Just wondering how much the electric bill would be for 1 person living in a 1 bedroom apartment. Anyone here know?
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Just wondering how much the electric bill would be for 1 person living in a 1 bedroom apartment. Anyone here know?
The only time I lived in such a place was in college, and since it was included in the rent, I have no idea what the utilities would be by themselves. However I now live in a 2,000 square foot house, and my electric bill varies from 80-130 depending on the time of year. (typically lower in the spring/fall and higher in the summer/winter)
What the s***. I know you live in Texas as well...how do you manage that in the summers. -did you build a 'green' home...aka energy certified (as the new builders are so inclined to call the houses these days) My electric bills have always been north of $200 in the summers -2 bedroom apartment -3 bedroom house -townhouse ...doesn't matterThe only time I lived in such a place was in college, and since it was included in the rent, I have no idea what the utilities would be by themselves. However I now live in a 2,000 square foot house, and my electric bill varies from 80-130 depending on the time of year. (typically lower in the spring/fall and higher in the summer/winter)
UT_Wrestler
it depends on a lot of things:
1. is the stove electric or gas?
2. is there a heater, and do you use it a lot?
3. Are you good about turning the lights off when you leave?
4. How much TV do you watch? How much time do you spend on the computer?
Honestly, though, I only pay like 30/month and that was in a two-bedroom apartment. You'd problably spend around 20 I guess.
The only time I lived in such a place was in college, and since it was included in the rent, I have no idea what the utilities would be by themselves. However I now live in a 2,000 square foot house, and my electric bill varies from 80-130 depending on the time of year. (typically lower in the spring/fall and higher in the summer/winter)
What the s***. I know you live in Texas as well...how do you manage that in the summers. -did you build a 'green' home...aka energy certified (as the new builders are so inclined to call the houses these days) My electric bills have always been north of $200 in the summers -2 bedroom apartment -3 bedroom house -townhouse ...doesn't matter It was built with radiant barriers in the attic. Plus I usually keep it at 79 during the day and 77 at night, which are comfortable as long as the fans are on.I have lived in a few in my time. Depends on where you live, whether or not water is electric or gas (if the former this will push your bill up a fair amount). If you have electric heating and suffer cold winters expect a substantial increase in the colder months (mine used to increase by circa 200 bucks per quarter during the winter). Air conditioning also spanks the electricity, so if you live in a humid area that'll probably double your bill. What about a washing machine? they can add a reasonable amount, although nothing compared to heating/air con/hot water. TV's use a reasonable amount even on standby, lighting is minimal, fans use about the same as a light bulb/globe so use that rather than air con. Anyway I'm waffling. Bottom line is living in a one bed is expensive - sharing bills makes living considerably cheaper.
[QUOTE="rawsavon"][QUOTE="UT_Wrestler"]What the s***. I know you live in Texas as well...how do you manage that in the summers. -did you build a 'green' home...aka energy certified (as the new builders are so inclined to call the houses these days) My electric bills have always been north of $200 in the summers -2 bedroom apartment -3 bedroom house -townhouse ...doesn't matter It was built with radiant barriers in the attic. Plus I usually keep it at 79 during the day and 77 at night, which are comfortable as long as the fans are on.The only time I lived in such a place was in college, and since it was included in the rent, I have no idea what the utilities would be by themselves. However I now live in a 2,000 square foot house, and my electric bill varies from 80-130 depending on the time of year. (typically lower in the spring/fall and higher in the summer/winter)
UT_Wrestler
79 and 77...that explains it.
I am too hot natured for that (have fans on in the winter time)
PS - if you want to crudely work it out, then 1K/W = 1 unit per hour. E.g. a 2 k/w heater on for 3 hours a night = 6 units, say at 20c per unit thats $1.20 per night. Times that by 91 days in a quarter then you have $109.20 just on heating. You can do it with most of your appliances if you're feeling frugal...
I have a 1 bedroom apartment in Los Angeles, and I pay around $25/month for electricity during the winter and around $40/month during the summer. I don't know what the water and gas cost, as they are included in my rent.
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