# How to cut your EAC electricity bill in Cyprus

> Lower your EAC bill in Cyprus: how tariffs and the fuel adjustment work, the 2026 net-billing shift for solar, current grants, and real consumption cuts.

- Canonical: https://periodiko.com/cut-eac-electricity-bill-cyprus/
- Updated: 2026-07-04

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The fastest way to cut an EAC bill is to attack it in this order: move
flexible loads to the cheap 23:00–09:00 window if Tariff 02 suits you,
shrink the two biggest loads (cooling and water heating), insulate the
roof, and only then price a solar-plus-battery system under the
self-consumption rules that replaced net metering in January 2026. Most
Cypriot households effectively pay around 30 cents per kWh once the fuel
adjustment, levies, and VAT are added <!-- VERIFY: effective all-in c/kWh against a current bill -->,
so every 100 kWh you avoid is roughly €30 back.

## What are you actually paying for on an EAC bill?

About two thirds of the bill is the per-kWh price; the rest is fixed
charges, the fuel adjustment, a renewables levy, and VAT. On the standard
domestic Tariff 01, the published rates at the base fuel price are:
<!-- VERIFY: rates below are from the EAC domestic tariff sheet applicable from 1 August 2025; a newer sheet applies from 1 April 2026 — reconcile figures -->

| Component | Rate |
| --- | --- |
| Energy charge | 10.34 c/kWh <!-- VERIFY --> |
| Network charge | 3.66 c/kWh <!-- VERIFY --> |
| Ancillary services | 0.65 c/kWh <!-- VERIFY --> |
| Meter data management | €0.96 per bi-monthly bill <!-- VERIFY --> |
| Supply charge | €6.88 per bi-monthly bill <!-- VERIFY --> |
| RES & Energy Conservation Fund levy | 0.5 c/kWh <!-- VERIFY --> |
| VAT | 9% (reduced from 19%, extended to 31 March 2027) <!-- VERIFY --> |

On top of that sits the fuel adjustment — the line that makes two
identical meter readings produce different bills.

## How does the fuel adjustment charge work?

Every EAC tariff is priced at a base fuel cost of €300 per metric tonne.
Each billing period, EAC compares the actual weighted average fuel price —
which includes fuel purchases, CO₂ emission allowances, and strategic
reserve costs — against that base, and adjusts every kWh you used by a
published coefficient. Fuel above €300/MT means a surcharge; below it, a
credit. The coefficients are re-evaluated every six months and the charge
is recalculated for each billing period. <!-- VERIFY: current coefficient and the fuel adjustment level on a recent bill -->

You cannot negotiate this line, but you can read it: the fuel adjustment
multiplies your consumption, so cutting kWh cuts it proportionally, and
solar self-consumption avoids it entirely for every unit you generate and
use yourself.

## Should you switch to the off-peak Tariff 02?

Switch only if you can genuinely move load to night hours. Tariff 02
charges 9.44 c/kWh (energy component) between 23:00 and 09:00 against
10.76 c/kWh in standard hours — but its standard-hour rate is higher than
Tariff 01's flat 10.34 c/kWh. <!-- VERIFY: Tariff 02 rates on the current sheet -->
The arithmetic favours households that heat water electrically at night,
charge an EV, run the washing machine and dishwasher after 23:00, or cool
bedrooms overnight in summer. A household that uses most of its
electricity between 09:00 and 23:00 will pay more on Tariff 02, not less.
Ask EAC about the meter change before committing; a smart meter, where
already installed, records both registers. <!-- VERIFY: meter change procedure and any fee -->

Households in one of the vulnerable-customer categories (public
assistance, large families with three or more dependent children,
low-income pensioners, and specific medical conditions, among others)
should ask for the special Tariff 08 instead — its first 1,000 bi-monthly
units are priced below the standard rate. <!-- VERIFY: Tariff 08 eligibility list and block rates -->

## What changed for solar in 2026?

Net metering — the one-for-one offset that made rooftop solar in Cyprus
almost arithmetic-free — closed to new applicants on 31 December 2025.
From 1 January 2026, new residential systems fall under a self-consumption
framework designed by the energy regulator CERA, following the market
liberalisation that started on 1 October 2025. <!-- VERIFY: CERA decision reference -->

New prosumers now have three options: sign a bilateral agreement with an
electricity supplier who buys the surplus at a negotiated (wholesale-like)
rate, join an aggregator that sells the surplus to the market, or simply
not export at all. Exported units are worth noticeably less than the
retail rate you avoid by consuming your own generation — which changes how
a system should be designed. Existing net metering contracts signed before
the end of 2025 keep their terms for the contract's duration. <!-- VERIFY: exact grandfathering terms with EAC/CERA -->

Practical consequences for anyone sizing a system in 2026:

- Size for your daytime consumption, not for maximum roof coverage —
  surplus is now the least valuable output.
- Shift loads into solar hours: water heating, pool pumps, laundry,
  pre-cooling the house in the afternoon.
- Price a battery. Storing afternoon surplus for the evening peak replaces
  units you would otherwise buy at the full retail rate, and the new grant
  scheme is expected to make storage a condition of support.

## Which grants can you get right now?

The 2024–2025 RES and Energy Conservation Fund scheme — the one that paid
€375 per kW for photovoltaics (up to €1,500), €1,250 per kW for vulnerable
households (up to €6,250), and 50% of roof insulation costs up to €2,500 —
closed for applications on 31 December 2025. <!-- VERIFY: whether a new call has since opened at resecfund.org.cy -->

The Ministry of Energy has announced a successor programme for 2026 that
replaces "Photovoltaics for All" and, for the first time, subsidises home
battery storage; PV systems are expected to need a storage system to
qualify. Amounts per kW and battery sizing rules had not been published at
the time of writing. <!-- VERIFY: new scheme categories, amounts, and opening date — check resecfund.org.cy and gov.cy/meci -->
If you are planning an installation, get quotes now but check the scheme
terms before signing: grant conditions have historically dictated
installer participation and equipment eligibility.

## Which everyday changes cut the most kWh?

Target cooling, water heating, and always-on loads — in a Cypriot home
they are the bill. The numbers below are typical, not universal:

- **Air conditioning**: every degree below 26°C in summer adds roughly
  5–7% to cooling consumption <!-- VERIFY: percentage range with a local energy auditor -->.
  Clean the filters at the start of the season, close off unused rooms,
  and use fans to raise the acceptable set point.
- **Water heating**: if you have a solar water heater — most Cypriot homes
  do — service it so the electric immersion element is a backup, not the
  default. Put the immersion switch on a timer instead of leaving it on.
- **Roof insulation**: an uninsulated concrete roof radiates heat into the
  house all evening in summer and leaks it all winter. Insulating it cuts
  both seasons' loads and has been the second pillar of every recent grant
  scheme.
- **Standby and old appliances**: a decade-old fridge, a second fridge on
  the veranda, and always-on electronics quietly add tens of euros per
  bi-monthly bill. Meter the suspects with a €15 plug-in meter before
  replacing anything.
- **Timing**: on Tariff 02, or with solar on the roof, when you run a load
  matters as much as how big it is.

A realistic combined effect: a household that fixes AC set points, water
heating, and standby losses typically trims 15–25% off consumption before
spending anything on hardware. <!-- VERIFY: range against local case studies -->

## Where to check the current numbers

Tariff sheets and fuel adjustment announcements are published by EAC
(eac.com.cy, under Regulated Activities → Supply → Tariffs), grant calls
by the RES and Energy Conservation Fund (resecfund.org.cy), and the
regulatory framework by CERA. Bills are bi-monthly for most households;
compare the same period year-on-year, not consecutive bills, because the
fuel adjustment and the seasons move together.