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Continuum Energy · Plans & rates

Continuum Energy electricity & gas plans 2026

2 plans currently listed. Editorial snapshot (2026-05) verified against the provider's published rate sheet.

Continuum Energy logo

Continuum Energy

Fixed-Price Natural Gas (California Residential)

Gas
12-month California (SoCalGas, PG&E core-aggregation territories)

Unit rate not published

Rate as of
2026-05
Continuum Energy logo

Continuum Energy

Index-Price Natural Gas (Commercial)

Gas
12-month California, Ohio, Michigan

Unit rate not published

Rate as of
2026-05

Plan availability varies by zip code. The unit rate shown is the electricity-supply or gas-commodity rate only — your utility's delivery (distribution) charge, taxes and state surcharges are billed separately. Always confirm the current rate on Continuum Energy's website with your zip code before enrolling.

How to compare

Compare Continuum plans the right way

  1. 1

    Pull a recent bill

    Find your annual kWh (electricity) or annual therms (gas). The supply portion is what Continuum can change; delivery stays with your utility.

  2. 2

    Get your price-to-compare

    Each utility publishes a default supply rate. Continuum plans must beat this rate (plus monthly fee, if any) to save you money.

  3. 3

    Read the Terms of Service

    Check the contract term, what happens at renewal (often a variable rate) and the early-termination fee. Switching back to the utility is always free.

Common questions about Continuum pricing

Continuum Energy plans — answers

Electricity rates are quoted in cents per kilowatt-hour (¢/kWh); natural gas rates are quoted in dollars per therm (\$/therm). Many plans also have a fixed monthly service fee ($5-$20 is typical) and a contract term (6, 12, 24 or 36 months are most common). Multiply the unit rate by your monthly usage from a recent bill, add the monthly fee, and compare across suppliers and the utility's default price-to-compare for your zip code.

If you leave a fixed-rate plan before the contract end date, most retail suppliers charge a flat ETF of $50-$200 (or $10-$25 per remaining month). The exact figure is in your enrollment letter and Terms of Service. Switching back to the local utility's default supply is always free and never triggers an ETF.

No. Retail-supplier rates cover the energy supply only — generation for electricity, gas commodity for natural gas. Your utility separately bills the delivery (distribution) charge, taxes, and any state surcharges. The total bill is supply + delivery + taxes. Continuum Energy can only change the supply portion; delivery is fixed by your local utility regardless of who supplies your energy.

Fixed-rate plans lock in the unit rate for the contract term (typically 6-36 months). Variable-rate plans can change every billing cycle and are tied to wholesale-market prices — they are usually cheaper at sign-up but can spike during cold snaps or grid stress. Indexed plans follow a published index (e.g. Henry Hub for gas) plus a fixed adder. Always check whether your plan is fixed, variable or indexed in the Terms of Service before enrolling.