Maryland’s new Utility RELIEF Act credits the average home about $150 a year on energy bills

Maryland residents who pay electric bills through Pepco and other state-regulated utilities can expect roughly $150 a year in savings after Governor Wes Moore signed the Utility RELIEF Act into law. The measure, introduced as HB 1532 during the 2026 Regular Session and enrolled as Chapter 353, shifts infrastructure upgrade costs onto data centers and tightens the Public Service Commission’s authority over rate increases. The first test of those savings is already underway: the PSC has cut Pepco’s latest rate reconciliation request, and state agencies have filed a federal complaint targeting a separate monthly surcharge.

Why $150 in annual bill credits matters for Maryland households right now

The savings figure is not a rough estimate buried in a fiscal note. Governor Moore, Senate President Bill Ferguson, and House Speaker Joseline Pena-Melnyk put it at the center of the law’s rollout, stating the package would save Maryland families at least $150 annually. That number now carries weight because two enforcement actions are already in motion. The Maryland Public Service Commission substantially reduced Pepco’s multi-year rate plan reconciliation request, a decision that directly limits how much the utility can recover from residential customers. Separately, the Maryland Energy Administration, the PSC, and the Office of People’s Counsel filed a complaint at the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission seeking to end a surcharge tied to regional transmission organization participation. The Utility RELIEF Act explicitly cleared the way for that FERC filing, connecting the state law to a federal proceeding that could lower bills further.

For a household budgeting around rising energy costs, the practical question is whether $150 shows up as a single credit, a monthly reduction, or a slower offset spread across billing cycles. The answer depends on how Pepco and other utilities adjust their reconciliation filings to comply with the new statutory limits. The PSC’s decision to cut Pepco’s request is the earliest signal that regulators intend to enforce the law aggressively rather than treat it as aspirational. If that approach continues, customers are more likely to see visible line-item reductions or smaller approved increases than they otherwise would have faced.

Even modest annual relief can matter for families already juggling higher prices for food, rent, and transportation. A $150 reduction roughly equals a month of summer cooling for some smaller apartments or the winter heating costs for a well-insulated townhouse. In that context, the law’s promise is less about a windfall and more about preventing energy bills from eroding household budgets further. Consumer advocates are watching how utilities translate the statute into new rate proposals, warning that overly complex adjustments could make it harder for residents to understand whether they are truly receiving the promised savings.

How HB 1532 restructures who pays for grid expansion

The Utility RELIEF Act does more than cap residential rate increases. One of its central provisions requires data centers to pay for the infrastructure upgrades their operations demand, according to the governor’s signing announcement. Data centers consume enormous amounts of electricity and often require substations, transmission lines, and distribution upgrades that utilities have historically folded into the rate base shared by all customers. By shifting those costs to the companies that trigger them, the law aims to prevent residential ratepayers from subsidizing commercial load growth…

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