The US Energy Information Administration reports that this winter, US home heating costs will vary by fuel type: natural gas users will pay about the same as last year, electricity users will pay more, and those using propane or heating oil will pay less. These changes are mainly driven by shifts in retail energy prices. Weather remains a key uncertainty; colder conditions would increase costs for nearly all households, while a milder winter would reduce costs for most except those using electricity, due to rising electricity prices. The Winter Fuels Outlook covers 96% of American homes and reflects regional and fuel-based trends rather than direct fuel comparisons. The EIA writes:
We expect energy expenditures this winter will vary based on a homeโs main space heating fuel: homes heating with natural gas will pay about the same amount for natural gas as they did last winter, but homes heating with electricity will pay more than they did last winter. Homes heating with propane or heating oil will pay less than they did last winter.
Trends in retail energy prices account for most of the changes in heating expenditures in ourย Winter Fuels Outlook, released today. We expect weather this winter will be similar to or milder than last winter.
The weather is a key source of uncertainty in these forecasts, so we provide two side cases that assume colder or warmer winter temperatures, as measured byย heating degree days. In 9 of the past 10 winters, actual weather outcomes at the national levelย have fallen within the boundsย of these weather cases.
In our colder weather case, expenditure forecasts shift higher, and we expect nearly all U.S. households would pay more than they did last winter, regardless of their heating fuel. In our warmer weather case, households heating with natural gas, propane, or heating oil would pay less than they did last winter, but households using electricity would pay about the same as they did last winter because of recent increases in retail electricity prices throughout the country.
A homeโs sensitivity to weather depends on local weather conditions, the homeโs insulation and air tightness, preferences for indoor air temperatures, and the energy efficiency of the equipment used to provide space heating. For example, homes primarily heating with electricityย tend to be in the warmer parts of the country, and homes heating with propane or heating oil tend to be in the coldest parts of the country.
The four fuels included in ourย Winter Fuels Outlookโnatural gas, electricity, propane, and heating oilโcover about 96% of the U.S. housing population. The energy consumption and expenditures in our outlook are meant to provide general expectations based on a householdโs space heating fuel and region of the United States rather than a comparison across heating fuels.
Our forecasts combine detailed information about the U.S. residential sector from ourย Residential Energy Consumption Surveyย with energy price and weather forecasts from ourย Short-Term Energy Outlookย (STEO). As the winter progresses, we will update ourย Winter Fuels Outlookย forecasts concurrently withย each STEO releaseย through April 2026.