Switch now
Lock today's rate before the next utility update.
Two contract concepts most US energy buyers run into — switch now and wait until renewal. Both can sit on the supply line of your bill; the choice changes how exposed you are to the next price spike, how often you renew, and what your average rate looks like over a 24-month window.
Switch now
Lock today's rate before the next utility update.
Wait until renewal
Stay on default; switch later if rates fall.
Side-by-side
How switch now and wait until renewal compare across six dimensions
| Dimension | Switch now | Wait until renewal |
|---|---|---|
| Rate stability | Locked for the whole contract term. | Resets monthly with the wholesale market. |
| Best when | Wholesale prices are rising or volatile. | Wholesale prices have been falling for 6+ months. |
| Average lock window | 12 to 48 months, buyer choice. | No lock — month to month. |
| Renewal cadence | Renew at term end; no auto-rollover surprises. | No renewal; rate is whatever the market sets each cycle. |
| Bill predictability | High — supply line is the same per kWh every month. | Low — winter spikes can double the supply line. |
| Early termination | Some plans charge an ETF; many waive it on residential. | No early-termination concept; you are on the default already. |
Switch now is exactly what it sounds like: Lock today's rate before the next utility update. On a deregulated US supply market — Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas, and a dozen others — this is one of the two shapes the supply line of your bill can take. The wires, the meter, the outage response, and the regulated delivery charges all stay with your utility regardless of which side you pick.
In switch now, the per-kWh rate is set by a fixed contract — you sign for a per-kWh number that does not move for the term. That has knock-on effects for budgeting, renewal cadence, and how exposed you are to the wholesale capacity auctions that drive winter price spikes in PJM territory and the August peaks in ERCOT. Buyers who care about predictability tend to weight switch now more heavily; buyers who actively trade the curve tend the other way.
Note that switch now is not a regulator-set product. It is a contract you sign with a licensed supplier (or stay on with your utility, depending on the kind). The PUC in your state publishes the supplier shelf and average rates; Seenra's job is to make the comparison effortless and to lock the term that fits your renewal calendar.
Wait until renewal works differently: Stay on default; switch later if rates fall. For most US households this is the default state — meaning if you have never opted into an alternative supplier, this is what is on your bill today. For commercial operators it is usually the starting point of a procurement audit, not the ending point.
The price formation under wait until renewal is more dynamic. Variable supply rates reset against the wholesale curve every billing cycle, so a cold week in PJM or a summer peak in ERCOT can show up directly on your bill thirty days later. That dynamism is the feature for some buyers and the bug for others. If you have a fixed lease term, predictable hours, and a CFO who wants the supply line to look like a flat number on the rolling 12-month average, wait until renewal introduces variance you may not want.
One thing that gets glossed over: switching between switch now and wait until renewal is account-level, not infrastructure-level. There is no truck roll, no service interruption, no credit pull on the residential side. The first locked rate kicks in at your next utility meter read, typically 30 to 45 days after submission.
Regardless of which side you pick, the regulated half of your bill — wires, meter, capacity riders, taxes, the provider-of-last-resort fee — stays under your state PUC's tariff. Locking a supply rate does not lock the delivery line. We say so in plain English on every Seenra estimate.
Your outage call still goes to the same utility number. The truck that responds to a downed line is still your utility's truck. If you have a smart-meter dispute, that is still a utility-side conversation. Suppliers, on either side of this comparison, do not own physical infrastructure on US deregulated markets.
Finally: estimated savings shown on this site are averages from Seenra's 2025–2026 book. Actual outcomes vary by ZIP, by load profile, by season, and by the state of the wholesale market the day you lock. We say "could save up to" and "estimated" for that reason.
Common questions
Sources: state Public Utility Commission rate filings, supplier contracts of record, and Seenra's 2025–2026 commercial procurement book (~2,400 accounts re-priced, $14.2M estimated savings). Numbers shown are estimates and never guaranteed; actual results vary by state, utility, contract term, and seasonal usage.
Concept comparison
Fixed-rate plan vs Variable-rate plan
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Utility default supply vs Alternative supplier
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Lock your energy rate
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