Built for Maine homeowners

Your electric bill should not feel like a surprise every month.

If you live in Maine and your CMP or Versant bill keeps getting harder to predict, you are not imagining it. Rate changes, delivery charges, supply adjustments, and approved utility increases have been stacking up — and most homeowners are left trying to understand it after the bill already changed.

This review was built to help you understand what is happening, what it could mean over time, and whether solar may give your home a more predictable path forward.

Built from real Maine rate updates, public utility sources, local headlines, and simple examples that help homeowners understand what rising electric costs could mean over time.

Current Versant Rate: $0.33/kWh
Current CMP Rate: $0.30/kWh
What’s your Solar Rate? ?

A home-specific review can show whether solar makes sense for your roof, usage, current bill, and long-term budget.

The problem

The hard part is not just that electric bills are high. It is that homeowners have no control over what happens next.

A bill can feel manageable one year and completely different the next. Supply rates change. Delivery charges change. Transmission costs change. New approvals get passed through. And by the time most families notice the impact, it is already built into the monthly bill.

The risk is simple: most homeowners are not given a warning early enough to plan. They open the bill, feel the increase, and have to find room for it in a budget that is already carrying groceries, insurance, vehicles, taxes, heating, and everything else.

What has been happening in Maine

The headlines show a pattern homeowners can no longer ignore.

Recent CMP and Versant updates show how quickly the conversation can change from one rate notice to the next. A single increase may feel manageable. Repeated increases over time can become the kind of household expense that forces families to rethink the path they are on.

Headline about CMP customers seeing a nearly 20 percent increase in electricity supply rates.
CMP supply-rate headline for 2026.
Versant public rate update notice.
Versant public rate-change notice.
The shift

At some point, the question becomes personal.

It is no longer only, “Why did my bill go up?”

It becomes, “How much control do I actually have over this long term — and what happens if I keep waiting?”

Most homeowners do not look into solar because they love solar panels. They look into it because the electric bill stopped feeling predictable.

Stay fully exposed

Keep paying the utility bill as rates, delivery charges, and supply costs change over time.

Build a more predictable plan

Review whether solar can reduce your dependence on the utility and give your home more long-term control.

Simple cost-path examples

See what staying on the utility path could look like over time.

The CMP and Versant pages include simple sliders that show how electricity costs can change over a 5–25 year period. These are examples only — not a quote. The real next step is reviewing your actual bill, usage, roof, and eligibility with someone who can walk you through the numbers.

Your home review

You do not need to guess what this means for your home.

Every home is different. A quick review can help you understand your usage, your roof, your current bill, and whether a more predictable solar plan may make sense before more increases become part of your monthly budget.