Compare Electricity Prices in Victoria

Compare electricity plans available in VIC. See which retailers operate in your area, understand your distribution network, and find a plan that suits your household.

Last reviewed: July 2026

Victoria has the most competitive retail electricity market in Australia, with over 30 active retailers (including AGL, Origin, EnergyAustralia, Alinta, Red Energy, 1st Energy, Arcline by RACV) and five distribution networks. Prices are regulated by the Essential Services Commission (ESC) through the Victorian Default Offer (VDO), which sets the maximum standing offer price and serves as the reference for advertised discounts.

The VDO for 2025-26 set the average residential flat tariff at $1,675 per year, a 1% increase on the previous year. From July 2026, the ESC introduced the new Smart Rate tariff structure with lower midday rates between 11am and 4pm, a shorter evening peak from 4pm to 9pm, and the removal of residential demand tariffs. The 2026-27 VDO proposes a further reduction of approximately 3%.

Current reference prices in Victoria (VDO 2025-26)

The Victorian Default Offer is set separately for each of the five distribution networks. Unlike the DMO in other states, the VDO is a single reference price that applies regardless of your tariff type, with the ESC calculating separate VDO prices for flat rate, time-of-use, and the new Smart Rate structures.

Network Area covered VDO annual (flat)
CitiPower Melbourne CBD, inner suburbs $1,511/year
Powercor Western Victoria, outer western Melbourne $1,695/year
Jemena Northern and western Melbourne $1,651/year
United Energy South-eastern Melbourne, Mornington Peninsula $1,639/year
AusNet Services Eastern Victoria, outer eastern Melbourne $1,878/year

CitiPower customers in inner Melbourne pay the least, while AusNet Services customers in the outer east pay the most, a gap of roughly $367 per year for the same usage. This reflects the difference in network costs between a dense urban area and a larger, more spread-out region.

Source: Essential Services Commission, Victorian Default Offer Price Review 2025-26, published May 2025. The 2026-27 VDO is expected to reduce prices by approximately 3% across all networks.

Our take on electricity in Victoria

Victoria has the strongest retail competition in the country, which means the gap between the VDO and the cheapest market offer is significant. The most competitive market offers typically sit 15% to 25% below the VDO, which translates to $250 to $400 per year in savings for an average household. If you are on the VDO standing offer, you are paying more than you need to.

The new Smart Rate tariff from July 2026 is worth investigating if you are home during the day. The lower midday rate (11am to 4pm) effectively rewards households that can run appliances during solar hours, even if they do not have solar panels themselves. For retirees, work-from-home households, and anyone with a daytime routine, the Smart Rate could reduce bills meaningfully.

Victoria also has the best solar feed-in tariff competition. With over 30 retailers competing for solar customers, feed-in rates range from 3 to 12 cents per kWh. The difference on a typical 6kW system can be $200 or more per year.

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Distribution networks in Victoria

CitiPower (Melbourne CBD and inner suburbs)

CitiPower covers the Melbourne CBD and surrounding inner suburbs including South Melbourne, Carlton, Fitzroy, Richmond, South Yarra, St Kilda, and Prahran. It is the smallest network by geography but one of the most densely populated, which keeps network costs low. CitiPower customers consistently have the lowest reference prices in Victoria.

Powercor (Western Victoria)

Powercor covers western Melbourne suburbs (Footscray, Sunshine, Werribee, Geelong corridor) and all of western Victoria including Ballarat, Bendigo, and the western districts. It is the largest network by geographic area. If you live west of the CBD or in regional western Victoria, you are on Powercor.

Jemena (Northern and western Melbourne)

Jemena covers the northern and north-western suburbs of Melbourne including Brunswick, Coburg, Essendon, Broadmeadows, and the growth areas around Craigieburn and Sunbury. It also extends to Melbourne Airport. A relatively compact network with moderate pricing.

United Energy (South-eastern Melbourne)

United Energy covers the south-eastern suburbs from Malvern and Caulfield through to Frankston and the Mornington Peninsula. If you are south-east of the CBD, including suburbs like Glen Waverley, Dandenong, Cranbourne, and the Bayside area, you are on United Energy.

AusNet Services (Eastern Victoria)

AusNet covers the outer eastern suburbs of Melbourne (Knox, Ringwood, the Yarra Valley) and all of eastern Victoria including the Latrobe Valley, Gippsland, and the alpine regions. AusNet customers pay the highest reference prices of the five networks due to the large, sparse service area. The Latrobe Valley is where most of Victoria's remaining coal-fired generation is located.

Average electricity bills by city in Victoria

Victoria has five distribution networks, so the same appliance usage can cost noticeably different amounts depending on exactly where in the state you live, even within greater Melbourne.

City / areaNetworkVDO reference (flat, annual)Typical cheapest market offer
Melbourne (CBD, inner suburbs)CitiPower$1,511/year$1,130 to $1,280/year
Northern Melbourne (Brunswick, Essendon)Jemena$1,651/year$1,240 to $1,400/year
South-eastern Melbourne, Mornington PeninsulaUnited Energy$1,639/year$1,230 to $1,390/year
Geelong, Ballarat, BendigoPowercor$1,695/year$1,270 to $1,440/year
Outer eastern Melbourne, GippslandAusNet Services$1,878/year$1,410 to $1,600/year

Melbourne's inner suburbs on CitiPower have the lowest reference price in the state, a byproduct of a small, dense, low-cost-to-serve network. If you live in the CBD, South Melbourne, Carlton, Fitzroy, or St Kilda, you start from the cheapest baseline in Victoria.

Geelong, Ballarat, and Bendigo are all on Powercor, along with western Melbourne. Reference prices here sit roughly 12% above CitiPower, reflecting the larger, more spread-out service area covering regional Victoria as well as the western suburbs.

Outer eastern Melbourne and Gippsland on AusNet Services pay the most of any Victorian network, around 24% above CitiPower. This is also where most of the state's coal-fired generation is located, and the network covers the largest and most sparsely populated geographic area of the five.

What would you pay? Real scenarios for Victorian households

Single person in a Melbourne apartment (CitiPower, 2,500 kWh/year, no gas, no solar)

On the VDO standing offer: approximately $945 per year. On the cheapest market offer: approximately $710 to $790 per year. Potential saving: $155 to $235 per year.

Family of four in outer eastern Melbourne (AusNet, 5,000 kWh/year, gas heating, no solar)

On the VDO standing offer: approximately $2,350 per year. On the cheapest market offer: approximately $1,770 to $1,950 per year. Potential saving: $400 to $580 per year. This household should also compare gas plans, as dual-fuel discounts can add further savings.

Retirees in Geelong (Powercor, 4,000 kWh/year, 6.6kW solar system)

On the VDO with a basic feed-in rate of 4.5c/kWh: approximately $1,250 per year after solar credits. On a market offer with a competitive feed-in rate of 10c/kWh: approximately $920 to $1,020 per year. The feed-in tariff alone accounts for $200+ of the difference.

Tariff types available in Victoria

Flat rate (single rate): One price per kWh at all times. The simplest option and the default for most Victorian households. If you cannot shift your usage patterns, this is the safest choice.

Time of use (TOU): Different rates for peak, off-peak, and shoulder periods. Victoria's new TOU structure from July 2026 has peak between 3pm and 9pm on weekdays, shoulder from 7am to 3pm and 9pm to 10pm weekdays plus 7am to 10pm weekends, and off-peak from 10pm to 7am daily.

Smart Rate (new from July 2026): Victoria's new default tariff structure features a low midday rate from 11am to 4pm, a peak rate from 4pm to 9pm on weekdays, and off-peak at all other times. Residential demand tariffs have been discontinued. The Smart Rate is designed to encourage midday electricity use when solar generation is abundant, reducing costs for all customers by lowering peak demand.

Controlled load: A separate, cheaper rate for appliances on a dedicated circuit such as electric hot water systems. Check your bill to see if you have a controlled load, and make sure your plan includes a competitive controlled load rate.

Tips for comparing electricity plans in Victoria

Use Victorian Energy Compare. The state government runs Victorian Energy Compare, a free tool that shows estimated annual costs based on your actual smart meter data. It is more accurate than generic comparison tools because it uses your real usage profile.

Check the Best Offer notification on your bill. Victorian retailers are required to show on every bill whether a better plan is available from the same retailer. If you see a notification, it is worth investigating, but also compare across retailers, not just within your current one.

Consider the Smart Rate if you are home during the day. The new midday low rate (11am to 4pm) rewards households that can run high-draw appliances during those hours. Even without solar, this tariff can reduce bills for retirees and remote workers.

Solar customers: compare feed-in tariffs carefully. With 30+ retailers in Victoria, the range of feed-in rates is the widest in Australia. The difference between the worst and best feed-in tariff can be worth $200 to $400 per year on a typical 6kW system.

Dual-fuel discounts may not be the best deal. Some retailers offer a discount for bundling electricity and gas. But if their individual rates are not competitive, the "discount" may still leave you paying more than separate plans from different retailers. Always compare the total estimated annual cost, not the discount percentage.

Common questions about electricity in Victoria

Check the distributor name on your electricity bill. It will be CitiPower, Powercor, Jemena, United Energy, or AusNet Services. If you do not have a bill, enter your postcode in our comparison form and we will identify your network.
Yes. Victoria has the lowest average electricity reference prices in mainland Australia, particularly on the CitiPower and Jemena networks. The VDO for a flat rate residential customer on CitiPower is $1,511 per year, compared to over $2,300 in South Australia. Victoria also has the most retailer competition, which pushes market offer prices further below the reference price.
The Smart Rate is a new tariff structure introduced in July 2026. It features a low rate from 11am to 4pm (when solar generation is high), a peak rate from 4pm to 9pm on weekdays, and off-peak at all other times. It replaces the old residential demand tariff. You need a smart meter to access it.
Not necessarily. Dual-fuel discounts can be appealing, but they only save money if the retailer's rates are competitive on both fuels. Compare the total estimated annual cost of bundled vs separate plans. In many cases, choosing the cheapest electricity retailer and the cheapest gas retailer separately will save more than a dual-fuel bundle.
It depends which part of Melbourne. Inner suburbs on CitiPower have a VDO reference price of $1,511 per year, the lowest in the state, while outer eastern suburbs on AusNet Services sit at $1,878 per year. Competitive market offers typically bring either down by 15% to 25%.
Geelong is on the Powercor network, with a VDO reference price of $1,695 per year. The most competitive market offers typically sit around $1,270 to $1,440 per year for a comparable household. Enter your postcode to compare current offers specific to your address.
Inner Melbourne is served by CitiPower, a small, dense network that is comparatively cheap to maintain per customer. Outer suburbs and regional areas are on larger networks (AusNet Services, Powercor) covering more sparsely populated ground, which pushes up the network cost component of the bill. The gap between CitiPower and AusNet Services is around $367 per year on the reference price alone.

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