PG&E Bills Are Too Complex to Verify Even for Mathematically Sophisticated Customers
PG&E's combination of time-of-use rates, daily changing fees, and NEM 3.0 solar rules makes electricity bills impossible to independently verify. This opacity benefits the utility at the expense of consumer trust and accuracy.
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Similar Problems
surfaced semanticallySCE Doubles Electricity Bills and Shuts Off Power Without Compensating Businesses for Lost Revenue
Southern California Edison has doubled residential and business electricity rates while conducting uncompensated power shutoffs that prevent businesses from operating. The monopoly status means customers and businesses have no alternatives and no leverage.
Utility billing system errors steal hours of customer time with no self-service fix
PG&E's internal billing errors require customers to spend hours on calls to resolve problems the utility created. No self-service resolution path exists for billing disputes — all corrections require phone support. Customers absorb the time cost of fixing the company's own system mistakes, with no compensation or acknowledgment.
PG&E Tiered Pricing Makes Basic Home Heating Unaffordable for Low-Income Families
PG&E's tiered gas pricing structure sets daily baseline allotments so low that heating even a small home exceeds the lower-cost tier, making basic comfort unaffordable. As a regulated monopoly, consumers have no provider alternative.
PG&E Website Has Slow Auth, Broken Links, and Unusable Account Management
PG&E's customer portal has authentication delays, broken navigation links, and an overall design that makes account management unnecessarily difficult. The poor digital experience compounds customer frustration with high rates.
Utilities demand unscheduled home access for installations with no appointment system
PG&E requires homeowners to leave gates open and dogs secured for smart meter or switch installations that happen at no specified time. The utility offers no appointment scheduling, forcing customers to forfeit entire days waiting for technicians who may not arrive. As a monopoly provider, PG&E faces no competitive pressure to offer the scheduling convenience standard in other service industries.
Problem descriptions, scores, analysis, and solution blueprints may be updated as new community data becomes available.