ConEd Territory ยท Staten Island, NYC

Energy Switching in Staten Island: ConEd Rates and Your Alternatives

Staten Island is often last in NYC energy conversations. It shouldn't be. More homeowners, bigger homes, and higher average electricity use means the savings from switching here are often larger than in other boroughs.

Your utility in Staten Island

All of Staten Island is served by Con Edison. St. George, Stapleton, New Dorp, Tottenville, and every neighborhood in between. There's no National Grid presence here. It's all ConEd, top to bottom.

ConEd delivers the electricity. They own the poles and wires. If a line goes down in New Dorp, you call ConEd. But who you buy the electricity supply from is a separate question. New York deregulated its energy market in 1996. That means you can choose a licensed retail supplier and pay their rate instead of ConEd's default.

Why Staten Island is a bigger opportunity than most people think

Staten Island has the highest homeownership rate of any NYC borough. Around 70% of households own their home. That matters for energy switching in two ways.

First, most homeowners pay their own electric bills directly. There's no landlord, no utility-included rent situation. The account is in your name, which means you can switch without asking anyone's permission.

Second, single-family homes in Staten Island use more electricity than typical NYC apartments. Larger square footage, more appliances, more HVAC load. Average monthly electricity bills are meaningfully higher than the city average. When your bill is higher, the dollar savings from switching to a lower per-kWh rate are higher too.

Current rates: what ConEd charges vs. what suppliers offer

ConEd's standard supply rate in early 2026 runs approximately $0.14 per kWh. Licensed retail suppliers currently serving Staten Island zip codes are offering fixed supply rates between $0.089 and $0.11 per kWh.

For a Staten Island homeowner spending $200/month on electricity, switching at the lower end of that supplier range saves roughly $300-450 per year. For homes running central air conditioning in summer, the savings are higher during peak months.

St. George, Tottenville, and New Dorp

St. George is the borough's most transit-accessible neighborhood and has seen an increase in newer residents who may not know about the switching option. Same ConEd service. Same switching process.

Tottenville at the southern tip has a high concentration of single-family homes. Average electricity consumption here is among the highest on the island. The switching math is especially favorable for Tottenville homeowners.

New Dorp is a mix of residential and commercial. Homeowners in this area are well-positioned to switch. The calculator shows available suppliers by zip code, and New Dorp zip codes have good supplier coverage.

How to switch your electricity supplier on Staten Island

Fixed-rate plans are the safer choice. Variable-rate plans can drop below the ConEd default but can also spike above it. A fixed rate lets you budget with certainty for the contract term.

Green energy options

Several suppliers serving Staten Island offer 100% renewable electricity plans, including wind and solar. Current green rates are close to conventional rates. Community solar is also available for Staten Island addresses. Run both options through the calculator to compare.

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