| I read that unplugging will save you at most $100-200 over a year. Which isn’t nothing, but I’m guessing OP’s husband wants to save $100 a month, not per year. You can ask your power company to come in and do a survey to see where you are wasting power. And you can also adjust your lifestyle to use power at off peak times. We have solar and 2 EV’s, so we try to charge the cars during the day, as well as the dishwasher and washer/dryer. In the winter, when daylight is more scarce, we try to run everything at night when price per kWh is lower. We average $40/month in the summer and $110/month in the winter for a large 6000 sqft house. We also live in a really cold climate, and radiant heating saves us a lot of money. |
I am an electrical engineer. He's right depending on the appliance. It you have electronic controls, the appliance is drawing a tiny amount of power watching for button presses. Besides changing your thermostat, go into your attic and stick a few more inches of insulation up there. Whatever you had initially has probably compressed or was 1960s/1970s code compliant, i.e., practically nothing. |
| Put your refrigerator on a separate circuit and then just flip all your other breakers when you go to bed. |
| The thread glows. It's not the electric useage, which is the distraction, it's the spy tech. |
This. Or put appliances on power strips with automatic timers that shut off during non usuage hours. That way one doesn't have to even think about it. |
I don't know where you read such nonsense but the savings are pennys, not dollars. You are mostly unplugging things that don't draw any power and a few that use a few cents worth of power a month. You won't see any difference in your electrical bill. |
| Never |
This is nonsense. |
This is actual helpful advice. |
+1 Taxes, fees, scholarship charges, etc. are over 70% of a utility bill. Some are fixed, some are multipliers on usage. |
| yes, you should unplug things that you aren't actively using...some of those are a bigger pain than others. But the bigger sources are heating and cooling - so do your best to move the thermostat and keep your hot or cold air inside. |
+1 Such great advice! We live in a 2300 sq foot brick home built in the 50s by a well regarded builder. We could not believe the difference in our bills after adding more insulation in the attic. We save about $250 - 300 dollars every month on our utility bills. |
This is a big factor. The creeping socialism charges. Used to be the electric bill was a flat $4.95 service fee and any additional KW usage. If you didn't use any electricty, your bill was simply $4.95. Now there are taxes, fees, more taxes, more fees, service fees, service taxes,. more taxes. It's gotten out of hand. 70-80% of a person's gross income is spent on some form of taxes, fees, licenses, etc. now. |
You're nuts and/or very bad at math. |
Live in NOVA as well. 2,300 Sq Ft home, August bill was under $80. Keep thermostat at 70 all summer long. Distribution charges and taxes and fees are 40% of the bill. Even if I got 10% savings from unplugging things it would only be $5 a month. Not worth the effort. |