Spanish Energy Suppliers Quietly Increase Potencia Charges While Electricity Prices Stay Stable
June 2026

Over the last few weeks, we have noticed a clear shift in the Spanish electricity market.
While many suppliers have kept their advertised electricity price per kWh relatively stable, several have quietly increased their potencia charges, especially the traditionally cheaper P2 power period.
For many households, this means the annual electricity bill can rise even if the home uses exactly the same amount of electricity as before.
At weSwitchSpain, we monitor tariff changes closely, and this is one of the clearest trends we have seen recently.
Don't let hidden potencia increases catch you by surprise
Use our free comparison tool to see if you can switch to a better deal today.
Compare Tariffs NowWhat is potencia?
Spanish electricity bills are made up of two main parts.
Energy consumption
This is the electricity you actually use, measured in kWh.
If you use more electricity, this part of the bill increases.
Potencia
This is the fixed daily charge you pay for the amount of power you have contracted.
Think of it as the fee you pay to reserve capacity from the electricity grid.
You pay this every day, whether you use electricity or not.
Most Spanish homes have two potencia periods:
| Period | Meaning |
|---|---|
| P1 | Peak power period |
| P2 | Off-peak power period, usually nights, weekends and national holidays |
Traditionally, P2 has been cheaper than P1.
What has changed?
Until a few weeks ago, many free-market fixed tariffs were commonly charging around:
| Potencia Period | Typical Fixed Tariff Pricing Until Recently |
|---|---|
| P1 | €0.087/kW/day |
| P2 | €0.056/kW/day |
P2 was not as low as the regulated PVPC-style charges, but it was still meaningfully cheaper than P1.
Now, we are seeing some suppliers move towards parity between the two periods.
| Potencia Period | Recent Fixed Tariff Example |
|---|---|
| P1 | €0.093/kW/day |
| P2 | €0.093/kW/day |
This may not look dramatic at first glance, but the effect is important.
In this example:
| Potencia Period | Old Example | New Example | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| P1 | €0.087 | €0.093 | +6.9% |
| P2 | €0.056 | €0.093 | +66.1% |
The big change is not the P1 increase.
The big change is that the cheaper P2 period has almost disappeared.
Why does this matter?
Most consumers compare electricity tariffs by looking at the cost per kWh.
That is understandable, because it is usually the headline price shown in adverts.
But potencia is different.
Potencia is a fixed charge.
You pay it every day, whether you use electricity or not.
That means you cannot reduce this part of the bill simply by switching off lights, using appliances less, or being more careful with consumption.
The higher your contracted power, the more you feel the increase.
This particularly affects:
- Villas and larger homes
- Homes with electric heating
- Homes with air conditioning
- Properties with pool pumps
- Homes with EV chargers
- Solar homes with higher contracted power
- Any property with 5.75 kW, 6.9 kW, 8.05 kW, 9.2 kW or more contracted
Example: Home with 4.7 kW and 4,000 kWh per year
Let’s look at a typical Spanish home using:
- 4.7 kW contracted power
- 4,000 kWh annual consumption
- Energy price remaining stable at €0.12/kWh
Annual cost comparison
| Cost Component | Previous Fixed Tariff Example | Recent Fixed Tariff Example |
|---|---|---|
| Energy: 4,000 kWh at €0.12/kWh | €480.00 | €480.00 |
| Potencia P1 | €149.25 | €159.58 |
| Potencia P2 | €96.07 | €159.58 |
| Total Annual Cost | €725.32 | €799.16 |
Net effect
| Impact | Amount |
|---|---|
| Extra annual cost | €73.84 |
| Increase in annual bill | 10.2% |
| Extra cost caused by higher kWh price | €0.00 |
| Extra cost caused by potencia | €73.84 |
The household has not used more electricity.
The energy price has not increased.
The rise comes entirely from the fixed potencia charges.
The effect is worse for homes with higher contracted power
A home with 4.7 kW may see an increase of around €74 per year in the example above.
But larger properties can be hit much harder.
| Contracted Power | Approx. Annual Increase From This Potencia Change |
|---|---|
| 3.45 kW | €54 |
| 4.7 kW | €74 |
| 5.75 kW | €90 |
| 6.9 kW | €108 |
| 8.05 kW | €126 |
| 9.2 kW | €145 |
| 13.8 kW | €217 |
This is why potencia matters.
A small-looking daily charge becomes a meaningful annual cost.
Why PVPC and indexed tariffs are different
PVPC and indexed-style tariffs work differently from most traditional fixed tariffs.
On many fixed tariffs, the supplier builds its margin into the tariff itself. This can include:
- The energy price
- The P1 potencia charge
- The P2 potencia charge
With PVPC and indexed-style tariffs, the potencia charges are usually much closer to the regulated amounts published through the BOE.
These regulated charges are limited by regulation, which is why the power costs can be much lower.
For example, a PVPC-style structure may show charges closer to:
| Potencia Period | Regulated / PVPC-Style Example |
|---|---|
| P1 | €0.076/kW/day |
| P2 | €0.002/kW/day |
These figures are not typical free-market fixed tariff prices.
They are much lower because they are linked to regulated charges.
Indexed tariffs usually have a monthly fee
This does not mean indexed tariffs are free of supplier margin.
The difference is how the supplier earns that margin.
Instead of adding large margins into the potencia charges, indexed suppliers usually charge a visible monthly management fee.
Typical examples include:
| Indexed Tariff Type | Typical Monthly Fee |
|---|---|
| Octopus Flexi | €3.75/month |
| Other indexed suppliers | Around €5-€7/month |
So the correct comparison is not simply:
"Which tariff has the lowest potencia?"
The correct comparison is:
"Which tariff has the lowest total annual cost once energy, potencia and monthly fees are all included?"
In many cases, even after adding the monthly fee, an indexed tariff can still work out cheaper than a fixed tariff that has increased P2 potencia heavily.
Example including an indexed-style tariff
Using the same home:
- 4.7 kW contracted power
- 4,000 kWh annual usage
- €0.12/kWh energy price for comparison
- €3.75/month management fee
| Cost Component | Recent Fixed Tariff Example | Indexed / Flexi-Style Example |
|---|---|---|
| Energy: 4,000 kWh at €0.12/kWh | €480.00 | €480.00 |
| Potencia P1 | €159.58 | €130.38 |
| Potencia P2 | €159.58 | €3.43 |
| Monthly fee | €0.00 | €45.00 |
| Total Annual Cost | €799.16 | €658.81 |
In this example, the indexed-style tariff is still around €140 per year cheaper, even after including the monthly fee.
This is why it is important to compare the complete annual cost, not just the advertised kWh price.
Already on a fixed tariff? You may be protected for now
If you recently signed up to a fixed-price electricity tariff, you may be protected until the end of your fixed contract term.
Many fixed tariffs in Spain protect the agreed prices for 12 months from the signup date.
That means if you joined before these recent potencia increases, you may still be paying the older, lower rates.
In that case, you may be lucky, for now.
However, this protection usually only lasts until the tariff renewal date.
Check your bill for the end date
It is worth checking your latest electricity bill to see when your current tariff ends or renews.
Look for sections called:
You should also check the actual potencia prices shown on the bill.
Look for:
If your P2 potencia is still much lower than P1, you may currently be on an older or better-protected deal.
If your renewal is soon, expect a possible increase
If your fixed tariff renewal date is approaching, you should pay close attention.
Many suppliers are now offering higher potencia charges than they were only a few weeks ago.
This means customers coming to the end of a fixed-price deal may see a rise at renewal, even if the advertised energy price per kWh does not change much.
The increase may appear quietly in the fixed charges rather than in the energy price.
Automatic renewal is normal in Spain
Many electricity contracts in Spain renew automatically.
In practice, this usually means:
- The customer remains supplied without interruption
- The contract rolls onto the supplier’s current conditions
- The new prices may apply from the renewal date
- Many customers only notice after receiving a bill with the new rates
Consumers often expect a clear warning letter, but in many cases renewal information may be included in routine communications, emails, online account notices or bill text.
This means it can easily be missed.
The safest approach is to check your tariff before the renewal date, not after.
Why solar homes need to be careful
Solar households often focus heavily on:
- Import price
- Export compensation
- Virtual battery or solar wallet
- Daytime energy cost
These are important, but they are not the whole picture.
Some solar tariffs offer attractive export compensation but charge higher import prices or higher potencia.
If a household has high contracted power, the extra standing charges can reduce or even wipe out the benefit of better solar export compensation.
For solar homes, the best tariff depends on the whole calculation:
- Annual import
- Annual export
- Export compensation
- Battery usage
- Potencia P1
- Potencia P2
- Monthly fees
- Whether solar paperwork is fully registered
What consumers should compare
Before switching, do not compare only the headline kWh price.
Always compare:
| Item | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Energy price | This affects what you pay for consumption |
| Potencia P1 | Fixed daily charge for contracted power |
| Potencia P2 | Traditionally cheaper, but now rising on some tariffs |
| Monthly management fee | Common on indexed tariffs |
| Contract length | Often 12 months on fixed tariffs |
| Renewal date | New prices may apply after renewal |
| Exit penalties | Some tariffs have permanence, many do not |
| Solar export rate | Important for registered solar owners |
| Virtual battery terms | Not all solar credits work the same way |
The bottom line
Over the last few weeks, we have seen Spanish energy suppliers quietly increase potencia charges, especially the P2 period that has traditionally been cheaper.
In many cases, the cost per kWh has remained stable, which makes the tariff look competitive at first glance.
But the full annual cost can still rise.
For a home with 4.7 kW contracted power and 4,000 kWh annual usage, the example above shows an increase of around €74 per year without using a single extra kWh of electricity.
For larger homes, the increase can be much higher.
If you are already on a fixed tariff, check your bill. You may be protected until your 12-month renewal date.
If your renewal is coming soon, expect the possibility of higher standing charges.
At weSwitchSpain, we compare the full annual cost of each tariff, including energy, potencia, management fees and solar conditions where relevant.
The cheapest tariff is not always the one with the lowest advertised kWh price.
Increasingly, the real difference is hidden in the fixed charges.
Don't let hidden potencia increases catch you by surprise
Use our free comparison tool to see if you can switch to a better deal today.
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