

Wir haben den Norgespris-Vertrag unterzeichnet, bei dem Sie 0,50 kr (inkl. MwSt.) pro kWh zahlen, wenn der Spotpreis über 0,50 kr liegt.
Aber die Rechnung schien Ende Oktober nicht zu stimmen – unsere Stromkosten beliefen sich am Ende auf mehr als die Hälfte der gesamten verbrauchten Kilowattstunden (Brennnessel nicht mitgerechnet). Ich vermutete, dass es vielleicht daran lag, dass der Spotpreis an manchen Tagen unter 0,50 kr lag, also habe ich mir keine großen Gedanken darüber gemacht.
Jetzt im November lag der Spotpreis sowohl am 1. als auch am 2. über dem Schwellenwert, aber wir erhalten nur einen Rabatt von etwa 28 Kronen statt etwa 44 Kronen (die Hälfte der bisher verbrauchten kWh). Warum ist das so? Gibt es versteckte Kosten, die mir entgangen sind?
https://www.reddit.com/gallery/1onbg7s
Von ninnibear
10 Kommentare
You pay 0,5 kr per kwh no matter what the spot price is. It is for all practical matters a fixed price contract. It is calculated on an hour by hour basis.
You pay 0,50 kr/kWh no matter what the spot is. It’s a flat tariff.
So 2 things to note about your picture and what you wrote ( I just woke up don’t judge me) but Norges pris is 0.50kr regardless of what the spotprice is. So it is a little bit of a gamble. If spotprice is higher you save money, if it is lower you lose money. However for the past month I think spotprice has been lower for only like 2-5 days if I remember correctly.
Secondly, you still pay nettleie and your electricity provider for whatever extra costs such as app usage or whatever. So Norgespris covers the kwh itself. But there’s some other fees that still add up to the total amount. The nettleie price is decided on when you use your most electricity, so it is still advisable to use most electricity in the night so that your nettleie is cheapest
Norgespris is a fixed price thing, where you pay 0.50 kr regardless of the spot price. It’s not a ceiling of 0.50kr, it’s a fixed price even if the spot price is below 0.50 kr .
Unrelated to question but Norwegian energy only costs 0.5nok? 4 euro cents??
Some providers add a påslag to the amount you pay (e.g. Fortum adds 5.9 øre per kWh), and some also charge a fixed monthly fee. Both of these are in addition to what you pay for Norgespris. Could it be something like that?
The spot price for those two days was roughly 0.73NOK/kWh including VAT, assuming that you are in NO2 which is the most expensive region of Norway. That means you get back roughly 0.23NOK/kWh. Your usage is 92.7kWh, which means you get roughly 21 NOK back for those two days. Your number is a bit higher at 28.8 NOK, which is probably because your usage was a bit higher in the most expensive hours, which results in a higher average price than the 0.73NOK/kWh that I calculated.
You are paying 88.3-28.8=59.5 NOK for a usage of 92.7kWh, which is 0.64NOK/kWh. The reason that this number is significantly higher than 0.50NOK/kWh is likely that you have an agreement with your provider that involves paying a significant contribution towards their profit. You may want to consider finding a better deal.
It’s in nettleie.
https://www.fjordkraft.no/strom/stromregning/nettleie-strom/norgespris/faktura/?utm_campaign=2025+10+-+FKP++-+Norgespris+første+faktura&utm_medium=email&utm_source=lime
Norgespris is a subsidy from the state which is managed by the net suppliers, so it will be on the nettleie part of the bill. You pay full price to your power supplier and gets the difference subtracted from the nettleie (or added if the spot price in total is lower than Norgespris). Many get the nettleie and the electricity billed together, and then it won’t matter, but if not, you may have to pay a high electricity bill and a low nettleie bill (or even get money back from the net owner).
One piece of the puzzle that is not visible in your screenshots is what surcharge you pay to your electricty supplier. The Norgespris rate of 0,50kr *does not include* the surcharge that your supplier charges, that surcharge is part of your contract with the supplier.
Based on your usage of 92,7kwh and cost of 59,50 (after the Norgespris discount), you are being charged 0,64 per kwh. Is it possible that you are paying 0,14kr per kwh in fees? If so you should really consider changing suppliers, you can look up cheaper ones here: [https://www.forbrukerradet.no/strompris/](https://www.forbrukerradet.no/strompris/) Cheap ones should not be more than a few øre per kwh.
If you can’t find that info in the app, you need to check your latest bill, where all such details should be listed.