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Electric Ireland tariff — slab structure and rate components

Electric Ireland electricity tariff is approved by Commission for Regulation of Utilities and is published in CRU's tariff orders. This page explains the structure — slabs, fixed charge, fuel pass-through, and statutory levies — and points you to the authoritative source for current per-unit rates.

Electrical transformer station on a cloudy day

Tariff structure — how ${provider.name} bills are calculated

Electric Ireland bills are calculated by applying the regulator-notified per-unit rate to your units consumed, then adding fixed charges, fuel pass-through, and statutory levies. The order of operations matters because some lines are percentages of others.

Residential tariff in Ireland is typically slabbed — a graduated rate where the first block of units is priced lower than the next. The exact slab boundaries are notified by CRU in periodic tariff orders. For Electric Ireland, the current slab table is published at https://www.cru.ie/.

Commercial and industrial tariffs are typically non-telescopic, meaning all units in a cycle are priced at the slab the monthly total lands in. Be aware of this when crossing slab thresholds for a small business.

Fixed charge

The fixed charge is a flat monthly amount tied to your sanctioned load. Paid regardless of consumption. It funds the meter, the service-line maintenance, and the operator's customer-service infrastructure.

Reducing your sanctioned load (where appropriate) lowers the fixed charge. If you are paying for a 5 kW sanctioned load but actually use 2 kW, apply for a load reduction at Electric Ireland's customer service — the fixed charge drops proportionally.

Electrical transformer station on a cloudy day
Electrical transformer station on a cloudy day

Fuel pass-through

Most Ireland electricity tariffs include a monthly fuel pass-through line (called FPA, FAC, or similar) that compensates for the difference between forecast and actual fuel costs.

The pass-through is approved by CRU on a regular schedule (monthly or quarterly). The figure on your bill is the pass-through for a past period, not the current consumption month. Pass-through can be positive or negative.

Pass-through is the single most volatile line on most electricity bills. A spike in fuel costs in one quarter can move the total bill by 10-25% in either direction in the following quarter without any change in your consumption.

Statutory levies — taxes, duties, and surcharges

Ireland bills include national and provincial taxes layered on top of the energy charge. The exact composition varies, but typically includes a general sales tax (VAT/GST), an electricity duty (provincial or state), and one or more financing surcharges that fund the country's power sector debt.

Statutory levies are percentages applied to base amounts; understanding the base of each percentage is key to predicting how a change in consumption translates into a change in the total bill. The bill explicitly shows the rate of each levy and the base it is calculated on.

Some statutory levies have an opt-out for compliant taxpayers (e.g., income tax withholding for tax-return filers). If Ireland offers such an opt-out, check with the relevant tax authority for the application steps.

Electrical transformer station on a cloudy day
Electrical transformer station on a cloudy day

Verifying your bill against the published tariff

On every Electric Ireland bill you can cross-check the math against the regulator's published tariff in three steps. First, multiply your units consumed by the slab-applicable per-unit rate to verify the energy charge. Second, add the fixed charge for your load category. Third, add the pass-through line (if any) and apply the statutory levies as percentages.

If the bill does not match the formula, the most common causes are: a slab boundary you didn't notice, a tariff revision that took effect mid-cycle (the bill prorates between the old and new rate), or an arrears line from a previous unpaid bill.

If after checking all three you still cannot reconcile the bill to the formula, file a complaint at Electric Ireland customer service (1800 372 372). The operator's customer service can pull up your consumption data and walk through the calculation with you.

Frequently asked questions

Where can I download the current Electric Ireland tariff schedule?
https://www.cru.ie/ publishes every tariff order. Search for Electric Ireland or for the country's distribution tariff schedule.
Why does my pass-through line look different from last month?
Pass-through is reset by CRU on a regular schedule based on actual input costs. Movement of 10-25% month-to-month is normal.
Can I dispute the per-unit rate on my bill?
Only on arithmetic grounds. The rates themselves are set by CRU and not appealable at the consumer level. Arithmetic mismatches are addressed at Electric Ireland customer service.

Monthly Electric Ireland Bill Guides

Step-by-step guides for checking your bill by month — with tariff context, due dates, and payment tips.