If you are a Mason County PUD No. 1 customer and your April electric bill looked a little higher than usual, you are not imagining it. New rates took effect April 1, 2026 — and while the increase is real, the district worked to keep it smaller than it was originally authorized to charge.
What Changed on Your Bill
The two line items that shifted for residential customers:
- Basic monthly charge: $45.86 → $47.26 (an increase of $1.40/month)
- Energy rate: $0.09670 → $0.09960 per kilowatt-hour
The net effect on a typical residential bill is approximately 3.0%. On a household using 800 kWh per month — a reasonable average for a Mason County home — that works out to about $2.65 more per month, or roughly $32 over a full year. Households that run electric heat, well pumps, or other high-draw equipment will see more, proportionally.
Why Did Rates Go Up?
Mason County PUD 1 does not generate its own electricity. Like most public utility districts in Washington State, it purchases wholesale power from the Bonneville Power Administration — the federal agency that markets hydropower from dams on the Columbia River system. In 2026, BPA raised its power rate by 6% and its transmission rate by 11.7%. Those are the costs PUD 1 pays before it can deliver a single kilowatt-hour to your meter.
Utilities that buy from BPA must pass at least some of those cost increases on to customers. What distinguishes Mason County PUD 1’s response is how it managed the local portion: the district’s board had authorized a larger increase, but staff secured a federal emergency management grant that offset a portion of the cost. The result was a 3.0% customer-facing increase rather than the full authorized amount. The difference doesn’t show up as a line item on your bill, but it’s there in what you’re not paying.
Is PUD 1 Expensive Compared to Other Options?
For Mason County residents, PUD 1’s rates remain on the more affordable end of Pacific Northwest electric utilities. Washington State’s mix of hydroelectric power — delivered through BPA — keeps rates across the region lower than the national average, and public utility districts like PUD 1 operate without the shareholder profit requirements of investor-owned utilities. The 3.0% increase reflects external cost pressure from BPA, not district expansion of overhead.
The Water System Work You May Not Have Noticed
While rate changes tend to get attention, PUD 1 also wrapped two significant infrastructure projects this spring. The Manzanita Water Storage Project — a $4.6 million construction effort — and the Arcadia Estates water system upgrade both reached completion around the April 14, 2026 board meeting. If you are in one of those rural service areas along the Hood Canal south shore, more reliable water service is the practical result.
The district also submitted a $5.6 million Congressionally Directed Spending request for the next phase of rural water improvements. If funded, it would extend that infrastructure cycle without requiring a new rate action.
Questions About Your PUD 1 Bill
PUD 1 customer service can be reached at (360) 426-8255, or you can visit the district office at 21971 N. Highway 101, Shelton, WA 98584. If your bill looks significantly higher than the 3.0% increase would explain, it’s worth checking whether there has been a usage change at your property — a new appliance, a water heater cycling more in cold weather, or a seasonal shift in how your home is heated.
Frequently Asked Questions
When did PUD 1 rates increase in 2026?
Mason County PUD No. 1 electric rates increased effective April 1, 2026. The basic monthly charge rose from $45.86 to $47.26, and the energy rate increased from $0.09670 to $0.09960 per kWh — an overall 3.0% increase on a typical residential bill.
Why is the BPA rate increase higher than what I’m seeing on my PUD 1 bill?
BPA raised its rates 6% (power) and 11.7% (transmission) for 2026, but PUD 1 offset some of the local impact by securing a federal emergency management grant. The result was a 3.0% customer-facing increase rather than the full amount the board had authorized. PUD 1 absorbed the difference through that grant funding.
How much more will I pay per year?
At 800 kWh per month, the increase is approximately $2.65/month or about $32/year. Higher-usage households will see more. A home using 1,200 kWh/month would see roughly $4 more per month, or about $48 annually.
Does the water infrastructure work affect electric rates?
No — PUD 1’s water system and electric system have separate rate structures. The Manzanita and Arcadia Estates water project completions are funded through water system capital budgets, not electric rates. The April 1 electric rate change is driven entirely by BPA wholesale power cost increases.
How do I read my PUD 1 bill?
Your PUD 1 bill shows a fixed basic charge (now $47.26/month) plus a variable energy charge based on kWh used (now $0.09960/kWh). Add the two together plus any applicable taxes or fees to get your total. If you are on a water system, that shows as a separate line. Contact PUD 1 at (360) 426-8255 if you have questions about specific charges.
For the full story on PUD 1’s infrastructure projects and how the rate was kept below authorized levels, see Mason County PUD 1 Wraps Major Water Projects, New Rates Take Effect April 1. For Mason County property owners with questions about infrastructure and taxes, see Mason County Property Tax Deadline April 30, 2026: Payment Options and What Happens If You’re Late.

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