
Questa è la prima volta che pago l’elettricità da solo. Non sono sicuro al 100% di come funzioni, c’è una bella differenza tra la compagnia elettrica locale (41,50€) e le altre che ho trovato sul sito Check24. Mi chiedevo se ci sono costi nascosti o qualcosa a cui dovrei prestare attenzione.
Da quanto mi risulta c’è una tariffa base che gioco ogni mese indipendentemente dal consumo, poi c’è la tariffa/kWh. Ma quando li aggiungo (29,23€+8,74€), non ottengo il prezzo mensile di 25,84€. Cosa mi manca qui?
Cosa faccio quando mi trasferisco in un nuovo posto?
Stessa cosa con Internet.
Grazie!
https://i.redd.it/0vpwkwbyeg4g1.png
di tempacc74656d70
6 commenti
Because the estimated cost isn’t calculated based on you using 100 kWh per month. You multiplied the price per kWH by 100 (why?) and then added it to the base price.
octopus is fine. I using them without any problems.
But check their website first, they might have a better rate.
To answer your question: Click on “Traif- und Preisdetails”. Everything is there. No hidden fees.
>Same thing with internet
Just look at the different providers and go for the cheapest one that’s available Look at eazy and providers like sim.de. I’d look for nothing under 50mbit/s if possible. Avoid Telekom, expensive and bad peering.
The shown average monthly price is including all discounts shown in the middle. Right next to it there is the actual average monthly price shown (34 Euros).
1. You also get a bonus in the first year with most providers (as a new costumer). CHECK24 usually shows you the monthly price for first year including the bonus. After one year it gets more expensive if you don’t switch to a new provider again.
2. If you move, you take the contract with you to your new place. If the provider can’t provide electricity/Internet in your new place, you have the right to cancel the contract even if the minimum time in the contract hasn’t passed yet.
To get the ø price/mo quoted there, you take the base price, plus the rate per kWh times your estimated consumption, minus any one-time bonus payments divided by the minimum contract time.
There aren’t any additional fees, but the price is only this low for the first 12 months (or whatever the minimum contract time is), after that you’ll have to switch again. It’s annoying but saves a lot of money, I recommend setting a reminder.
One trap you should watch out for is that for contracts with longer minimum times, they sometimes only quote the average price for the first year – the second year might be significantly more expensive.