Nevada Power Company (NV Energy) Rate Selection Guide

Nevada Power Company, doing business as NV Energy, is a regulated electric utility serving about 1.04 million customers in southern Nevada. Fully deployed AMI smart meters provide 15-minute interval data via the MyAccount portal and CSV download, with third-party API access available through Nectar.

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

Nevada Power Company (NV Energy) Rate Schedule Comparison

ScheduleTypeRateBest For
GS — General ServiceSmall commercial (no demand charge)$25.50/mo + $0.07126/kWh + ridersSmall businesses under 3,500 kWh/month
LGS-1 — Large General Service 1Demand-metered commercial$15.80/mo + $3.68/kW facilities + $4.01/kW demand + $0.06846/kWhMid-size commercial under 300 kW
LGS-2 — Large General Service 2TOU demand (300–999 kW)$122.40/mo + $2.68/kW facilities + TOU demand to $12.81/kW (summer on-peak)Large commercial 300–999 kW
LGS-3 — Large General Service 3TOU demand (1,000 kW+)$214.10/mo + $2.73/kW facilities + TOU demand to $13.61/kW (summer on-peak)Largest C&I; candidates for 704B exit
01

Market Overview

Nevada Power is a fully regulated, vertically integrated electric utility under the Public Utilities Commission of Nevada (PUCN). Residential and small/mid-size commercial customers buy bundled service at PUCN-approved rates with no retail supplier choice. However, under NRS/NAC Chapter 704B, very large customers (generally 1 MW or more of load) may apply to exit bundled utility service and purchase energy from an alternative provider on the open market — subject to PUCN approval and payment of an exit/impact fee to protect remaining customers. Several Nevada casinos and data centers (e.g., MGM, Wynn, Caesars, Switch) have used 704B to leave NV Energy service. The PUCN also approved a commercial demand-charge structure (effective 2026) that increased the fixed demand-cost recovery for general-service customers.

Market Type
Partially Deregulated
Supplier Choice
Not Available

Need to pull your actual usage data to compare rates? See the Nevada Power Company (NV Energy) Data Access Guide →


02

Current Rate Schedules

Rates are set in Nevada Power's PUCN-approved electric tariff (Southern Nevada schedules), with quarterly Base Tariff Energy Rate (BTER) / Deferred Energy Accounting Adjustment (DEAA) updates. Bills combine a Basic Service Charge, volumetric energy charges per kWh (with rider adders: DEAA, TRED, REPR, EE, NDPP), and — for larger customers — Facilities and Demand charges per kW, with summer time-of-use periods. Verified figures below are from NV Energy's Southern Nevada commercial Statement of Rates; rider/energy components are adjusted quarterly.

Effective: April 1, 2026 · Full Tariff Book →

ScheduleTypeApplicabilityStructureRate
GS — General ServicecommercialNon-residential customers whose energy use does not exceed 3,500 kWh in any billing period.Basic Service Charge $25.50/month (+$2.50 per additional meter). Verified energy charge $0.07126/kWh plus riders (DEAA $0.005, TRED $0.00083, REPR $0.00043, EE $0.00063, NDPP $0.00056 per kWh). No demand charge at this size. An optional time-of-use variant (OGS-TOU) is available.
OGS-TOU — Optional General Service, Time-of-UsecommercialGS customers who elect time-of-use pricing.Basic Service Charge $25.50/month. Verified energy charges: winter (all other) $0.06584/kWh, summer on-peak $0.11539/kWh, summer off-peak $0.06715/kWh, plus the standard riders. Summer on-peak is June 1–Sept 30, 1:01–7 p.m. weekdays.
LGS-1 — Large General Service 1commercialNon-residential customers exceeding 3,500 kWh where billing demand does not exceed 299 kW.Basic Service Charge $15.80/month (+$6.25 per additional meter). Verified Facilities Charge $3.68/kW, Demand Charge $4.01/kW, energy charge $0.06846/kWh, plus riders. An optional TOU variant (OLGS-1-TOU) splits the demand charge into winter ($0.26/kW) and summer on-peak ($7.60/kW) with a lower energy rate.
LGS-2 — Large General Service 2commercialNon-residential customers exceeding 3,500 kWh with demand of 300 kW up to 999 kW.Secondary service: Basic Service Charge $122.40/month, Facilities Charge $2.68/kW, time-of-use Demand Charges (verified: winter $0.60/kW, summer on-peak $12.81/kW, summer mid-peak $2.65/kW), energy ~$0.058–$0.091/kWh by TOU period, plus riders. Primary-service rates are slightly lower. Summer on-peak 1:01–7 p.m. daily (Jun 1–Sep 30).
LGS-3 — Large General Service 3industrialNon-residential customers exceeding 3,500 kWh with demand of 1,000 kW or greater.Largest C&I demand class with time-of-use demand and energy charges. Verified primary-service example: Basic Service Charge $214.10/month, Facilities Charge $2.73/kW, Demand Charges winter $0.85/kW, summer on-peak $13.61/kW, summer mid-peak $3.36/kW; energy ~$0.0545–$0.089/kWh by TOU period, plus riders. An Optional Large General Service-3P High Load Factor (OLGS-3P-HLF) variant exists for high-load-factor customers.
704B Distribution-Only Service / Large-Customer ExitindustrialVery large customers (generally 1 MW+) approved under NAC Chapter 704B to buy energy from an alternative provider.Eligible 704B customers leave bundled generation service and take Distribution-Only Service from NV Energy, paying distribution/transmission charges plus a PUCN-approved exit/impact fee. They procure energy and generation from a competitive provider. See PUCN dockets and NV Energy's 704B / Expanded Solar (ESER) provisions.

03

Rate Recommendations by Use Case

🏪

Small business / retail storefront

Small commercial sites under 3,500 kWh per billing period belong on GS, with TOU as an option if usage is concentrated off-peak.

Recommended:
GS — General ServiceOGS-TOU — Optional General Service TOU

GS has no demand charge; OGS-TOU can help if load is mostly off-peak, but summer on-peak energy is $0.11539/kWh.

Tips:
  • Confirm you stay under 3,500 kWh to remain on GS
  • Model OGS-TOU only if load is off-peak heavy
  • Track usage in MyAccount to catch class changes
Est. monthly: $25.50/mo + ~$0.078/kWh all-in (with riders)
🏢

Mid-size commercial building

Buildings between ~3,500 kWh and 299 kW demand fall on LGS-1; managing peak kW is the key lever.

Recommended:
LGS-1 — Large General Service 1OLGS-1-TOU

LGS-1 adds a $3.68/kW facilities charge and $4.01/kW demand charge; OLGS-1-TOU concentrates demand cost into summer on-peak ($7.60/kW) with lower energy.

Tips:
  • Reduce coincident peak demand to lower kW charges
  • Compare LGS-1 vs OLGS-1-TOU using interval data
  • Investigate storage or load-shifting for peak shaving
Est. monthly: $15.80/mo + $3.68/kW + $4.01/kW + $0.06846/kWh
🏬

Large facility (300–999 kW)

Large commercial loads on LGS-2 should aggressively manage summer on-peak demand, which is the dominant charge.

Recommended:
LGS-2 — Large General Service 2

Summer on-peak demand is $12.81/kW (secondary); shifting load out of the 1:01–7 p.m. window yields the biggest savings.

Tips:
  • Target the summer on-peak window for load reduction
  • Consider battery storage for peak shaving
  • Check primary vs secondary service economics
Est. monthly: $122.40/mo + $2.68/kW facilities + TOU demand (to $12.81/kW)
🏭

Largest industrial / data center (1 MW+)

The biggest loads on LGS-3 should evaluate both demand optimization and a NAC 704B market exit.

Recommended:
LGS-3 — Large General Service 3704B Distribution-Only Service

LGS-3 summer on-peak demand reaches $13.61/kW; very large customers may save more by procuring energy competitively under 704B, net of the PUCN exit fee.

Tips:
  • Model 704B exit economics including the impact/exit fee
  • Engage PUCN process early — approval takes time
  • Combine demand management with competitive procurement
Est. monthly: $214.10/mo + $2.73/kW facilities + TOU demand (to $13.61/kW), or 704B distribution-only + market energy

04

Historical Rate Trends

NV Energy rates change through general rate cases (base rates) and quarterly fuel/energy adjustments (BTER and DEAA). A controversial commercial demand-charge restructuring was approved by the PUCN and took effect in 2026.

April 1, 2026

PUCN-approved demand-charge structure and quarterly BTER updates took effect for Southern Nevada commercial customers, increasing fixed demand-cost recovery for general-service classes.

Structure change (varies by customer)

Overall trend: Energy charges fluctuate quarterly with fuel costs; base and demand-charge structure has trended toward greater fixed demand-cost recovery for commercial customers.

Next expected change: Quarterly BTER/DEAA adjustments continue; next general rate case outcomes per PUCN's Southern Nevada GRC schedule.


05

Cost Optimization Strategies

For NV Energy commercial customers, the largest savings come from reducing summer on-peak demand and energy, choosing the optimal rate class/TOU option, and — for the very largest loads — evaluating a 704B market exit.

Shave summer on-peak demand

For: LGS-1/2/3 demand-metered customers

High — demand charges are the dominant cost for large accounts

Summer on-peak (Jun–Sep, 1:01–7 p.m.) demand charges reach $12.81/kW (LGS-2) and $13.61/kW (LGS-3). Shifting or curtailing peak load and using storage cuts the most expensive charges.

Optimize rate class and TOU option

For: All commercial customers

Varies by load shape

Verify the account is on the correct class for its demand, and model optional TOU variants (OGS-TOU, OLGS-1-TOU) against standard schedules using 15-minute interval data.

Evaluate NAC 704B market exit

For: Very large C&I (1 MW+)

Potentially large, net of exit fee — requires PUCN approval

Loads of roughly 1 MW or more can apply to leave bundled service and buy energy competitively, paying distribution-only charges plus a PUCN exit fee. Casinos and data centers have done this.

Use interval data for M&V

For: All C&I customers

Indirect — enables targeted projects

Download 15-minute CSV from MyAccount (or via the Nectar API) to benchmark, run measurement & verification on efficiency projects, and qualify for demand response.

To implement these strategies, you need your 15-minute interval data. Learn how to download Nevada Power Company (NV Energy) interval data →


06

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Nevada Power offer 15-minute interval data for commercial accounts?

Yes. NV Energy has full AMI smart-meter coverage and provides 15-minute interval data, available the day after consumption. Download it as CSV from the MyAccount Download Usage tool (up to 12+ months), or use Nectar for automated API feeds (see docs.nectarclimate.com).

How do third parties access our usage data — is there Green Button?

There is no Green Button program. Third parties use form-based authorization (Seller's Energy Consumption Form or Peak Demand Request Form) for one-time data, or connect via Nectar, which provides API access to billing and interval data after customer authorization — see docs.nectarclimate.com.

What drives our commercial bill the most?

For LGS-1/2/3 customers, summer on-peak demand charges (per kW) are the dominant cost — up to $12.81/kW (LGS-2) and $13.61/kW (LGS-3). Reducing coincident peak demand in the Jun–Sep 1:01–7 p.m. window typically delivers the largest savings.

Can a very large customer leave NV Energy and buy power elsewhere?

Yes, under NAC Chapter 704B. Customers with roughly 1 MW or more of load can apply to the PUCN to exit bundled service, procure energy from a competitive provider, and take Distribution-Only Service from NV Energy — paying a PUCN-approved exit/impact fee. Several casinos and data centers have done this.

Is EDI available for our billing data?

No. NV Energy does not offer EDI for customer billing, consumption, or interval data — its EDI is limited to supplier/procurement systems. Use MyAccount CSV downloads or Nectar's API for programmatic billing/usage data.

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