Sky-high electrical bills. Can't figure out what's wrong.

I totally read that as halve two people and cell phones…:dubious:

With a saucy little Chianti and some fava beans, perhaps.

what the shit? I live in a 1-BR apartment, and my electric bill is like $30/month.

Good lord. What is your thermostat setting?

I’m in Texas,one bedroom duplex and my summer AC bill was $175.00 I think… (it’s been a few months ago and I’ve had a nap)

Call the electric company and ask if your bill is low, medium or high for your area. They won’t tell you bills for others, but they can look at it and tell you if it’s out of line. Many of them do an energy audit which I think is free. Have them do that and see what is going on. It might be the electric meter is defective and needs to be replaced.

I have a small 2br house mine was $37 last month. All lights are LED, a little cooking, showers.

I once lived in a basement apartment in Mississauga, and came hone one day to a $400 (landline) phone bill. No way was I making that many calls. A check with the roommates revealed that they weren’t making them either. We got the phone police involved; they came out and checked the wiring. Turned out that the guy upstairs had wired his phones into my line and was making hundreds of dollars worth of calls to Germany… and giving out my number to people in South America. He was picking up calls when I was at work, and apparently running a shady auto-import business.

The phone company went after him big time. Around then, he skipped town without paying six months’ rent, and I heard later that he was arrested in Germany for speeding. On the Autobahn.

So yeah, weird stuff can happen.

Apartments can be well insulated from the elements, eg due to being surrounded,
basically its not much energy required due to the insulation, and the neighbours are using their temperature adjustment device too…
OR if they get the heat from , or lose the heat to - cooling effect- a shop downstairs or something like that.

Or of course, apartments may be centrally heated,
it may be in the maintenance fees ? Which may be just in the rent if you pay rent.

I also recommend making sure you know the difference between power and energy before you do the math.