Utility and Energy Bill Assistance
Browse utility and energy bill assistance — help with heating, cooling, electricity, and water bills, plus weatherization and shutoff protections.
Utility assistance has an urgency structure most benefit categories lack: programs distinguish between routine bill help and crisis intervention for households facing disconnection or lacking heat. If you are days from a shutoff, say so — crisis components move faster, and separate protections may bar disconnection during extreme temperatures or for households with medical needs. Calling your utility before the shutoff also matters, because payment plans and hardship programs are usually available but rarely offered unprompted.
For non-crisis help, the landscape has three layers. Government energy assistance, led in the U.S. by LIHEAP, is federally funded but state-administered, meaning income limits, benefit amounts, and application seasons differ by state, and funds often run out before the season ends — apply the day your state’s window opens. Utility companies themselves run hardship funds, discount rates, and arrearage forgiveness programs funded by ratepayers or charities. Water and broadband assistance exist as separate programs with their own applications, and they are missed constantly because people assume “utility assistance” means energy only.
The structural fix is weatherization. Free home efficiency upgrades — insulation, air sealing, sometimes heating system repair or replacement — cut bills permanently rather than for one season, and eligibility often piggybacks on energy-assistance enrollment. If you qualify for bill help, ask about weatherization in the same conversation.
The common mistakes are waiting for a disconnection notice before acting, applying only once instead of every eligible season, and not asking the utility itself what it offers. Browse the programs below, note which are seasonal, and apply through your state agency, local community action agency, or utility’s official channel.
Current matching opportunities
These listings are limited to open, rolling, or upcoming opportunities that match this guide. Check the official source before applying.
Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP)
Federal block grant delivered through states, territories, and tribes to help low-income households with home energy costs, energy emergencies, and some energy-related home improvements.
Arkansas Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP)
Federal LIHEAP funds, administered in Arkansas through local community-based organizations, can help eligible residential households with heating and cooling costs, crisis reconnections, and fuel-related support during disconnection risk.
Louisiana Housing Corporation (LHC)
Statewide LIHEAP administration and local parish intake for heating and cooling energy help in Louisiana, including crisis support.
Nevada Energy Assistance Program (EAP)
Income-tested energy assistance for qualifying Nevada households, including annual support and crisis help through the Energy Assistance Program.
Austin Energy Customer Assistance Program (CAP)
City of Austin utility discounts and related assistance programs for income-eligible residential customers.
San Francisco Water Power Sewer
SFPUC Customer Assistance Program (CAP) helps qualifying low-income San Francisco households with water, wastewater, and Hetch Hetchy Power bill discounts.
Utah Home Energy Assistance Target (HEAT) Program
Utah's HEAT program provides seasonal home energy bill support and crisis help for qualifying low-income households.
Wisconsin Home Energy Assistance Program (WHEAP)
Wisconsin program that helps eligible households with part of heating costs, non-heating electricity costs, crisis help, and select furnace/water repair services.
Idaho Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP)
Idaho LIHEAP provides limited, one-time heating assistance payments through local Community Action agencies to help eligible households with utility bills and energy-related emergencies.
Texas Comprehensive Energy Assistance Program (CEAP)
Texas CEAP utility assistance guidance for low-income households, including 2026 income-guideline context, local-subrecipient workflow, and documentation strategy.
Maryland Energy Assistance Program (OHEP)
Maryland's Office of Home Energy Programs helps eligible households pay heating and electric costs and, in some cases, reduce past-due energy balances.
Free Emergency Rent and Utility Help Plus Job Training Grants USA: How CSBG Community Action Agencies Can Cover Bills, GED Prep, and Coaching
Money has a special talent: it disappears right when you need it most. Rent is due whether your hours got cut or not. The power company is not moved by your compelling personal narrative.
Application guidance
Use the listings above as a shortlist, then build your application from the official instructions. Save the source page, deadline, eligibility rules, required documents, contact details, and any program-specific scoring criteria. If the deadline is rolling, apply early enough for review queues and budget limits. If the deadline is fixed, work backward from the closing date and leave time for recommendations, institutional approvals, financial documents, and portal errors.
Popular funding types
Utility and Energy Bill Assistance FAQ
What is LIHEAP?
The Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program is the main U.S. federal program helping households with heating and cooling costs, administered by states with their own income limits and application windows. Apply through your state or local LIHEAP office.
Can I get help if my utilities are about to be shut off?
Often yes — many programs prioritize crisis cases, and shutoff protections may apply during extreme weather or for medically vulnerable households. Contact your utility and your state's assistance program immediately rather than waiting.
Do renters qualify for utility assistance?
Generally yes if you pay energy costs, directly or as part of rent, though documentation rules differ. Check the specific program's rules on the official site.