No-Deposit & Prepaid Electricity in Texas: How to Get the Lights On Without $400 Up Front
Standard Texas electricity plans come with a catch nobody mentions in the ads: a credit check. Depending on the result, the provider can require a deposit β commonly $100 to $400 β before your service starts. If that lands at the worst possible moment (say, mid-move), you have real options. Here they are, from most useful to most situational.
Option 1: Prepaid electricity β no credit check, no deposit
Prepaid (pay-as-you-go) plans flip the model: you fund an account balance first, and usage draws it down daily. Because you can't run up a bill you haven't paid, providers skip the credit check and deposit entirely. Enrollment is usually same-day β often the fastest way in Texas to get lights on, period.
The honest trade-offs:
- Price: prepaid rates typically run a bit above the cheapest standard plans. You're paying for the skipped deposit and credit check.
- Disconnection speed: this is the serious one. On a standard plan, nonpayment triggers a formal notice period. On prepaid, when your balance hits zero, disconnection can follow the same day (providers must send low-balance warnings by text/email first β keep those alerts on and your phone number current).
- Budgeting flip side: daily usage texts make prepaid the most transparent plan type there is β many people keep prepaid by choice because seeing "$3.40 yesterday" changes behavior in a way monthly bills never do.
Every prepaid plan in our comparison tables is flagged "Prepaid," and the hide-prepaid filter works in both directions β uncheck it to see them all.
Option 2: Deposit waivers the rules require
PUCT customer-protection rules require providers to waive deposits in several situations. If any of these fit, say so during enrollment β you may need to submit simple documentation:
- Age 65+ β customers 65 or older who aren't currently delinquent with an electric provider can't be charged a deposit.
- Good payment history β a reference letter from your previous electricity provider showing on-time payment (typically the last 12 months) substitutes for a deposit with many providers.
- Victims of family violence β with a certification letter (available through the Texas Council on Family Violence process), deposits must be waived.
- Letter of guarantee β some providers accept a co-signer who guarantees the account instead of cash up front.
Option 3: Shop for plans with lighter requirements
Deposit policies differ by provider β the credit threshold that triggers a $300 deposit at one company may pass clean at another. If a quote comes back with a big deposit, it costs nothing to enroll with a different provider instead; the quote isn't a debt, just an offer. Satisfaction guarantees some providers advertise (30-day switch-out, for instance) also signal lighter onboarding.
If you do pay a deposit
It's your money on loan, not a fee. Rules require it back β typically refunded with interest after about a year of on-time payments, or applied to your final bill when you leave. If a provider drags its feet after you've closed an account, the PUCT complaint line (1-888-782-8477) is the lever.
The exit ramp: don't stay longer than you need
Prepaid and no-deposit arrangements are excellent bridges and poor permanent homes if their rate runs high. After several months of on-time prepaid history, you're building exactly the payment record that waives deposits on standard plans. Re-run the comparison at your usage twice a year; when a standard plan beats your prepaid rate and the deposit barrier has fallen, take the ten-minute switch.
If the problem is the bill itself
If affording electricity β not the deposit β is the pressure, two doors: dial 2-1-1 (Texas's assistance referral line) to find utility bill help programs in your county, and ask about CEAP, the state's energy assistance program for qualifying households. Providers also offer deferred payment plans, and during extreme weather events disconnections are restricted β ask; the protections only work if invoked.