Start evaluating options 6–12 months before your contract expires. Waiting until the last minute is the single most expensive mistake in energy procurement—it eliminates leverage, limits options, and almost always results in paying more than necessary.
If you miss your renewal window or start too late, several things happen: your supplier may auto-renew at a higher rate, you lose the ability to run a competitive process, and you’re forced to accept whatever the market offers on the day you decide. Starting early doesn’t mean deciding early—it means giving yourself time to act when conditions are favorable.
|
When |
What to Do |
Why |
|
12 months out |
Review contract terms. Note expiration, auto-renewal clauses, and notice windows. Pull usage data. |
Know your deadlines and your baseline. |
|
9–10 months out |
Engage an advisor. Assess load profile, risk tolerance, and operational changes. |
Your needs may have shifted since the last contract. |
|
6–9 months out |
Run a competitive RFP across multiple suppliers. Monitor forward curves. |
Competition drives better pricing and reveals available products. |
|
3–6 months out |
Begin executing hedges. Negotiate final terms. |
Market monitoring becomes locked-in savings. |
|
1–3 months out |
Finalize, sign, and complete enrollment paperwork. |
Late paperwork can push you onto default rates. |
Price per kWh gets all the attention, but these factors matter just as much:
Contract expiration is a planning trigger, not a deadline. Starting 6–12 months early gives you time to create competition, monitor the market, and execute a strategy that reflects your actual needs. The best deals go to the buyers who planned earliest, not the ones who negotiated hardest at the last minute.
When should I start planning for energy contract renewal?
Start 6–12 months before expiration. This gives you time to assess your load, run a competitive RFP, and hedge strategically without being rushed.
What happens if my contract expires without a new one?
You’ll typically roll onto a default service rate or holdover provision—both significantly more expensive than a negotiated contract. Some contracts auto-renew at unfavorable rates.
Should I stay with my current supplier or switch?
Run a competitive process to find out. Your current supplier may be competitive, but you won’t know without comparison. Even if you stay, bids give you leverage.
Don’t wait until your contract expires.
Connect with Pilot Energy today to review your options and build a smarter energy strategy for the future.
Schedule a consultation
Ready to see how your energy strategy stacks up?
👉 Take the Energy Readiness Assessment
👉 Request a Consultation or Discovery Call
About Pilot Energy
Pilot is an energy advisory and procurement partner helping businesses manage rising energy costs with confidence and clarity. Founded in 2001, we provide independent, data-driven strategies for energy procurement, energy risk management, utility cost reduction, and long-term commercial energy savings.
We work closely with finance, operations, and sustainability teams to create custom energy roadmaps, aligning energy procurement, forecasting, and carbon reduction goals. With a blend of market expertise and digital platforms, we help you reduce volatility, improve budget predictability, and plan smarter in any market.
Schedule a complementary energy assessment and a no-cost utility bill review with Pilot Energy today and start building a smarter energy strategy.