Trump is Raising Energy and Utility Bills

March 25, 2026

Overview

President Trump promised to cut energy prices in half within his first year in office. He has done the exact opposite.

President Trump campaigned on a promise to cut energy prices in half within twelve months of taking office. Instead, more than one year in, energy bills are rising for families across the country. Electricity prices rose more than twice as fast as overall inflation in 2025, with no slowing in sight. Gasoline prices have skyrocketed as Trump’s war in Iran disrupts oil markets, and utilities are demanding record rate increases spurred by the buildout of AI data centers. As energy bills surge, Americans are increasingly worried about their ability to afford basic utilities:

Electricity prices have been rising fast, and families are bearing the brunt. Prices were already elevated, and new global instability is pushing them even higher.

Trump’s blanket tariffs are increasing the cost of building and maintaining the electric grid. Utilities rely on imported equipment, and those higher costs show up directly in higher electricity and gas bills.

AI data centers are driving up electricity prices, and Trump’s plan won’t fix it. The rapid expansion of AI data centers is dramatically increasing electricity demand across the United States.

Trump’s war on Iran is disrupting global oil supply and pushing energy prices higher for American families. The conflict is disrupting shipments through the Strait of Hormuz, and Iraq, Kuwait, and the United Arab Emirates have cut oil production as exporters struggle to move crude through the region.

Trump is blocking cheaper energy and raising household utility costs. The Trump administration has taken steps that block cheaper sources of electricity and weaken policies that help households reduce energy use and save money.

Trump administration policies are discouraging investment in new clean energy supply. Clean energy project cancellations surged to $35 billion last year, dwarfing the roughly $3.4 billion canceled over the previous two years combined. The One Big Beautiful Bill also repealed the Residential Clean Energy Credit, which helped homeowners lower upfront costs for solar panels and other energy-saving upgrades.

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