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Posted

I have been staying in a small apartment in Bangkok as a budget traveller. The rent and the water fees are okay. But the electricity fees are high even though I have tried to reduce the usage. Any tips that you guys have tried and worked for lowering electricity fees in Thailand?

Posted

I was getting charged around 350 a month just to leave my BKK condo fridge on, no aircon no fan and why do you need a fridge on if you only keep water in it? 7b at 7/11...

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Posted

H/W showers, aircon and ancient fridges set on high use most juice. This time of year is a killer for AC, esp in Bkk. Even if you set it to 30-29, it’ll be working hard and will use up a lot if the compressor’s an old thing. Most condos will charge their own rate, prob 8 baht/unit and up. Nowt you can do about that. Consider moving to a condo that sees shade most of the day. 

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Posted
17 hours ago, RolandRat said:

I have been staying in a small apartment in Bangkok as a budget traveller. The rent and the water fees are okay. But the electricity fees are high even though I have tried to reduce the usage. Any tips that you guys have tried and worked for lowering electricity fees?

Make sure the AC is cleaned (Filter) and running up to par To help close all windows and doors (Check for a close leaks). Close all blinds to keep sun from entering your apartment

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Posted (edited)
40 minutes ago, CecilM said:

Get inverter A/Cs.

I now use much more A/C and my bill has gone down. 

OP is renting, so keeping the ones he uses now, clean, as stated, better, cheaper option, till moving to a place that charges the MEA/PEA rate, without anything tacked on.

 

Suspect it's just an older building, poorly insulated, if at all, maybe having sun exposure, and old AC units.   Next place, take all those things into consideration.   

 

For those buying, inverters make a huge difference.

Edited by KhunLA
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Posted

Check if the air conditioner remote has a "dry" setting" appears to consume less electric.

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Posted
20 hours ago, FritsSikkink said:

What are you using at the moment.

I am only using an air conditioner and a refrigerator. Plus some lights, of course. 

Posted
1 hour ago, Wrwest said:

Check if the air conditioner remote has a "dry" setting" appears to consume less electric.

Yes, mine has a dry setting. Does it really consume less electricity?

Posted
2 hours ago, cowellandrew said:

Turn every thing off and go to the pub,

This also works in hot countries as you save on heating costs!

😁

Haha, very true!

Posted
1 hour ago, RolandRat said:

I am only using an air conditioner and a refrigerator. Plus some lights, of course. 

Your aircon can use a lot more or less energy depending on the degree setting. Mine is on 28, friend used to have it on 16.

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Posted

is your water heated? turn it off and get used to cold showers, not had mine on for years

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Posted

One thing we have done is start using the ”dry” mode on our AC. It causes the compressor to run much less often than ” cool” or ”auto” settings. Also use a rotary fan when the ambient temps are below 30C.

I’ve also heard that keeping your fridge filled with e.g. waterbottles can help. 

Eletricity is so relatively cheap for us compared to what I used to pay in the US that I mostly economise for environmental and my wife’s thrifty nature reasons.

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Posted
23 hours ago, Njoku said:

I was getting charged around 350 a month just to leave my BKK condo fridge on

No, you weren't - unless you were being heavily ripped-off on the charge per unit or it was an industrial freezer/fridge.

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Posted
7 hours ago, cowellandrew said:

Turn every thing off and go to the pub,

This also works in hot countries as you save on heating costs!

What heating costs are there to save on in hot countries?

Posted
9 hours ago, daveAustin said:

Most condos will charge their own rate, prob 8 baht/unit and up.

Most apartments will charge their own rate, most condos, having private owners, will get government rated bills direct from the MEA/PEA.

Posted
2 hours ago, Liverpool Lou said:

Most apartments will charge their own rate, most condos, having private owners, will get government rated bills direct from the MEA/PEA.

Wasn’t there a law made where if there was above a certain number of condos in a building they could only charge government rates albeit I doubt it’s ever enforced ?

Posted (edited)

@RolandRat So if your bill is only ฿2000 max, that's 425kWh/units a month, or 14kWh a day.  Not sure that's excessive highly, especially for last month, April.   We were using about 8kWh overnight, 1800-0800 hrs, and that's with a very good inverter AC running, laptop &  TV for 8 hr, and frigs (2).  Then sleeping for 6 hrs w/AC on.

 

That alone is 240 units a month, and no sun, temp outside, not much different than AC'd bedroom, just the lower humidity from the AC making the difference.  Set on 'cool' 27C, low fan, not the dehumidifier setting.  Daytime temps, 35C+ and 2 ACs running (very efficient inverters) and we easily use 25kWh/units a month.

 

That calculation is at the PEA rate.  If landlord charging you more, ฿6 or 7 a unit, then that usage drops considerably, @ ฿7 = 285kWh/units, less than 10kWh a day.  That's pretty conservative use, as when we're not home, the frigs use 4kWh a day.

Edited by KhunLA
Posted
17 hours ago, Jumbo1968 said:
19 hours ago, Liverpool Lou said:

Most apartments will charge their own rate, most condos, having private owners, will get government rated bills direct from the MEA/PEA.

Wasn’t there a law made where if there was above a certain number of condos in a building they could only charge government rates albeit I doubt it’s ever enforced ?

As you know, condos and apartments are not the same things although many people, wrongly, refer to their apartments as condos. 

 

I don't know about that law you reference but condos (not apartments) are billed direct to the individual condo owners from the MEA or PEA, whereas apartments are generally billed to their tenants from the juristic office based on their contracted unit rate.

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