Most PG&E customers assume their bill is accurate. They open it, wince at the total, and pay it. But PG&E processes millions of bills per month across a complex metering infrastructure, and errors happen — some small, some substantial.
We've analyzed thousands of PG&E bills at BrightBill. Billing errors show up in roughly 1 in 8 bills we review. The most common errors aren't obvious — they don't announce themselves as mistakes. They look like a normal bill, just with a subtly wrong number buried inside.
This guide explains the most common types of PG&E billing errors, how to identify them yourself, and exactly what to do when you find one.
Why PG&E Billing Errors Happen
PG&E's billing system is the product of decades of infrastructure layered on top of each other. Smart meters communicate wirelessly to aggregation points. Aggregation points transmit to PG&E's billing database. The billing database applies rate schedules, baseline allocations, and any applicable credits. One failed transmission, one data processing error, or one incorrect configuration can produce a bill that looks plausible but charges you the wrong amount.
The five most common sources of billing errors:
- Meter misreads — the meter reports incorrect usage, either because of a hardware malfunction, failed wireless transmission, or manual read error
- Wrong rate plan assignment — you're being charged under E-TOU-C when you should be on EV-2A, or your plan was changed without your knowledge
- Baseline territory errors — your account is assigned to the wrong climate zone, affecting how much electricity you get at the lower Tier 1 baseline rate
- Double charges — certain fees (public purpose programs, generation surcharges) appear more than once due to processing glitches
- CCA/MCE generation charge errors — if you're a Marin Clean Energy or Peninsula Clean Energy customer, the split billing between MCE/PCE (generation) and PG&E (delivery) creates opportunities for duplication or miscalculation
None of these errors are unique to struggling customers or old equipment. We've found billing errors on accounts with new smart meters and customers who've had PG&E service for 20+ years.
Type 1: Meter Misread Errors
Your smart meter transmits your hourly usage data wirelessly to PG&E. Most of the time this works fine. When it doesn't, PG&E uses an estimated read — a projection based on prior months' usage. Estimated reads are marked on your bill with an "E" next to the usage figure.
The problem with estimated reads: If your actual usage is significantly different from the estimate — because you installed solar, got a new EV, went on vacation for 3 weeks, or the weather was unusual — the estimate can be wildly off. PG&E reconciles estimated reads when the meter is read accurately the next month, but that catch-up can result in a sudden spike that surprises customers.
How to spot it
Look for the letter "E" on your bill next to meter readings. It appears in the electric charges section, typically labeled "Estimated Read" in the usage detail. An estimated read is not automatically an error — but if you see multiple consecutive estimated reads, or if the usage figure seems wrong for the period, investigate.
Compare against Green Button data: Log in to pge.com → My Energy → Green Button → Export data. This gives you your raw interval meter data (15-minute or hourly readings). If the billed usage significantly diverges from the Green Button export for the same period, you have evidence of a meter read discrepancy.
What hardware malfunctions look like
Smart meter malfunctions are less common but more expensive when they occur. A malfunctioning meter can register usage at the wrong rate — often reading high, sometimes for months before the customer notices.
The clearest signal: a sudden unexplained spike in kWh usage with no corresponding change in your behavior or household. If your bill jumps 40% month-over-month in a month with similar weather and no new appliances, request a meter test.
Type 2: Wrong Rate Plan
This is the most expensive category of billing error, and the most insidious — because being on the wrong rate plan looks like a normal bill.
PG&E assigns most residential customers to E-TOU-C by default. If you've never changed your rate plan, you're probably on E-TOU-C. That may or may not be the optimal plan for your usage — but it's not an error.
The errors happen when:
- You requested a rate plan switch and it wasn't processed — the switch window passed without PG&E acting on your request, and you're still being billed on the old plan
- You moved and your rate plan didn't transfer correctly — new accounts are sometimes assigned to a plan that doesn't match what you had at your previous address
- PG&E changed your plan without notice — this happens sometimes when plans are discontinued or restructured; affected customers are supposed to receive advance notice, but some fall through the cracks
- You enrolled in a rate plan as part of a program that ended — demand response programs and pilot TOU schedules can expire, and if your account isn't re-enrolled in a standard plan correctly, the billing may be wrong
How to spot it
Check your rate plan on every bill. It's listed in the electric charges section — look for text like "E-TOU-C" or "EV-2A" near the top of the charge breakdown. Compare it against what you expect to be enrolled in.
If you've ever requested a rate plan change, pull your account history on pge.com → My Account → Billing & Payment → Billing History. Your rate plan change should appear as an account notification dated around when you requested it. If it's not there, the switch may not have gone through.
For context on which rate plans are available and which is right for your usage, see our guide: PG&E Rate Plans Compared — Which One Saves You the Most?
Type 3: Baseline Territory Error
PG&E uses baseline territories to determine how much electricity you get at the lower Tier 1 rate. California's climate zones mean a home in Fresno gets a different baseline allocation than a home in San Francisco — heating and cooling needs differ significantly.
If your account is assigned to the wrong baseline territory, you either:
- Get less Tier 1 electricity than you're entitled to (paying more)
- Get more Tier 1 electricity than you should (paying less — until PG&E catches the error and back-bills you)
The first scenario is more common and more financially damaging.
How to spot it
Your baseline territory appears on your bill. Find the line that reads something like: "Baseline Territory: P" or "Baseline Territory: X". Cross-reference that against PG&E's baseline territory map at pge.com/mybill → Rates & Tariffs → Residential Baseline Allowance. If the territory doesn't match your actual zip code/climate zone, you have an error.
Baseline territory errors are most common after:
- Moving to a new address
- PG&E system migrations (they've had several over the past decade)
- Account merges or splits
Type 4: Double Charges and Duplicate Line Items
This category is rarer but more obvious when it occurs. PG&E bills include several mandatory charges beyond the energy itself: public purpose programs (PPP), nuclear decommissioning, transmission charges, distribution charges. Each has a specific calculation method.
A double charge occurs when one of these line items appears twice, or when a surcharge is applied at two different points in the bill calculation. These errors typically result from:
- System processing glitches during billing cycles
- Manual billing corrections that weren't properly applied
- Rate schedule updates applied mid-cycle in the wrong sequence
How to spot it
Compare your current bill's line items against your prior month's bill. Major charges (PPP surcharge, transmission surcharge, nuclear decommissioning) should be similar in structure and roughly proportional to your usage. If you see the same fee category appearing twice in a single bill, or if one line item is dramatically higher than the prior month with no corresponding usage change, flag it for review.
Type 5: MCE / CCA Generation Charge Errors
If you live in a county served by Marin Clean Energy (MCE), Peninsula Clean Energy (PCE), or another Community Choice Aggregation (CCA) provider, your bill is more complex than a standard PG&E bill — and more prone to error.
The way CCA billing works: your CCA (MCE, PCE, etc.) is responsible for the generation portion of your electricity cost. PG&E handles the delivery portion. Both charges appear on your PG&E bill, with the CCA charges noted separately.
Common CCA billing errors:
- CCA charge applied when you opted out — if you opted out of your local CCA but the opt-out wasn't processed, you continue to be billed at CCA rates (which may be higher or lower than PG&E's generation rates)
- Both CCA generation and PG&E generation charged in the same billing period — this is the most costly error; you pay for generation twice
- Wrong CCA rate tier applied — MCE offers different service levels (Light Green, Deep Green, Local Sol) at different rates; if your enrollment tier is wrong, your generation charges are wrong
How to spot it
Look for "MCE" or "PCE" labeled charges on your bill alongside PG&E generation charges. In a correct bill, you should see CCA generation charges OR PG&E generation charges for any given period — not both. If you see both on the same billing period, contact PG&E immediately.
For a detailed explanation of CCA billing and how to read the split charges, see How to Read Your PG&E Bill.
How to Dispute a PG&E Billing Error
Once you've identified a likely error, here's the process:
Step 1: Gather your evidence
Before calling PG&E, collect:
- The bill with the error (billing period, dollar amount affected)
- Prior months' bills for comparison
- Your Green Button data export if it's a meter read issue
- Any correspondence about rate plan changes, CCA enrollment, or service changes
Document the specific error clearly: "My September 2026 bill shows 1,847 kWh of usage. My Green Button data for the same period shows 1,203 kWh. The difference is 644 kWh, which at my current rate calculates to approximately $264 in overcharges."
Step 2: Contact PG&E directly
Call PG&E customer service at 1-800-743-5000 (residential) or use the online message center at pge.com.
What to ask for:
- A billing review and correction
- A meter test (if you suspect hardware error) — PG&E is required to perform a meter test for free upon request
- An adjustment to the affected bill pending resolution
PG&E customer service can resolve straightforward errors (wrong rate plan, obvious duplicate charge) without escalation. For meter accuracy disputes, they'll schedule a meter technician.
Timeline: Expect 5–15 business days for a billing review response. Meter tests take longer — PG&E schedules appointments typically within 2–4 weeks.
Step 3: Request a formal credit
If PG&E confirms the error, ask specifically for:
- The credit amount to be applied to your next bill, or
- A refund check (if the amount is substantial)
PG&E can issue back-credits for up to 12 months of billing errors under California Public Utilities Commission rules. For older errors, CPUC may need to intervene. Get the credit confirmation in writing — either in a service email or a bill notation.
Step 4: Escalate to CPUC if PG&E doesn't resolve it
If PG&E dismisses your dispute and you believe you have a genuine error, file a complaint with the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC):
- Online: cpuc.ca.gov → Consumer Affairs Branch → File a Complaint
- Phone: 1-800-649-7570
- Email: public.advisor@cpuc.ca.gov
CPUC complaints require PG&E to formally respond and document their findings. This escalation is most effective when you have clear documentation — meter data, bill comparisons, and a written record of your prior contacts with PG&E.
Timeline for CPUC resolution: Expect 30–60 days. CPUC has authority to order credits and, in cases of willful overbilling, penalties.
How Much Can You Get Back?
Refunds from PG&E billing disputes vary widely:
| Error Type | Typical Refund Range |
|---|---|
| Meter misread (single month) | $50–$300 |
| Wrong rate plan (12-month look-back) | $200–$800 |
| Baseline territory error (12-month look-back) | $100–$500 |
| CCA double-charge (per affected period) | $80–$200/month |
| Smart meter malfunction (extended period) | $500–$2,500+ |
The largest refunds come from extended errors that went undetected — particularly meter malfunctions and wrong rate plan assignments. One customer received $2,100 after PG&E confirmed a malfunctioning smart meter had been over-reporting usage for 11 months.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I know if my PG&E bill has an error?
The clearest signals: a sudden month-over-month spike in usage or charges with no behavioral change, an "E" marker indicating an estimated read, or a rate plan label that doesn't match what you signed up for. Compare your last 12 months of bills and look for anomalies — a bill that's 30%+ higher than the same month the prior year without a clear explanation (weather, new appliances) is worth investigating.
What is PG&E's process for disputing a billing error?
Contact PG&E at 1-800-743-5000 or through your online account. You can request a billing review, a meter test, and a formal credit. PG&E is required by CPUC regulations to investigate billing disputes and respond within 15 business days. If they don't resolve the issue, escalate to CPUC at 1-800-649-7570.
How far back can I dispute a PG&E overcharge?
PG&E can issue credits for billing errors going back 12 months. For errors older than 12 months, you'll need CPUC involvement and may need to demonstrate that PG&E had notice of the problem. Document everything and act promptly — the 12-month window starts from when the error occurred, not when you discovered it.
Can PG&E back-bill me if I was undercharged?
Yes. If PG&E discovers they undercharged you — due to a meter malfunction that read low, a rate plan error, or a billing system glitch — they can issue a catch-up bill for the difference. California law limits catch-up billing to 12 months. If you receive an unexpected catch-up bill, you can request an itemized explanation and, if you believe it's incorrect, dispute it through the same CPUC process.
Does filing a CPUC complaint affect my PG&E service?
No. PG&E cannot reduce your service quality or priority as retaliation for filing a CPUC complaint. This is explicitly prohibited under California utility regulations. Filing a complaint is a legal right.
Let BrightBill Check Your Bill for Errors
Identifying billing errors requires comparing your bill against PG&E's published tariffs, your meter data, your rate plan history, and your baseline territory allocation. Most customers don't have time to do that analysis manually.
BrightBill does it automatically. Upload your PG&E bill and we'll flag potential errors — wrong rate plans, baseline territory mismatches, anomalous usage patterns — and tell you exactly what to dispute and how.
Related articles:
- How to Read Your PG&E Bill
- PG&E Rate Plans Compared — Which One Saves You the Most?
- PG&E Summer Rates 2026
- Smart Meter Overcharging: How to Check if Your Meter Is Wrong
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