Swellendam Electricity Tariffs

Current approved Swellendam electricity tariffs for 2026. These rates apply to residential prepaid meters in Western Cape. Use the table below to check your block rates and see if you are being overcharged.

Swellendam Overview

Validated pricing data sourced directly from NERSA.

Increase

10.7

Domestic - Prepaid, Indigent 1 Phase 20A

residential_indigent

prepaid

Charge Breakdown

185.8 c/kWh
Min: 0 Max: 50
238.4 c/kWh
Min: 51 Max: 350
337.8 c/kWh
Min: 351 Max: 600
398.8 c/kWh
Min: 601 Max: 0

Domestic - Normal, Prepaid 1 Phase 0-30A

residential_standard

prepaid

Charge Breakdown

185.8 c/kWh
Min: 0 Max: 50
238.4 c/kWh
Min: 51 Max: 350
337.8 c/kWh
Min: 351 Max: 600
398.8 c/kWh
Min: 601 Max: 0
6.35 R/day
Min: 0 Max: 0

Domestic - Alternative, Prepaid 1 Phase 1-30A

residential_standard

prepaid

Charge Breakdown

302.3 c/kWh
Min: 0 Max: 50
320.8 c/kWh
Min: 51 Max: 350
354.8 c/kWh
Min: 351 Max: 600
377 c/kWh
Min: 601 Max: 0

Domestic - Prepaid 1 Phase 45A

residential_standard

prepaid

Charge Breakdown

185.8 c/kWh
Min: 0 Max: 50
238.4 c/kWh
Min: 51 Max: 350
337.8 c/kWh
Min: 351 Max: 600
361.7 c/kWh
Min: 601 Max: 0
11.62 R/day
Min: 0 Max: 0

Domestic - Prepaid 3 Phase 21-60A

residential_standard

prepaid

Charge Breakdown

185.8 c/kWh
Min: 0 Max: 50
238.4 c/kWh
Min: 51 Max: 350
337.8 c/kWh
Min: 351 Max: 600
361.7 c/kWh
Min: 601 Max: 0
15.69 R/day
Min: 0 Max: 0

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Electricity Tariff FAQs

Common questions about municipal electricity rates and lifeline tariffs.

A lifeline tariff is a special electricity rate designed to support low-income households. In most South African municipalities, if you consume less than a certain threshold (usually 350kWh - 450kWh per month), you qualify for a subsidized rate. This ensures basic electricity needs remain affordable for everyone.

Municipal electricity rates are typically structured into "blocks." As you use more electricity during a calendar month, the price per unit increases. For example, the first 600kWh might be at one rate, and anything above that at a higher rate. These rates are reviewed and approved annually by NERSA (National Energy Regulator of South Africa) and usually take effect on July 1st each year.