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FPL rate settlement reduces request by nearly a third, limits average annual bill increases to 2%, maintains consumer protections

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Florida Power & Light Company (NYSE:NEE) has filed a significant four-year rate settlement agreement with state regulators, reducing its original revenue request by approximately 30%. The agreement, pending Florida Public Service Commission approval, will result in a modest $3.79 monthly increase for typical 1,000-kWh residential customers in 2026.

The settlement cuts base rate revenues by $2.9 billion less than originally requested over the four-year period, with a 39% reduction for 2026 (from $1.545B to $945M) and a 17% reduction for 2027 (from $927M to $766M). Despite the increases, FPL projects bills will remain 20% below inflation-adjusted rates from 20 years ago and well under the national average through 2029.

The agreement supports infrastructure investments to serve Florida's growth, with FPL expecting to add 335,000 new customers by decade's end. The settlement maintains consumer protections and includes additional funding for eligible customers needing bill payment assistance.

Florida Power & Light Company (NYSE:NEE) ha presentato ai regolatori statali un importante accordo biennale di quattro anni sulle tariffe, riducendo la richiesta iniziale di ricavi di circa il 30%. L’intesa, soggetta all’approvazione della Florida Public Service Commission, comporterà un modesto aumento di $3,79 al mese per i clienti residenziali tipo che consumano 1.000 kWh nel 2026.

L’accordo riduce i ricavi da tariffe base di $2,9 miliardi rispetto alla richiesta iniziale nel corso dei quattro anni, con una diminuzione del 39% per il 2026 (da $1,545M a $945M) e del 17% per il 2027 (da $927M a $766M). Nonostante gli aumenti, FPL prevede che le bollette resteranno circa il 20% inferiori rispetto ai livelli adeguati all’inflazione di 20 anni fa e ben al di sotto della media nazionale fino al 2029.

L’intesa sostiene gli investimenti infrastrutturali necessari a servire la crescita della Florida: FPL stima di aggiungere 335.000 nuovi clienti entro la fine del decennio. L’accordo mantiene le tutele per i consumatori e prevede fondi aggiuntivi per i clienti idonei che necessitano di assistenza per il pagamento delle bollette.

Florida Power & Light Company (NYSE:NEE) presentó a los reguladores estatales un importante acuerdo tarifario por cuatro años, reduciendo su solicitud original de ingresos en aproximadamente un 30%. El acuerdo, pendiente de la aprobación de la Florida Public Service Commission, implicará un modesto aumento de $3,79 mensuales para clientes residenciales tipo de 1.000 kWh en 2026.

El acuerdo recorta los ingresos por tarifas base en $2.900 millones menos de lo solicitado originalmente durante el periodo de cuatro años, con una reducción del 39% para 2026 (de $1.545M a $945M) y del 17% para 2027 (de $927M a $766M). A pesar de los aumentos, FPL proyecta que las facturas permanecerán aproximadamente un 20% por debajo de las tarifas ajustadas por inflación de hace 20 años y muy por debajo del promedio nacional hasta 2029.

El acuerdo respalda inversiones en infraestructura para atender el crecimiento de Florida; FPL espera incorporar 335.000 nuevos clientes para finales de la década. El acuerdo mantiene las protecciones al consumidor e incluye fondos adicionales para clientes elegibles que necesiten asistencia para pagar sus facturas.

Florida Power & Light Company (NYSE:NEE)ëŠ� ì£� 규제 당국ì—� 중대í•� 4ë…� 요금 í•©ì˜ì•ˆì„ 제출했으ë©�, 당초 요청í•� 수입 규모ë¥� ì•� 30% 줄였습니ë‹�. 해당 í•©ì˜ì•ˆì€ 플로리다 공공서비스위ì›íšŒ(FPSC)ì� ìŠ¹ì¸ ëŒ€ê¸� 중ì´ë©�, 2026ë…� 기준 ì¼ë°˜ 가정용 1,000kWh 사용 ê³ ê°ì—게ëŠ� ì›� $3.79ì� ì†Œí­ ì¸ìƒì� ë°œìƒí•� 예정입니ë‹�.

ì� í•©ì˜ë¡� 기본 요금 수입ì� 4ë…„ê°„ 당초 요청보다 $29¹®� ì ì–´ì¡Œê³ , 2026ë…„ì—ëŠ� 39% ê°ì†Œ(1,545M 달러ì—서 945M 달러ë¡�), 2027ë…„ì—ëŠ� 17% ê°ì†Œ(927M 달러ì—서 766M 달러ë¡�)합니ë‹�. ì¸ìƒì—ë„ ë¶ˆêµ¬í•˜ê³  FPLì€ ì²­êµ¬ì•¡ì´ 20ë…� ì „ì˜ ë¬¼ê°€ë¥� ë°˜ì˜í•� 요금보다 ì•� 20% 낮고, 2029년까지 ì „êµ­ í‰ê· ì� í¬ê²Œ ë°‘ëŒ ê²ƒìœ¼ë¡� ë³´ê³  있습니다.

ì� í•©ì˜ëŠ� 플로리다ì� 성장ì—� 대ì‘한 ì¸í”„ë� 투ìžë¥� ì§€ì›í•˜ë©�, FPLì€ ì´ë²ˆ 10ë…� ì•ˆì— 335,000ëª…ì˜ ì‹ ê·œ ê³ ê°ì� 추가í•� 것으ë¡� 예ìƒí•©ë‹ˆë‹�. í•©ì˜ëŠ� 소비ìž� 보호 장치ë¥� 유지하고, 요금 ë‚©ë¶€ ì§€ì›ì´ í•„ìš”í•� ì ê²© ê³ ê°ì� 위한 추가 ìžê¸ˆë� í¬í•¨í•©ë‹ˆë‹�.

Florida Power & Light Company (NYSE:NEE) a déposé auprès des régulateurs d’État un important accord tarifaire sur quatre ans, réduisant sa demande de revenus initiale d’environ 30%. L’accord, soumis à l’approbation de la Florida Public Service Commission, entraînera une augmentation modeste de 3,79 $ par mois pour les clients résidentiels type consommant 1 000 kWh en 2026.

L’accord réduit les recettes tarifaires de base de 2,9 milliards $ par rapport à la demande initiale sur la période de quatre ans, avec une baisse de 39% pour 2026 (de 1 545 M$ à 945 M$) et de 17% pour 2027 (de 927 M$ à 766 M$). Malgré ces hausses, FPL prévoit que les factures resteront environ 20% ¾±²Ô´Úé°ù¾±±ð³Ü°ù±ð²õ aux niveaux ajustés de l’inflation d’il y a 20 ans et bien en dessous de la moyenne nationale jusqu’en 2029.

L’accord soutient les investissements d’infrastructure nécessaires pour accompagner la croissance de la Floride ; FPL s’attend à ajouter 335 000 nouveaux clients d’ici la fin de la décennie. L’accord maintient les protections des consommateurs et prévoit des fonds supplémentaires pour les clients éligibles ayant besoin d’aide pour payer leurs factures.

Florida Power & Light Company (NYSE:NEE) hat bei den staatlichen Aufsichtsbehörden eine bedeutende vierjährige Tarifvereinbarung eingereicht und damit seine ursprüngliche Einnahmenanforderung um rund 30% reduziert. Die Vereinbarung, die noch der Zustimmung der Florida Public Service Commission bedarf, führt 2026 zu einer moderaten Erhöhung von $3,79 pro Monat für typische Haushalte mit 1.000 kWh.

Die Einigung verringert die Basis-Tarifeinnahmen über den vierjährigen Zeitraum um $2,9 Milliarden gegenüber der ursprünglich beantragten Summe, mit einer 39%-Reduktion für 2026 (von $1.545M auf $945M) und einer 17%-Reduktion für 2027 (von $927M auf $766M). Trotz der Erhöhungen rechnet FPL damit, dass die Rechnungen etwa 20% unter den inflationsbereinigten Niveaus von vor 20 Jahren liegen und bis 2029 deutlich unter dem US-Durchschnitt bleiben.

Das Abkommen unterstützt Infrastrukturinvestitionen zur Versorgung des Wachstums in Florida; FPL erwartet, bis zum Ende des Jahrzehnts 335.000 neue Kunden zu gewinnen. Die Vereinbarung erhält Verbraucherschutzmaßnahmen und sieht zusätzliche Mittel für berechtigte Kunden vor, die Hilfe bei der Rechnungszahlung benötigen.

Positive
  • Base rate revenue request reduced by 30%, saving customers $2.9 billion over four years
  • Monthly bill increase limited to $3.79 for typical residential customers in 2026
  • Bills projected to remain 20% lower than 20 years ago when adjusted for inflation
  • FPL maintains lowest operating and maintenance costs in the industry
  • Solar investments have already saved customers over $1 billion in avoided fuel costs
  • Enhanced consumer protections including no disconnections during extreme temperatures
Negative
  • Base rate increases of $945 million in 2026 and $766 million in 2027
  • Residential bills will increase by approximately 2% annually through 2029
  • Company requires significant capital investment to support 335,000 new customers by 2029

Insights

FPL's rate settlement reduces revenue requests by 30%, limiting bill increases to ~2% annually while maintaining infrastructure investments.

This negotiated settlement represents a significant regulatory development for NextEra Energy's largest subsidiary. The agreement cuts FPL's original four-year revenue request by approximately 30%, reducing the total ask by $2.9 billion over the period. The 2026 request alone drops by 39% from $1.545 billion to $945 million.

From a consumer perspective, the settlement limits bill impacts to approximately 2% annually through 2029, with the typical 1,000-kWh residential customer seeing just a $3.79 monthly increase in 2026. This positions FPL bills to remain 20% below the national average - a crucial competitive advantage in the utility sector.

The regulatory framework maintains important consumer protections including PSC oversight of fuel costs, infrastructure investments, and performance standards. Notably, the settlement includes provisions prohibiting disconnections during extreme temperature events and additional funding for struggling customers.

For investors, this settlement reduces regulatory uncertainty through 2029 while allowing necessary capital investments to accommodate Florida's growth trajectory. The agreement enables continued investment in solar energy, battery storage, and grid technologies - critical elements of NextEra's clean energy strategy. The broad stakeholder support (10 parties including industrial users, retailers, and clean energy advocates) significantly enhances the likelihood of PSC approval, providing regulatory clarity for NEE's largest operating subsidiary through the end of the decade.

JUNO BEACH, Fla., Aug. 20, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Florida Power & Light Company and 10 key stakeholder groups filed a comprehensive four-year rate settlement agreement with state regulators today that significantly reduces FPL's original revenue request while keeping residential customer bills well below the projected national average through the end of the decade.

The agreement, which is subject to Florida Public Service Commission (PSC) approval, cuts FPL's four-year revenue request by approximately 30% � shaving hundreds of millions of dollars from its initial proposal while still supporting continued investments in grid infrastructure and new generation to reliably serve Florida's growth.

A word from FPL President and CEO Armando Pimentel: "This settlement agreement is a win for all FPL customers and a win for Florida. It supports our ongoing commitment to meet the resiliency and reliability needs of our fast-growing state, while keeping customer bills well below the national average. We expect the typical 1,000-kWh residential customer bill will increase next year by about $3.79 a month. Even with the proposed increase, FPL's bill would be about 20% lower than it was 20 years prior when adjusted for inflation."

Substantial reductions from original request: The settlement significantly scales back FPL's initial rate request:

  • 2026: Base rate revenue request reduced by 39%, from $1.545 billion to $945 million
  • 2027: Base rate revenue request reduced by 17%, from $927 million to $766 million
  • Total savings: Base rate revenues about $2.9 billion less than originally requested over the four-year period

Consumer impact: Under the settlement, the typical 1,000-kWh residential customer bill would increase by about $3.79 a month next year � far below FPL's original proposal. Even with this increase, FPL projects its bills will remain well below the national average through 2029. Residential customers would receive the lowest increase of all types of customers.

Estimated FPL bills under rate proposal

(for 1,000-kWh residential customer)

Region

Current

Jan. 2026

Jan. 2027

Jan. 2028

Dec. 2029

Peninsular Florida

$134.14

$137.93

$143.05*

$146.24

$148.15

Northwest Florida

$143.60

$142.66

Estimates include base rates proposed to the Florida Public Service Commission (PSC), as well as
projections for fuel and other non-storm costs, which are approved annually by the PSC. Beginning in 2027,
FPL customers in peninsular and Northwest Florida will pay the same rates. *Pending PSC approval of
estimated solar and battery projects in January 2027, bill will move to $143.25.

Continued consumer protections: The settlement maintains essential regulatory oversight: all fuel and other variable costs recovered through bill clauses will be subject to annual PSC review and approval; infrastructure investments � including new solar and battery projects � remain under PSC oversight; performance standards and reliability metrics remain in place; and rate adjustments remain predictable and reasonable. FPL commits to not disconnect customers for nonpayment during heat advisories and extremely hot or cold temperatures (95 degrees or above or 32 degrees or below).

Meeting Florida's growth needs: With FPL expecting to add about 335,000 new customers by the end of the decade, the agreement enables necessary investments in solar energy, battery storage and smart-grid technologies, while protecting customers from fuel price volatility. FPL's existing solar investments have already saved customers more than $1 billion in avoided fuel costs.

Affordability context:ÌýThe proposal amounts to an approximately 2% average annual residential bill increase from 2025 through the end of the decade. FPL's typical residential customer bills are $24 lower than those of an average utility because the company has â€� by far â€� the lowest operating and maintenance costs in the industry. The settlement recognizes the financial pressures facing Florida families by keeping increases modest and predictable. The agreement also provides additional funding for eligible customers who may be struggling and need assistance paying their bills.

Settlement participants: Parties to the agreement include the Florida Retail Federation, Florida Industrial Power Users Group, Florida Energy for Innovation Association, Walmart, Southern Alliance for Clean Energy, EVgo Services, Fuel Retailers, Electrify America, Federal Executive Agencies and Armstrong World Industries.

Next steps: The PSC will set a schedule to thoroughly review the settlement agreement and full proposal, along with other information pending before the PSC, before voting on new rates. If approved, new rates would take effect Jan. 1, 2026.

AboutÌýFlorida PowerÌý& Light CompanyÌý
Florida PowerÌý& Light Company is America's largest electric utility, delivering reliable power to more than 6 million customer accounts â€� serving approximately 12 million people across Florida. By leveraging a diverse energy mix, including nuclear, natural gas, solar and battery storage, FPL operates one of the most fuel- and cost-efficient power generation fleets in the U.S. and has earned the ReliabilityOne®ÌýNational Reliability Award for seven of the last ten years. FPL is a subsidiary ofÌýJuno Beach, Florida-based NextEra Energy, Inc. (NYSE: NEE), which is one of the largest electric power and energy infrastructure companies inÌýNorth AmericaÌýand is a leading provider of electricity to American homes and businesses. NextEra Energy is also the parent company of NextEra Energy Resources, LLC, which, together with its affiliated entities, is advancing America's energy future with one of the largest and most diverse portfolios of power generation and infrastructure solutions. For more information about NextEra Energy companies, visit these websites:â€�www.NextEraEnergy.com,â€�www.FPL.com,Ìýwww.NextEraEnergyResources.com.

Cautionary Statements and Risk Factors That May Affect Future Results
This news release contains "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements are not statements of historical facts, but instead represent the current expectations of NextEra Energy, Inc. (NextEra Energy) and Florida Power & Light Company (FPL) regarding future operating results and other future events, many of which, by their nature, are inherently uncertain and outside of NextEra Energy's and FPL's control. Forward-looking statements in this news release include, among others, statements concerning effects of the proposed 2025 rate agreement.ÌýIn some cases, you can identify the forward-looking statements by words or phrases such as "will," "may result," "expect," "anticipate," "believe," "intend," "plan," "seek," "potential," "projection," "forecast," "predict," "goals," "target," "outlook," "should," "would" or similar words or expressions. You should not place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which are not a guarantee of future performance. The future results of NextEra Energy and FPL and their business and financial condition are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause their actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied in the forward-looking statements, or may require them to limit or eliminate certain operations. These risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to, those discussed in this news release and the following: effects of extensive regulation of NextEra Energy's and FPL's business operations; inability of NextEra Energy and FPL to recover in a timely manner any significant amount of costs, a return on certain assets or a reasonable return on invested capital through base rates, cost recovery clauses, other regulatory mechanisms or otherwise; impact of political, regulatory, operational and economic factors on regulatory decisions important to NextEra Energy and FPL; effect of any reductions or modifications to, or elimination of, governmental incentives or policies that support clean energy projects of NextEra Energy and FPL and its affiliated entities or the imposition of additional tax laws, tariffs, duties, policies or other costs or assessments on clean energy or equipment necessary to generate, store or deliver it; impact of new or revised laws, regulations, executive orders, interpretations or constitutional ballot and regulatory initiatives on NextEra Energy and FPL; capital expenditures, increased operating costs and various liabilities attributable to environmental laws, regulations and other standards applicable to NextEra Energy and FPL; effects on NextEra Energy and FPL of federal or state laws or regulations mandating new or additional limits on the production of greenhouse gas emissions; exposure of NextEra Energy and FPL to significant and increasing compliance costs and substantial monetary penalties and other sanctions as a result of extensive federal, state and local government regulation of their operations and businesses; effect on NextEra Energy and FPL of changes in tax laws, guidance or policies as well as in judgments and estimates used to determine tax-related asset and liability amounts; impact on NextEra Energy and FPL of adverse results of litigation; impacts on NextEra Energy or FPL of allegations of violations of law; effect on NextEra Energy and FPL of failure to proceed with projects under development or inability to complete the construction of (or capital improvements to) electric generation, storage, transmission and distribution facilities, natural gas and oil production and transportation facilities or other facilities on schedule or within budget; impact on development and operating activities of NextEra Energy and FPL resulting from risks related to project siting, planning, financing, construction, permitting, governmental approvals and the negotiation of project development agreements, as well as supply chain disruptions; risks involved in the operation and maintenance of electric generation, storage, transmission and distribution facilities, natural gas and oil production and transportation facilities, and other facilities; effect on NextEra Energy and FPL of a lack of growth, slower growth or a decline in the number of customers or in customer usage; impact on NextEra Energy and FPL of severe weather and other weather conditions; threats of geopolitical factors, terrorism and catastrophic events that could result from terrorism, cyberattacks or other attempts to disrupt NextEra Energy's and FPL's business or the businesses of third parties; inability to obtain adequate insurance coverage for protection of NextEra Energy and FPL against significant losses and risk that insurance coverage does not provide protection against all significant losses; a prolonged period of low natural gas and oil prices, disrupted production or unsuccessful drilling efforts could impact NextEra Energy Resources, LLC's (NextEra Energy Resources) natural gas and oil production operations and cause NextEra Energy Resources to delay or cancel certain natural gas and oil production projects and could result in certain assets becoming impaired; risk to NextEra Energy Resources of increased operating costs resulting from unfavorable supply costs necessary to provide NextEra Energy Resources' full energy and capacity requirements services; inability or failure to manage properly or hedge effectively the commodity risk within its portfolio; effect of reductions in the liquidity of energy markets on NextEra Energy's ability to manage operational risks; effectiveness of NextEra Energy's and FPL's risk management tools associated with their hedging and trading procedures to protect against significant losses, including the effect of unforeseen price variances from historical behavior; impact of unavailability or disruption of power transmission or commodity transportation operations on sale and delivery of power or natural gas by NextEra Energy, including FPL; exposure of NextEra Energy and FPL to credit and performance risk from customers, hedging counterparties and vendors; failure of NextEra Energy or FPL counterparties to perform under derivative contracts or of requirement for NextEra Energy or FPL to post margin cash collateral under derivative contracts; failure or breach of NextEra Energy's or FPL's information technology systems; risks to NextEra Energy and FPL's retail businesses from compromise of sensitive customer data; losses from volatility in the market values of derivative instruments and limited liquidity in over-the-counter markets; impact of negative publicity; inability of FPL to maintain, negotiate or renegotiate acceptable franchise agreements with municipalities and counties in Florida; occurrence of work strikes or stoppages and increasing personnel costs; NextEra Energy's ability to successfully identify, complete and integrate acquisitions, including the effect of increased competition for acquisitions; environmental, health and financial risks associated with NextEra Energy Resources' and FPL's ownership and operation of nuclear generation facilities; liability of NextEra Energy and FPL for significant retrospective assessments and/or retrospective insurance premiums in the event of an incident at certain nuclear generation facilities; increased operating and capital expenditures and/or reduced revenues at nuclear generation facilities of NextEra Energy or FPL resulting from orders or new regulations of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission; inability to operate any of NextEra Energy Resources' or FPL's owned nuclear generation units through the end of their respective operating licenses or planned license extensions; effect of disruptions, uncertainty or volatility in the credit and capital markets or actions by third parties in connection with project-specific or other financing arrangements on NextEra Energy's and FPL's ability to fund their liquidity and capital needs and meet their growth objectives; defaults or noncompliance related to project-specific, limited-recourse financing agreements; inability of NextEra Energy, FPL and NextEra Energy Capital Holdings, Inc. to maintain their current credit ratings; impairment of NextEra Energy's and FPL's liquidity from inability of credit providers to fund their credit commitments or to maintain their current credit ratings; poor market performance and other economic factors that could affect NextEra Energy's defined benefit pension plan's funded status; poor market performance and other risks to the asset values of NextEra Energy's and FPL's nuclear decommissioning funds; changes in market value and other risks to certain of NextEra Energy's assets and investments; effect of inability of NextEra Energy subsidiaries to pay upstream dividends or repay funds to NextEra Energy or of NextEra Energy's performance under guarantees of subsidiary obligations on NextEra Energy's ability to meet its financial obligations and to pay dividends on its common stock; the fact that the amount and timing of dividends payable on NextEra Energy's common stock, as well as the dividend policy approved by NextEra Energy's board of directors from time to time, and changes to that policy, are within the sole discretion of NextEra Energy's board of directors and, if declared and paid, dividends may be in amounts that are less than might be expected by shareholders; XPLR Infrastructure, LP's inability to access sources of capital on commercially reasonable terms could have an effect on its ability to consummate future acquisitions and on the value of NextEra Energy's limited partner interest in XPLR Operating Partners, LP; effects of disruptions, uncertainty or volatility in the credit and capital markets on the market price of NextEra Energy's common stock; and the ultimate severity and duration of public health crises, epidemics and pandemics, and its effects on NextEra Energy's or FPL's businesses. NextEra Energy and FPL discuss these and other risks and uncertainties in their annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2024 and other Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filings, and this news release should be read in conjunction with such SEC filings. The forward-looking statements made in this news release are made only as of the date of this news release and NextEra Energy and FPL undertake no obligation to update any forward-looking statements.

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SOURCE Florida Power & Light Company

FAQ

How much will FPL (NYSE:NEE) rates increase in 2026?

FPL's typical 1,000-kWh residential customer bill will increase by $3.79 per month in 2026, with base rate revenues increasing by $945 million.

What is the total reduction in FPL's rate request under the new settlement?

The settlement reduces FPL's original revenue request by approximately 30%, resulting in $2.9 billion less in base rate revenues over the four-year period than initially requested.

How will FPL's new rates compare to historical prices?

Even with the proposed increases, FPL's bills will remain about 20% lower than they were 20 years ago when adjusted for inflation and well below the national average through 2029.

What consumer protections are included in FPL's rate settlement?

The settlement includes PSC oversight of infrastructure investments, annual review of fuel costs, maintained performance standards, and protection from disconnections during extreme temperatures (above 95°F or below 32°F).

When will FPL's new rates take effect?

If approved by the Florida Public Service Commission, the new rates will take effect on January 1, 2026.
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Utilities - Regulated Electric
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United States
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