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Understanding Your CFE Electricity Bill in Mérida: A 2026 Cost Guide

Everything expats need to know about CFE electricity in Mérida — tariffs, the dreaded DAC high-consumption tier, how solar can help, and practical ways to slash your bill.

2026-07-07

Solar panels on a rooftop under a bright blue sky

The One Utility Bill That Shocks New Residents

Almost everything about the cost of living in Mérida delights newcomers — until the first serious electricity bill arrives. In a city where summer temperatures routinely climb past 38°C and air conditioning runs for months, the CFE (Comisión Federal de Electricidad) bill is the single expense most likely to catch expats off guard. Understand how it works, and you can keep it under control. Ignore it, and you can end up paying more for power in Yucatán than you did back home.

Here’s the complete picture for 2026.

How CFE Billing Works

CFE bills most residential customers every two months (bimonthly). Your rate depends on a tariff assigned to your region and consumption level. In hot Yucatán, most homes fall under a subsidized summer tariff (historically Tarifa 1C or 1D), which grants a higher subsidized-consumption allowance during the hottest months precisely because everyone runs AC.

The structure is tiered and escalating:

  • Basic tier (básico): the cheapest kilowatt-hours, heavily subsidized.
  • Intermediate tier (intermedio): a higher rate once you exceed the basic allowance.
  • Excess tier (excedente): the most expensive subsidized rate, just before the cliff.

Stay within your subsidized allowance and electricity in Mérida is genuinely cheap. Cross the line consistently, and you fall off a financial cliff called the DAC.

The DAC: The Tier You Must Avoid

DAC stands for Tarifa Doméstica de Alto Consumo — the High-Consumption Domestic Tariff. This is the tier that ruins budgets.

Here’s how it works: CFE calculates a rolling average of your consumption. If your average over the trailing period exceeds a regional threshold (in the hot Yucatán tariff, this is a relatively generous allowance, but heavy AC use blows past it), CFE strips your subsidy entirely and moves you to DAC.

Under DAC:

  • The per-kWh rate roughly doubles or more, because the government subsidy vanishes.
  • You stay on DAC until your rolling average drops back below the threshold — which can take several billing cycles of disciplined consumption.
  • A large air-conditioned home on DAC can see bills of 4,000–10,000+ MXN per two-month cycle, versus a few hundred to a couple thousand pesos while subsidized.

The lesson: treat the DAC threshold as a hard ceiling. Falling into it is expensive and slow to escape.

Typical Bills: What to Expect

Rough real-world ranges for Mérida homes in 2026 (bimonthly):

  • Small apartment, minimal AC: 300–800 MXN
  • Modest home, moderate AC use: 1,000–2,500 MXN
  • Larger home, heavy AC, subsidized: 2,500–4,000 MXN
  • Larger home on DAC: 5,000–12,000 MXN or more

The variable that dominates everything is air conditioning.

Practical Ways to Slash Your Bill

You have far more control than you think:

  • Set AC thermostats to 24–25°C, not 20°C. Each degree lower dramatically increases consumption.
  • Choose inverter (inverter) mini-split AC units. They use a fraction of the power of older on/off units. If you’re buying or renting, ask what type is installed.
  • Cool only occupied rooms. Close doors, use zoned AC, and rely on ceiling fans, which cost pennies to run.
  • Insulate and shade. Reflective roof coatings, thermal window film, and closing curtains during peak sun cut heat load substantially.
  • Switch to LED lighting and unplug phantom loads.
  • Run heavy appliances thoughtfully and consider a solar water heater — sunshine is free here.
  • Monitor your consumption between bills; some residents install a simple energy monitor to catch DAC creep before it happens.

Solar: The Game-Changer in Sunny Yucatán

Yucatán gets abundant, reliable sunshine, which makes residential solar one of the smartest investments for anyone planning to stay.

Under CFE’s net-metering (net metering / interconnection) arrangements, a grid-tied solar system lets you offset your consumption and bank surplus generation against future bills. A properly sized system can bring a heavy-AC household’s bill close to zero — and, critically, keep you permanently off the DAC.

A typical residential solar installation in Mérida runs roughly 60,000–150,000 MXN depending on size and quality, with payback periods often in the 3–6 year range for high-consumption homes. For anyone facing recurring DAC bills, the math is compelling. Use a reputable, certified installer and confirm the CFE interconnection is handled properly.

The Bottom Line

Electricity is the one Mérida expense that rewards attention. Understand the tiered tariff, respect the DAC threshold like a hard line, choose efficient inverter AC, and — if you’re staying for the long haul — seriously consider solar. Do that, and you’ll enjoy cool, comfortable Yucatán living without the bill-shock stories you’ll inevitably hear from neighbors who learned the hard way.


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