City Power billing overhaul triggers wave of massive electricity bills in Johannesburg

 

                                            Elizabeth Edwards, from Parkwood, was slapped with a R60,000                                                                                      electricity bill after City Power took over electricity billing from                                                                                        City of Johannesburg. Photo: Seth Thorne


Johannesburg residents say they are receiving shockingly high electricity bills after the city’s power utility took over billing functions from the municipality, exposing years of billing errors and system failures.

Editor’s note:
The article below was originally published by GroundUp and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 licence. It is written by Seth Thorne and Kimberly Mutandiro. The text has not been edited or changed. The original article can be found on GroundUp.


City Power billing changes leave JHB residents with sky-high bills

Johannesburg’s power utility says credits of R136-million have been issued to 86 customers who were overcharged.

In July 2025, City Power took over electricity billing from the City of Johannesburg in an effort to increase revenue collection.

While this has led to some improvements, many residents have complained about sky-high bills, incorrect meter numbers, and being charged for estimated usage rather than actual meter readings.

City Power says credits of R136-million have been issued to customers who were overcharged.

Parkwood resident Elizabeth Edwards installed solar panels and switched to Egoli gas to reduce her reliance on the grid. But to her surprise, her electricity bill from City Power and the City of Johannesburg soared to more than R60,000.

This happened shortly after City Power replaced her electricity meter, saying it was faulty. Between June and July, her bill went up by almost R21,000, even though her actual usage went down because of switching to solar and gas. The bill continued to rise in the coming months.

The electricity usage on her account was based on estimates not actual readings. These estimates have since been reversed, and the account was adjusted to reflect actual meter readings, City Power spokesperson Isaac Mangena told GroundUp. But Edwards says she is left owing more than R20,000, which she continues to challenge.

Her case is not unique. Across Johannesburg, residents say they are battling high, unexplained or erroneous electricity bills. In some cases, electricity has been disconnected, even while their accounts remain under formal dispute.

In Randburg, another resident’s electricity has been disconnected several times. In 2022, her meter was replaced by City Power, but it was never properly registered. In recent months, she was slapped with a R93,000 bill. City Power took a correct meter reading in December, but the resident was still left with a R52,000 bill, which she disputes.

Mangena told GroundUp that a verification reading has been requested.

Julia Fish, head of the civic organisation JoburgCAN, says Johannesburg’s municipal billing system has been unstable for more than a decade. In July 2025, City Power officially took over electricity billing. This has led to some improvements, says Fish.

“Many long-estimated bills have been resolved,” she says, adding that City Power’s billing team has been responsive in correcting cases that had remained unresolved for years.

But the transition has not been smooth, and JoburgCAN saw an increase in complaints as the change came into effect.

In January, the municipal e-billing system went offline for nearly two weeks.

Disconnections have also become more unpredictable because that responsibility still lies with the municipality rather than the utility, says Fish.

The transition has also contributed to an increase in aggressive debt collection, she said, including cases where the city proceeds with disconnections even when accounts are disputed or subject to court orders.

“The issue now is the multiple siloed entities handling metering, revenue and disconnections,” she says.

Systems for residents to log disputes often fail to connect cases with officials who can resolve them. Although municipal bylaws state that residents who lodge disputes should not be charged interest or penalties, this sometimes still happens, further inflating bills.

Fish says a complete migration of the entire billing function is needed for the system to work properly.

She advises residents disputing bills to continue paying their previous monthly average and to log their dispute each month using the original reference number.

If a disconnection team arrives, residents should calmly present the dispute reference and contact the municipal call centre if electricity is cut. No reconnection fee is charged for unlawful disconnections.

Long-troubled billing system

Mangena said taking over electricity billing was an important step toward fixing Johannesburg’s long-troubled billing system and improving revenue collection.

City Power’s financial crisis has been largely driven by the gap between the electricity it buys from Eskom and the revenue it actually collects. This contributed to a reported R20-billion deficit and a monthly shortfall of roughly R2-billion in late 2025.

Mangena said the change allows City Power to take direct control of metering, tariff alignment and account reconciliation, improving oversight and responsiveness to customer queries.

The transition has exposed numerous historical discrepancies that had accumulated over several years, including incorrectly programmed meters, tariff misclassifications, unbilled accounts and other technical inconsistencies.

To address these issues, City Power launched a city-wide meter audit in July 2025 to verify that every electricity meter is correctly linked to a customer account.

The audit uncovered widespread problems, including prepaid meters providing electricity without payment, under-billing caused by meter tampering, customers placed on incorrect tariffs, and accounts that were not billed for electricity consumption at all.

As City Power corrected these problems, some residents reported duplicate charges and back-billing for electricity consumption going back several years. There were also instances of over-billing and long-standing customer disputes.

According to Mangena, credits totalling R136-million have been issued to 86 customers whose accounts were overcharged, while 162 long-running legal disputes have been resolved. Another 116 remain outstanding.

City Power encourages residents to submit their monthly meter readings via the e-Joburg platform to reduce estimated billing.

Since taking over billing responsibilities, City Power says it has processed 2,888 accounts and generated about R1.1-billion in additional revenue by correcting under-billing and previously unbilled accounts.

Mangena insists the increase in revenue is not due to overcharging residents.

City Power is also upgrading its billing system to allow real-time detection of anomalies and training staff to respond more quickly to customer queries.


Source: https://url-shortener.me/GJ28
Originally published by GroundUp.
Authors: Seth Thorne and Kimberly Mutandiro.
Republished under Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0.

Joburg News

Joburg News is an independent public service newsroom dedicated to informing Johannesburg residents about local politics, governance, public services, and business. We shine a light on accountability, uncover stories that affect everyday life, and give citizens a voice. Our mission is to report with integrity, empower communities, and hold leaders and institutions responsible for their actions in this world-class African city.

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