Electricity Plan Comparator

Enter your postcode or NMI, tell us about your usage, solar and battery, and we will identify your network distributor and rank the current retail market offers available at your address.

Live API data, refreshed daily

1 Your location and meter

Your postcode determines which plans and network apply. Your NMI (the 10 or 11 digit National Metering Identifier in the top section of your bill) confirms your exact distributor.

Found on your electricity bill, usually near your address or meter details.

2 Your electricity usage

Use the kWh figures printed on a recent bill. Enter what you actually import from the grid. If you have solar, this is your usage after solar self consumption.

Used to estimate time of use tariff costs.
Best accuracy: upload your actual meter data (optional)
Download your interval data as a CSV (NEM12 format) from your retailer's website or your distributor's portal (Energy Easy, myEnergy, Electricity Outlook, myHomeNetwork and similar), then upload it here. We will use your real half hourly usage instead of estimates. The file is read in your browser only and is never uploaded anywhere.

3 Your solar and battery

This determines feed in credits and how well time of use plans suit you.

No solar Solar only Solar + battery
Plans that require equipment you do not have (battery, EV, solar) are automatically excluded from your results.
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What do these rates and terms mean?

Supply charge (c/day): a fixed amount you pay every day just to be connected, even if you use no power. Multiply by 365 for the yearly cost of staying connected.

Usage rate (c/kWh): what you pay for each kilowatt hour of electricity you use. A kWh runs a typical fridge for about a day.

Single rate: one price per kWh no matter what time you use power. Simple and predictable.

Time of use: the price changes with the time of day. Peak is the most expensive window, usually weekday afternoons and evenings when demand is highest. Off peak is the cheapest, usually overnight. Shoulder sits in between, covering the remaining hours. We show the time window next to each rate so you can see exactly when it applies. Some retailers label most of their windows "shoulder", so always check the times shown.

Feed in (c/kWh): the credit you receive for each kWh your solar exports to the grid.

Demand tariff: an extra charge based on your single highest usage spike in a period. These plans suit some households but are hard to predict, so we flag them rather than estimate them.

All rates shown include GST, the way they appear on your bill.