A commercial energy broker in Georgia has one job: get competing offers from multiple suppliers, translate the pricing structures, and help you choose. We work for you, not the utility.

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The Case for Switching Suppliers in Georgia

Georgia passed Georgia Natural Gas Deregulation Act (1997), opening the commercial electricity market to retail competition. Today, Georgia Power (electricity, regulated), Atlanta Gas Light deliver power through wires they own — but you choose the company that generates and prices that electricity. That's a retail energy supplier (REP), and there are 10+ certified natural gas marketers competing for your business.

Georgia electricity is largely regulated — Georgia Power (Southern Company) is the primary utility

The grid operator — SERC — runs the wholesale market where suppliers buy power in bulk. What they pay in that market, plus their margin and your delivery charges, determines your all-in rate. A broker's job is to know which suppliers are pricing aggressively at any given moment and lock that in before the window closes.

Georgia Utilities vs. Retail Energy Suppliers

Natural gas deregulation is the main competitive market: customers choose from certified gas marketers

Your utility (Georgia Power (electricity, regulated), Atlanta Gas Light) handles physical delivery and emergency response regardless of which supplier you choose. Georgia Power (Southern Company) is the regulated monopoly for most electricity in Georgia; Atlanta Gas Light distributes natural gas but customers can choose gas marketers The supply charge — typically the largest line item on commercial bills — is where your choice matters. Delivery and transmission charges are regulated and fixed by the state PUC.

SERC region (not a formal auction market)

How We Source Georgia Energy Contracts

We run a structured quote process: pull your usage history (12 months minimum), identify your load profile and peak demand pattern, then submit to 30+ suppliers simultaneously. Suppliers compete. You get multiple offers within 24–48 hours with our plain-English translation of each.

We don't represent any single supplier. Our fee comes from the supplier you choose — standard in the industry and priced into every quote regardless of whether you use a broker. You pay nothing out of pocket and get a competitive process you wouldn't have time to run yourself.

Compare Georgia commercial energy rates — no cost
We shop 30+ suppliers at no cost to you.

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Pricing Structures in the Georgia Market

Three main structures exist in Georgia:

Georgia Power's tariff rate (electricity); AGL's default rate (gas)

Georgia Market Risks and How Brokers Manage Them

Atlanta Gas Light distributes natural gas; competitive marketers supply the commodity

Limited electricity competitive access — natural gas is the primary focus for brokers in Georgia

Natural gas note: Deregulated — customers choose gas marketer for supply

Auto-renewal clauses, early termination fees, and demand charge structures vary significantly by supplier and contract. We read every contract before recommending it.

Common Questions About Georgia Commercial Energy

Is commercial electricity deregulated in Georgia?

Yes. Georgia operates under retail energy choice, meaning commercial and industrial customers can choose their electricity supplier. Georgia Power (electricity, regulated), Atlanta Gas Light still deliver the power; you're choosing who generates and prices it.

How many suppliers compete in the Georgia commercial market?

There are 10+ certified natural gas marketers licensed retail energy providers (REPs) active in Georgia. We work with 30+ of them and can pull competing quotes for your account within 24–48 hours.

What are typical commercial electricity rates in Georgia?

Commercial all-in rates in Georgia typically run 8–12 cents/kWh (Georgia Power regulated) depending on load size, contract term, and market timing. electricity regulated; gas procurement is the opportunity

What grid manages electricity in Georgia?

Georgia is served by SERC. Georgia electricity market is largely regulated; natural gas is the deregulated opportunity

What's the risk of a variable-rate contract in Georgia?

Limited electricity competitive access — natural gas is the primary focus for brokers in Georgia

Georgia by Industry

Energy use patterns vary significantly by business type. We've built resources for each major commercial sector in Georgia: