000 kWh residential bill) effective the July billing cycle. Bills also include riders such as ECR (energy cost recovery), MISO, and grid modernization.

What riders affect a commercial bill?

Beyond the base rate schedule, bills are modified by riders including FRP-7 (Formula Rate Plan), ECR-4 (Energy Cost Recovery), MISO-2 (MISO cost & revenue), GMR-1 (Grid Modernization), SRC-1 (System Restoration Charge), and ATA-3 (Ad Valorem Tax). Optional riders such as HF-12 (Highly Fluctuating Load) or SS-12 (Standby/Supplementary) may apply based on load characteristics.

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