Why is your utility bill going up?
When a utility wants to charge you more, it has to ask a state commission first — in public, on a docket, months in advance. RateDocket tracks those cases: who filed, how much more they want, where the case stands, and when a decision is expected.
Coverage
- New York — 8 rate cases across 5 utilities · New York State Department of Public Service
- Texas — 87 rate cases across 73 utilities · Public Utility Commission of Texas
For interveners and rate analysts
RateDocket Pro adds the procedural schedule for every case — each deadline traced to the page of the order that set it — plus email and webhook alerts 30 and 7 days before an intervention or protest deadline, ROE and revenue-requirement detail, party lists, and a cross-state board of every active case.
How the data is made
Dockets and filings are read directly from each commission's public portal. Facts and dates are extracted from the filed documents themselves, and every one carries the document and page it came from. Anything extracted below our confidence threshold is labelled verify against source rather than shown as a fact — a wrong deadline is worse than a missing one.