If your Texas electric bill has been climbing and you’re wondering why — this post is for you. Not the utility company’s explanation. Not a press release. A real answer from a homesteader in Porter, Texas who spent years in information technology, ran his own small data center, and has been watching this situation develop with a very specific kind of concern.
Texas electric bills are going up. They will continue to go up. And the reason is bigger than most people realize — and more structural than any politician is going to fix in the near term.
Here’s what’s actually happening.
Why Texas electric bills keep going up — the real reasons
I want to be clear about something before I go further: I’m not anti-technology, anti-data center, or anti-progress. I spent years in information technology. I ran my own small network operations center in the Greenspoint area of Houston. I understand what data centers do and why they matter.
That background is exactly why I take this situation seriously.
People need to keep in mind that data centers pull as much energy as many cities do. A single hyperscale facility — the kind being built across Texas right now to serve AI workloads — can consume 100 megawatts or more of continuous power. That’s equivalent to powering 80,000 to 100,000 average American homes. Continuously. 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.
Now multiply that by hundreds of facilities across Texas. That’s not a minor increase in grid demand. That’s a fundamental restructuring of who the grid is serving — and residential consumers are not at the top of that priority list.
I’m not trying to sound any alarms or cause fear. I’m being honest about what the data shows and what my experience tells me it means.
“Even if we built a bunch of new power plants, the grid infrastructure is in no way, shape, or form ready to handle the demand these data centers require. That gap doesn’t close quickly.”
The generation vs. transmission problem — why building more plants isn’t enough
A common response to grid reliability concerns is: “They’re building new power plants, so the problem is being solved.” This misunderstands the actual bottleneck.
There are two parts to getting electricity from generation to your home: generation and transmission. Texas has been investing in new generation — solar farms, wind, natural gas peakers. But transmission infrastructure — the high-voltage lines that carry power across the state — is a decades-long buildout that cannot be accelerated quickly regardless of investment.
New generation outside Amarillo doesn’t automatically solve reliability problems in Houston’s suburbs. The power has to travel through transmission infrastructure that was built for a different demand profile — before hundreds of data centers came online and before millions of new Texas residents arrived.
The forces driving rates up — data center demand, transmission constraints, grid infrastructure investment costs, population growth — are all structural and long-term. None of them reverse quickly.
Utilities are investing in infrastructure to meet this demand, and those costs get passed to ratepayers. Data centers negotiating favorable power contracts shift costs toward residential customers. Summer peak demand continues setting records, requiring expensive peaker capacity that runs only a few hundred hours per year but has to be paid for regardless.
The trajectory is up. Planning your household energy strategy around rates staying flat or declining is not a reasonable assumption for Texas homeowners.
What Texas homeowners can actually do about it
I want to be clear about something: this post isn’t meant to make you feel helpless. The opposite. Understanding why your bill is going up is the first step toward doing something about it — and there are real, practical steps Texas homeowners can take right now.
My electric bill went from $198 a month to $78 a month by doing exactly this — piece by piece, over two years, without writing a $25,000 check. We’re still expanding the system. The next phase will push the bill even closer to zero.
“My bill went from $198 to $78 a month. Not from a $25,000 turnkey installation — from building step by step with a clear plan. That path is open to any Texas homeowner willing to start.”
The bigger picture — energy independence as a practical strategy
I want to close with something that goes beyond the financial calculation, because I think it matters.
Energy independence isn’t just about saving money on your electric bill — though the savings are real and significant. It’s about not being entirely dependent on a system that is under increasing strain, serving increasingly powerful interests, and subject to failures that leave residential customers with no recourse.
When my grid connection failed during a brush fire on our property — cutting power to our well pump at the worst possible moment — I didn’t have a solar system to fall back on yet. I do now. That experience changed how I think about this permanently.
The data center buildout is going to continue. AI infrastructure investment is accelerating. Texas grid demand is going up. Your electric bill is going up. None of those things are within your control.
What is within your control is how dependent you are on that system — and how much of your own power you generate, store, and control yourself.
