Texas Commercial Energy Broker — Save 15–30% on Business Electricity
We Partner with 25+ Licensed Texas Retail Electricity Providers — They Compete. You Save.









How Texas Businesses Get Lower Electricity Rates in Under 24 Hours
Send us a recent electric bill or just your Texas ZIP code and average monthly kWh. It takes 60 seconds. No account access needed — a bill photo or a rough usage estimate is enough to get started.
We submit your usage profile to 25+ licensed retail electricity providers simultaneously. They bid against each other in a live reverse auction — fixed-rate, variable, indexed, and green energy options all come in. You see every offer side by side. No filtering, no pressure.
Pick the rate and contract length that fits your business. We handle all paperwork and coordinate the switch with your TDU (Oncor, AEP, or CenterPoint). Your power is never interrupted. Zero cost to you — our fee is paid by the winning provider.
Why Texas Commercial Businesses Choose EnergyBrokerTX in 2026
Businesses in Dallas, Fort Worth, Houston, and Corpus Christi are locking in supply rates 15–30% below what they were paying — without switching utilities or changing how their power is delivered.
The current Texas commercial average energy supply rate — vs. the national average of 14.1¢/kWh. Texas deregulation creates the gap. A broker makes sure you're on the right side of it.
Most Texas commercial accounts receive competing quotes from multiple providers and are ready to sign a new contract within one business day of their first contact with us.
Protect Your Texas Business from 2026 Electricity Rate Spikes
Spikes
ERCOT's 2026 load forecasts show sharp peaks during July and August driven by North Texas heat and surging data center demand. A fixed-rate commercial electricity plan locks your supply price for the full contract term — so a 110-degree week in Fort Worth doesn't show up as a line item on your August bill.
Hidden Fees
Most commercial electricity contracts include an auto-renewal clause that rolls you onto a month-to-month rate — often 20–40% higher than your original fixed rate — with no notification. We review your current contract terms, identify your expiration date, and get competing bids in front of you 90–120 days early so you never get caught. No hidden fees. No early termination surprises.
Peak Usage
For larger commercial accounts, demand charges — based on your single highest kilowatt draw in any 15-minute window — can represent 30–50% of your total bill. Most businesses don't realize this until they see the breakdown. Our reverse auction targets plans structured for your actual load profile, including options that reduce or offset peak demand costs — not one-size-fits-all residential rate cards.
Real Texas Businesses. Real Savings.
Dallas
Frequently Asked Questions
Have questions about how commercial energy brokerage works in Texas? Here are the ones we hear most from business owners shopping electricity for the first time.
When you go directly to a retail electricity provider for a quote, you get one rate from one company with no competitive pressure. When EnergyBrokerTX submits your account to 25+ providers at once and runs a reverse auction, those providers compete against each other for your business. The result is typically a rate 15–30% lower than what you'd negotiate on your own — and our fee is paid by the winning provider, not by you. The process takes about 60 seconds to start and most businesses have quotes within 24 hours.
No. EnergyBrokerTX is compensated directly by the retail electricity provider you choose, through a margin built into your contract rate — the same mechanism used whether you go direct or through a broker. You pay nothing separately, and the rate you receive through our reverse auction is typically at or below what you'd find going direct, because providers price aggressively to win competitive bids. There are no consulting fees, no setup costs, and no obligation to accept any quote we bring you.
The ideal window is 90 to 120 days before your current contract expires. This gives providers enough lead time to quote accurately and ensures you don't accidentally roll into an auto-renewal at a higher month-to-month rate. If you're not sure when your contract expires, check your most recent electric bill or call your current provider's commercial line — they're required to disclose it. If your contract has already expired or you're month-to-month right now, you're likely overpaying and can switch immediately with no penalty.

