- November 8, 2025
- zeroqueststg
- 12:00 am
Demand charges 101 (and 7 quick fixes)
by Charles (Chuck) Tralka
Energy Strategy Consultant
Summary
Demand charges bill you for your highest 15–60 minute average kW during a billing cycle. One bad spike can cost you all month. The goal is to avoid coincident peaks by adjusting when and how loads start.
What “demand” actually is
Energy (kWh): how much electricity you use over time. Demand (kW): your highest rate of use—often the max average over any 15–60 minute window. Utilities set on-peak windows (e.g., weekdays 4–9 pm) where demand is most expensive.
Rule of thumb: If demand charges are ≥ 25–40% of your bill, peak control is a high-ROI priority.
- Step 1 — Find your demand window
- Step 2 — Identify your “spikers”
Check the tariff (or last bill) for on-peak time blocks and demand ratchets. Note if weekends/holidays are excluded.
Staggered HVAC starts, process loads (compressors, pumps, EV charging, defrost cycles), and exterior/lot lighting are common culprits.
Seven quick fixes (no hardware)
- Stage HVAC starts: offset RTUs by 2–5 minutes each during morning startup and before on-peak windows.
- Set a “peak guardrail” setpoint: nudge cool setpoint up 1–2°F (or heat down) only during on-peak; exclude critical zones.
- Shift non-urgent tasks off-peak: laundry, dishwashers, cleaning equipment.
- Trim exterior/lot lights: delay on-time by 15–30 minutes and/or dim partial circuits.
- Schedule EV charging: cap Level-2 charging during on-peak; push bulk charging to off-peak; limit DC fast during peak.
- Coordinate defrost cycles (grocery/cold storage): stagger defrost; avoid launches at start of peak.
- Pre-cool or warm-up before peak: pre-condition 30–60 minutes before the on-peak window.
Simple check:
Did demand charges drop?
Compare kW peak this month vs. last month (same season). Savings: demand reduction (kW) × demand rate ($/kW).
10-minute checklist
- On-peak window and ratchets identified
- HVAC starts staggered (AM + pre-peak)
- Peak-window setpoint adjustment active (safe zones only)
- Non-critical tasks moved out of peak
- Lot/exterior lights trimmed or staggered
- EV charging capped/scheduled
- Defrost cycles staggered away from peak
- Pre-conditioning used where feasible