Ohio Electricity Rates

Electricity Rates in Cortland, OH

Served by The Illuminating Company (CEI)

146 active offersEffective rate: 12.40¢/kWhUpdated 2026-06-01

Effective Utility Rate

12.40¢/kWh

9.88¢ PTC + 2.52¢ bypassable riders — the rate that drops off your bill when you switch suppliers.

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SupplierRate (¢/kWh)vs. UtilityTypeTerm
American Power & Gas of Ohio, LLC6.39¢-6.01¢variable1 mo.Enroll →
American Power & Gas of Ohio, LLC7.39¢-5.01¢fixed3 mo.Enroll →
Public Power LLC7.69¢-4.71¢fixed6 mo.
Public Power LLC7.79¢-4.61¢fixed12 mo.
American Power & Gas of Ohio, LLC7.89¢-4.51¢variable1 mo.Enroll →
Showing 5 of 146 offersSee all 146 offers →

History of Cortland

Samuel Bacon established a settlement in what is now Cortland by acquiring land along the Mahoning River in 1807. In 1816, he traded this land for a lumber mill. The mill relied on a dam built in 1809, but it was limited to spring use due to water levels. As the area developed, J.H. Post and H.G. Scovill built a larger dam that powered a custom and planning mill and grist mill. The area became known as Baconsburg in the 19th century.Minister Orrin Gates, who was from Cortland, New York, helped convert the area's oldest church into a Disciple Church in 1832. Baconsburg officially incorporated as the village of Cortland in 1873, named after the city in New York. The village grew, with a new town hall built in 1874 and later replaced in 1986. The Methodist Episcopal Church was organized in 1820, a cheese factory opened in 1875, and the Union School was constructed in 1877.In 1981, Cortland officially became a city after its population surpassed 5,000 and later adopted a charter government.

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Cortland by the Numbers

Population
16,467
Median Age
49.6 yrs
Median Household Income
$63,158/yr
Median Home Value
$174,600
Homeownership Rate
81%

Source: U.S. Census Bureau, ACS 5-Year Estimates (2023)

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