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The Timeline Most Providers Will Not Tell You About
You’ve been meaning to switch electricity providers. Maybe you found a better rate three months ago. Maybe your contract expired and you know you’re overpaying on holdover terms. But you keep putting it off because you’re imagining a complicated process. Phone calls to your current provider. A technician showing up at your building. Some kind of transition period where the lights go out and you’re running the register on your phone’s hotspot.

The Texas business average electricity rate is 8.60 ¢/kWh, 36.9 % less than the U.S. average.
Fuente: eia.gov
"Fácil, sencillo, las mejores tarifas, a un solo clic ".
~ Stephen H. (TX, Estados Unidos)
Principales conclusiones:
- Switching business electricity providers in Texas takes 1 to 2 business days for standard commercial accounts, with zero downtime and no site visit required.
- Your current provider cannot block the switch, delay your service, or charge you anything beyond your existing contract terms (including any applicable early termination fee).
- The same TDU wires deliver your electricity before and after the switch, which is why there is no interruption, no equipment change, and no difference in power quality.
None of that happens. The switching process in Texas is simpler, faster, and less disruptive than almost every business owner assumes. The actual switch takes about 7 business days. Your total involvement is about 15 minutes. And your electricity never stops flowing for a single second.
Here’s exactly how it works, step by step, so you can stop delaying and start saving.
The Timeline, Start to Finish
The switching process follows a standard sequence managed by ERCOT, the organization that operates the Texas electricity grid. Every provider switch in the deregulated Texas market goes through this same process, regardless of which provider you’re leaving or which one you’re joining.
Day 1: You choose a new electricity plan and enroll with the new provider. This happens online or by phone. Most enrollments take 10 to 15 minutes. You’ll need your ESID number (which is on your current bill), your business name, service address, and payment information. The new provider confirms your enrollment, usually within minutes.
Days 2 through 5: Your new provider submits a switch request to ERCOT. ERCOT coordinates with both your old and new providers, verifies the meter information, and processes the request. ERCOT then sends a confirmation notice to your service address. This step is entirely automatic. You don’t need to do anything, call anyone, or follow up.
Days 3 through 6 after confirmation: A 3-business-day rescission window opens. This is your built-in safety net. If you change your mind for any reason, you can cancel the switch during this window with zero penalties. If you do nothing (which is what the vast majority of people do), the switch proceeds on schedule.
Day 5 through 7: The switch takes effect on your next meter read date. For locations with smart meters, which includes most commercial properties in Texas, this happens quickly because the meter can be read remotely without a technician visiting your property. The old provider stops billing. The new provider starts billing. Nothing changes at your building.
Within 1 to 2 billing cycles: You receive your first bill from your new provider. Your old provider sends a final bill covering usage up to the switch date. Both bills will show the exact date the switch occurred, so you can verify there’s no overlap or gap in billing.
That’s the entire process. The total time the business owner actively spends on it is the 15 minutes it takes to compare plans and enroll. Everything after enrollment is automatic. No phone calls. No site visits. No coordination required on your end.
Why Your Lights Will Not Even Flicker
The reason switching doesn’t cause a service interruption is structural. In Texas, the company that delivers your electricity is not the same company that bills you for it.
The physical infrastructure (the wires running to your building, the poles along the street, the meter on your wall, the transformers in your neighborhood) belongs to your TDU, or Transmission and Distribution Utility. In the Dallas-Fort Worth area, that’s Oncor. In the Houston area, it’s CenterPoint. In South Texas, it’s AEP Texas. In parts of North and Central Texas, it’s TNMP.
Your TDU delivers your electricity 24/7 regardless of who your retail provider is. When you switching providerss, you’re switching the company that sends you a bill. You’re not switching the company that delivers the power. The wires don’t know or care who your REP is. They just carry electricity.
Think of it like switching your car insurance. You change the company you pay, but the roads don’t change. The car doesn’t change. Nothing physical about your driving experience is affected. That’s exactly what happens when you switch electricity providers.
This is also why you’ll never see a technician at your property during a switch. There’s nothing to physically change. The meter stays. The wiring stays. The service connection stays. The only thing that changes is whose name is on the bill. Your employees, your customers, and your equipment will never know the difference.
Your Part Takes About 15 Minutes
Here’s every action you need to take personally:
Find your ESID number. Your Electric Service Identifier is the unique number assigned to your meter. It’s on your electricity bill, usually near the top or in the account details section. Your new provider needs this number to process the switch through ERCOT. If you can’t find it on your bill, your TDU’s website has a lookup tool.
Compare plans. Look at the rate, the contract length, the early termination fee structure, and the renewal terms. A marketplace like Compare Power shows these details side by side for every available plan, which saves you from calling individual providers one at a time.
Enroll with your new provider. This can be done online or by phone. You’ll provide your ESID, your business name, your service address, and your billing information. Most providers confirm your enrollment within minutes.
That’s it. You don’t need to call your old provider. You don’t need to schedule anything. You don’t need to be at the property. You don’t need to sign a stack of paperwork. Your new provider handles the ERCOT switch request, and the transition happens in the background.
The 3-Day Safety Net Most People Do Not Know About
After ERCOT processes your switch request and sends the confirmation, a 3-business-day rescission period begins. During this window, you can cancel the switch without any penalty or consequence. The rescission period is a consumer protection required by the Public Utility Commission of Texas.
If you enrolled in a new plan and then had second thoughts (maybe you found an even better rate, or realized you misread the contract terms), you can undo the switch during those three days. Just contact the new provider and tell them you want to cancel.
If you don’t take any action during the rescission window, the switch proceeds on schedule. Most business owners never use this option. But knowing it exists can make the decision to switch feel less permanent and less stressful.
Does Anything Change for Commercial Accounts?
The short answer is no. Commercial electricity switches in Texas follow the same ERCOT process as residential switches. The timeline is the same. The steps are the same. The lack of service interruption is the same.
The one area where commercial accounts might need extra attention is demand-metered properties. If your business has a demand meter (common for larger commercial properties with peak demand above 10 kW), you should coordinate the effective date with both your old and new providers. This isn’t because the switch is more complicated. It’s because demand charges are calculated based on your peak usage within a billing period, and you want to make sure the billing split between providers doesn’t create an artificially high demand reading on a partial-month bill.
For most small and mid-size commercial accounts (offices, retail shops, restaurants, small warehouses), the process is identical to residential. Enroll, wait for ERCOT to process, and your next bill comes from the new provider.
One timing consideration that applies to all commercial accounts: if you’re switching from an active fixed-rate contract, make sure you understand your early termination fee before enrolling. The switching process itself doesn’t care whether you’re in a contract or not. ERCOT will process the switch either way. But your old provider will charge the ETF on your final bill if you leave before the contract expires. The switch timeline and the contract timeline are two separate things.
When the Switching Timeline Does Not Matter
If your current rate is competitive, your contract terms are reasonable, and your renewal window is still months away, the ease of switching isn’t a reason to switch. A better rate is the reason. The simplicity of the process just means the process won’t hold you back when you find one.
Not every business owner needs to switch right now. If you signed a solid contract six months ago and you’re happy with the rate, the smartest move is to set a calendar reminder for 90 days before that contract expires and start comparing then. The switching process will be just as easy in six months as it is today.
The Longest Part Is Choosing, Not Switching
Once you’ve enrolled with a new provider, the rest of the process runs on autopilot. ERCOT processes the switch. Your TDU continues delivering power. Your new provider sends you a bill. You don’t need to monitor anything or follow up with anyone.
The part that takes actual time and effort is the comparison step. Reading Electricity Facts Labels. Understanding the difference between a 12-month fixed rate and a 24-month fixed rate. Checking whether a plan has minimum usage penalties or auto-renewal clauses that could cost you down the road. Calculating whether the early termination fee on your current contract makes switching worthwhile right now or whether you should wait for the renewal window.
A marketplace like ComparePower compresses that comparison step. Instead of calling five providers and requesting quotes, you can see every available commercial plan, the rates, the contract terms, and the EFL details in one place. The comparison that used to take a full afternoon takes 10 minutes.
The switching process itself is the easy part. It always has been. The hard part was never the logistics of changing providers. It was finding the right plan. Once you solve the comparison problem, the switch handles itself.

The Texas business average electricity rate is 8.60 ¢/kWh, 36.9 % less than the U.S. average.
Fuente: eia.gov
"Fácil, sencillo, las mejores tarifas, a un solo clic ".
~ Stephen H. (TX, Estados Unidos)
Preguntas frecuentes
Will my power go out during the switch?
No. There is zero service interruption when you switch electricity providers in Texas. Your TDU continues delivering power to your building regardless of which provider is billing you. The physical infrastructure never changes.
Do I need to call my old provider to cancel?
No. Your new provider handles the switch through ERCOT. Your old provider is notified automatically and will send you a final bill for usage up to the switch date. You do not need to cancel separately.
How long from enrollment to my first new bill?
The switch takes effect within 7 business days. Your first bill from the new provider typically arrives within 1 to 2 billing cycles after the switch date, depending on where you are in the billing cycle when the switch takes effect.
What if I change my mind after enrolling?
You have a 3-business-day rescission period after ERCOT sends the switch confirmation. During that window, you can cancel the switch by contacting your new provider. No penalties apply during the rescission period.
What is an ESID and where do I find it?
Your ESID (Electric Service Identifier) is the unique number assigned to your meter by your TDU. It’s listed on your electricity bill, usually near the account information section. Your new provider needs this number to process the switch through ERCOT. If you can’t locate it on your bill, your TDU’s website has a lookup tool.
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