What just happened
PJM's July 2024 capacity auction set prices for the June 2026 through May 2027 delivery year. The auction cleared at $329.17/MW-day — the market price cap, the ceiling the auction can't exceed under PJM rules. The prior year cleared at $269.92/MW-day. Two years before that, it cleared at $28.92/MW-day.
In two auctions, capacity prices have climbed roughly 11×. With the most recent auction at the cap and structural drivers unchanged, analysts widely expect the next auction (clearing in mid-2025, for the 2027–2028 delivery year) to clear at the cap again.
Why prices are at the cap
The auction outcome reflects long-term market pressure, not a single shock. Four drivers compound:
Tightening supply
Accelerated retirements of coal and nuclear plants are outpacing new capacity additions, creating a structural supply gap. New solar, wind, and battery storage are being built — but they provide capacity differently than thermal generation, and net capacity additions aren't keeping pace with retirements.
Rapid demand growth
Expanding data center development (especially in PJM's Virginia load zone), industrial electrification, and regional economic growth are driving record peak load forecasts. For the first time in over a decade, demand is climbing — see our grid reliability piece for the full picture.
Higher reserve margin requirements
PJM is maintaining higher reserve margins to safeguard against extreme weather and grid stress events. FERC-approved rule changes have tightened the required quantity of capacity — same available supply, higher required quantity, higher price.
Fuel and policy risk
Uncertainty around fuel delivery (especially natural gas during winter peaks) combined with policy shifts is raising the risk premium generators bid into the auction. The result: even ample generation gets priced at a higher capacity premium than it would in a calmer policy environment.
What this means for your 2026 bill
If your utility bill lists capacity as a separate line item, you can expect roughly a 22% increase in that portion of your charges for the June 2026 to May 2027 delivery year. The dollar impact depends on your capacity tag — your peak demand contribution measured during PJM's 5 highest summer afternoon peaks (the 5CP).
For concrete sizing: a 5 MW facility with a typical capacity tag may have been paying roughly $250K annually in capacity charges. The same facility, same tag, will see that line climb closer to $305–325K for the 2026/27 delivery year — an increase of $55–75K per year on the capacity component alone. Larger facilities scale proportionally.
Even if your energy commodity rate is already locked in, the capacity charge is a separate pass-through. The locked rate doesn't protect you from the capacity increase. Budgets built around historical capacity numbers will miss; budgets that decompose by component will catch this in time to respond.
What's still in your control
Three categories of action change the capacity bill, even with prices at the cap:
1. Capacity tag management
Your tag is set by your load during a small number of system peak hours. In PJM, that's the 5 highest summer afternoon peaks. Reducing load during those specific hours reduces your tag for the next 12 months. The challenge is forecasting which hours will be the 5CP — that requires weather monitoring, regional load forecasting, and operational coordination. With reliable forecasting, capacity tag reductions of 15–25% year over year are achievable for facilities with operational flexibility.
2. Demand response enrollment
DR programs pay you to reduce load during grid emergencies. Revenue varies by market, but for industrial facilities with operational flexibility, DR can offset 30–50% of capacity charges. Worth running the analysis even for facilities that think they can't reduce load — partial reductions often qualify, and the operational coordination required for DR is similar to what you'd need for tag management anyway.
3. Procurement structure
How capacity is passed through in your supplier contract matters. Some suppliers pass through at cost (clean and verifiable). Others mark up. Others bundle capacity into a fixed all-in rate that hides the cost component but typically includes the supplier's hedge premium on top. Knowing what you're signing changes both your effective capacity cost and your visibility into what's actually driving bill changes.
What's coming
Most analysts expect capacity prices to remain at or near the cap through 2027–2028. Reforms are happening — PJM Fast-Track (RRI) accelerates ~10 GW of new supply by ~18 months, surplus interconnection processes are expanding, and broader queue reform is in motion — but the demand growth is outpacing the supply response in the near term.
The structural shift won't reverse on the timeline that matters for your 2026 budget. Plan around it.
$329.17/MW-day
PJM auction clearing price for 2026/27 — at the market price cap, up 22% YoY and ~11× the 2024/25 clearing price
Bottom Line
The 22% jump in PJM capacity prices is locked in. Its impact on your bottom line isn't. Capacity tag management, demand response enrollment, and peak-aware procurement are the three pathways that change the bill — even at the price cap. Budgets that decompose energy spend by component (commodity, capacity, T&D) will catch this in time to respond. Budgets that treat energy as one line will explain the variance after the fact.