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FPL files details of new rate plan designed to power growing state with unmatched combination of high reliability and low bills

In This Article:

JUNO BEACH, Fla., Feb. 28, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Florida Power & Light Company today submitted a comprehensive four-year request to the Florida Public Service Commission (PSC) to set new rates once its current base rate agreement concludes at the end of this year.

PR NEWSWIRE (PRNewsfoto/Florida Power & Light Company)
PR NEWSWIRE (PRNewsfoto/Florida Power & Light Company)

The proposal, covering 2026 through 2029, would enable FPL to continue to deliver some of the nation's most reliable electricity, provide excellent customer service, diversify its generation resources to reduce fuel costs, and keep bills as low as possible.

A word from FPL President and CEO Armando Pimentel: "At FPL, we're focused on our customers every single day. The balanced plan we submitted to the PSC would enable FPL to continue to make smart investments in the grid and in new generation resources to benefit our customers and to power our fast-growing state. No other utility in the U.S. provides a better combination of reliability, resiliency and low bills than FPL."

Bill adjustments: Residential customers can calculate how the proposal would affect their individual bills by using the calculator feature at FPL.com/answers. Overall, FPL projects that, even with the proposed rate adjustment, residential customer bills would remain well below the national average and below many other Florida utilities. When adjusted for inflation, the typical 1,000-kWh residential customer bill in January 2026 under FPL's proposal would be about 20% lower than it was 20 years earlier, in 2006.

Estimated FPL bills under rate proposal

(for 1,000-kWh residential customer)

Region

Current

2026

2027

2028

2029

Peninsular Florida

$134.14

$142.37

$148.29

$149.93

$151.99

Northwest Florida

$143.60

$147.10

Estimates include base rates proposed to the Florida Public Service Commission (PSC), as well as
projections for fuel and other costs, which are approved annually by the PSC. Beginning in 2027, FPL
customers in peninsular and Northwest Florida will pay the same rates.

Typical small- and medium-size business customer bills would increase at an average annual rate of 1% to 5% from 2025 through 2029 under the proposal. Commercial and industrial customers can reach out to their FPL account managers for more information.

Key priorities: Among the ways FPL's proposed rate plan would benefit customers:

  • Delivering reliable service: FPL's plan supports continued investments in the critical infrastructure and technologies that have helped make FPL's distribution service reliability 59% better than the national average and the best among major utilities in Florida. FPL's technology investments have benefitted customers, with smart-grid devices helping speed restoration and avoid 2.7 million customer outages in 2024 alone. This includes more than 800,000 avoided outages during Hurricanes Debby, Helene and Milton last year.