Side by side (GA, EIA-861)
| Metric | Georgia Power Co | Satilla Rural Elec Member Corporation |
|---|---|---|
| 2024 average price, ¢/kWh | 15.49 | 13.98 |
| 2023 average price, ¢/kWh | 14.62 | 13.21 |
| Annual cost at 10,800 kWh, $/yr | $1,673 | $1,510 |
| Residential customers (2024) | 2,452,488 | 54,115 |
| Ownership | Investor-owned | Co-op |
| Counties served in GA | 155 | 12 |
Average price = residential revenue ÷ sales (bundled service): the all-in price customers actually paid, including supply, delivery and riders. Profiles: Georgia Power Co · Satilla Rural Elec Member Corporation · Georgia overview.
Where the territories meet
Both utilities file EIA-861 service territory in: Appling · Atkinson · Bacon · Ben Hill · Brantley · Coffee · Irwin · Jeff Davis · Pierce · Tattnall · Ware · Wayne counties (GA, 2024).
Adjoining or overlapping territory in a county does not mean households there can pick between the two — service maps are parcel-level and fixed. The county overlap mainly matters when choosing where to live or comparing town-level costs.
Can you actually choose between them?
No — not for delivery. Distribution territories are exclusive and set by address; Georgia Power Co and Satilla Rural Elec Member Corporation do not compete for the same meters. Georgia is a regulated retail market — there is no residential supplier shopping; rates are set in utility-commission proceedings (psc.ga.gov/utilities/natural-gas). The price gap above mainly matters when choosing where to live, comparing towns, or benchmarking your bill.
Questions people ask
- Is Georgia Power Co cheaper than Satilla Rural Elec Member Corporation?
- No — in 2024 Georgia Power Co customers averaged 15.49 cents/kWh versus 13.98 for Satilla Rural Elec Member Corporation (EIA-861). Satilla Rural Elec Member Corporation was cheaper by 1.51 cents, about $163 per year at 10,800 kWh.
- Can I switch from Georgia Power Co to Satilla Rural Elec Member Corporation?
- No — distribution territories are exclusive and set by address; you cannot pick between the two wires companies. Georgia has no residential supplier shopping either; rates are set in utility-commission proceedings.
- Why is Georgia Power Co more expensive than Satilla Rural Elec Member Corporation?
- EIA-861 averages reflect everything customers actually paid — supply costs, delivery rates, riders, and surcharges across each territory. Differences in generation mix, grid investment, storm costs, and customer density between Georgia Power and Satilla Rural Elec Member Corporation territory all feed the 1.51-cent gap.