TX

State

Texas

7

Major utilities

Investor-owned, municipal & coop

20

Cities covered

Live local pages for Texas cities

911

Emergency

Downed wires, fire, injury

Power outage near me in Texas: live map by zip code

The Texas map below is zoomed to state level. Use the zoom controls to drill down to your zip code — the map covers every Texas zip code with reports submitted in the past few hours. Each red marker is an outage cluster; click it for the start time, report count and affected radius.

Want a tighter view? Pick your city below — the city page opens the map centered on that city at neighborhood zoom, so “power outage near me right now by zip code” becomes one tap of the marker cluster.

Active outages in Texas
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Source: user reports · CallMePower

Latest power outage updates in Texas

The 7 Texas utilities publish their own outage maps with crew-verified estimated restoration times (ETRs). For the most accurate ETR for your address, use the official map directly:

Below is the community feed — the most recent reports submitted by Texas residents. For real-time alerts to your phone, opt in to your utility’s SMS or app notifications.

Active power outages right now

The most recent active outages reported across the USA.

No active power outages reported right now. Report an outage if your lights just went out.

Data is based on user reports. Only active outages are shown. The confidence score is derived from the number of reports and their geographic proximity. For verified information, check your utility’s official outage map.

Report an outage in Texas

Use the form below to log your outage on the live map. Reports are submitted anonymously and help neighbors see where outages are happening. This does not dispatch a crew — for that, call your utility directly using the contact list below.

Your outage report was submitted. Thank you for helping your neighbors!

Reports are submitted anonymously and help other residents see where outages are happening. For official outage reporting, also contact your utility directly — only they can dispatch a crew.

Who to call for a power outage in Texas

Texas is served by the following utilities. Find the one that covers your address and use their dedicated outage line — not the customer-service number. Most also offer SMS or app-based reporting; check the utility’s page for instructions.

Oncor Electric Delivery

North and West Texas TDU — Dallas, Fort Worth, Arlington, Waco, Midland, Odessa, Tyler, Killeen.

CenterPoint Energy

Greater Houston Gulf Coast TDU — Houston, Sugar Land, Pasadena, Pearland, Katy, Galveston.

AEP Texas

South and West Texas TDU — Corpus Christi, Laredo, Abilene, San Angelo, McAllen, Brownsville.

Texas-New Mexico Power (TNMP)

Pockets statewide TDU — League City, Texas City, Lewisville, Pecos, Fort Stockton.

Austin Energy

Austin municipal utility.

CPS Energy

San Antonio and Bexar County municipal utility.

Texas Electric Cooperatives

75 distribution cooperatives across rural Texas.

Are you eligible for compensation in Texas?

Texas framework: Case-by-case

No automatic compensation. Claims go directly to the TDU (Oncor, CenterPoint, AEP Texas, TNMP). The Texas PUC has oversight if claims are denied. After the Feb 2021 winter storm event, several class-action cases were filed.

Are you eligible right now?

File a claim with your TDU (not your REP) within 30 days. PUC complaint available if denied. Hurricane Beryl and ice-storm class actions are precedent.

How to file:

  1. Document the outage: start time, end time, photos of spoiled food and damaged appliances, receipts for replacement purchases.
  2. Go to your utility’s claims page (linked above in the “who to call” section) and submit within 30–60 days.
  3. If your claim is denied or stalls, file a consumer complaint with the Texas Public Utility Commission — they have authority over the utility.
  4. For damages from a federally declared disaster, also check disasterassistance.gov for FEMA Individual Assistance.

Renters: a standalone food spoilage benefit in your HO-4 policy (typically $500–$1,000, no deductible) may cover what your utility won’t. See the renters insurance breakdown.