The Ontario Energy Board (OEB) sets Time-of-Use, Tiered & ULO electricity rates in Ontario.
Rates are calculated using a 12-month forecast that helps make pricing more stable, predictable, and fair for users and electricity generators.
The Ontario Energy Board (OEB) sets Time-of-Use, Tiered & ULO electricity rates in Ontario.
Rates are calculated using a 12-month forecast that helps make pricing more stable, predictable, and fair for users and electricity generators.
GrandBridge Energy business customers are billed according to their rate classification, which is determined by the monthly electricity consumed and the service size.
Electricity rates and charges for business customers prior to January 1, 2025.
Your electricity bill is made up of Electricity, Delivery (including transmission and distribution) and Regulatory charges. For a detailed explanation of electricity terms, visit the Ontario Energy Board website.
This is the cost of electricity supplied during the billing period and is calculated on the adjusted kilowatt hours (kWh) used. The electricity charges on your bill will be based on prices set by spot market pricing through the Independent Electricity System Operator (IESO) and the Ontario Energy Board or based on a contract with a retailer. Electricity charges are collected by GrandBridge Energy and paid directly to electricity suppliers. We do not keep any of these charges.
On May 1, 2025, the Independent Electricity System Operator (IESO) launched the Market Renewal Program (MRP) to modernize Ontario’s electricity market to make it more efficient, transparent, and reliable.
GrandBridge Energy’s large commercial, industrial, and institutional customers will pay a market price for the electricity supply referred to as the Ontario Electricity Market Price (OEMP), previously the Hourly Ontario Energy Price. The only change to this market price is the process used behind the scenes to calculate the market price.
More information is available from the IESO:
Small business customers who use <50 kWh monthly are automatically part of the Regulated Price Plan (RPP) for the purchase of electricity. This means you are charged a regulated price per kilowatt hour (kWh) for electricity you use. RPP customers are classified as Standard Supply Service customers. The rates include Global Adjustment Charges. The Ontario Energy Board reviews these electricity rates every six months in May and November.
You can choose between three electricity price plan options: Time-of-Use (TOU), Ultra-Low Overnight (ULO) or Tiered. You can switch between these options anytime, but you must notify GrandBridge Energy through your My Account portal or by submitting an election form.
People use electricity differently depending on the season, so the TOU price periods are different in winter than summer.
Customers also have the option to purchase electricity from an electricity Retailer. If a consumer signs a retail contract, they pay a fixed rate independent of the RPP pricing and Spot Market price. These customers will also pay the Global Adjustment in addition to the rate of their retail contract.
Sign up for My Account and run a price comparison.
The Electricity charges on your bill are based on the prices set by the Ontario Energy Board or a contract with a Retailer. Electricity charges are collected by the utility and paid directly to electricity suppliers.
The delivery charge is the cost of delivering electricity from generation stations across the province to GrandBridge Energy and then to your business. This includes the costs of building and maintaining the transmission and distribution lines, towers, and poles and operating provincial and local electricity systems.
A portion of these charges are fixed and do not change from month to month. The rest are variable and increase or decrease depending on your electricity use.
GrandBridge Energy retains only the Monthly Service Charge and the Local Distribution charge (called the Delivery) on your bill.
Regulatory charges are the costs of administering the wholesale electricity system and maintaining the reliability of the provincial grid.
Electricity generators in Ontario receive a combination of payments from the operation of the wholesale market, payments set by regulation and payments set by contracts. Your portion of the net adjustments arising from these and other authorized payments is included on your bill as Global Adjustment.