The Victorian Default Offer (VDO) — 2026–27
The Victorian Default Offer, or VDO, is the standing electricity price the Essential Services Commission sets each year for households in Victoria who haven't chosen a market plan. It works as both a fair default rate and a benchmark for comparing every other offer in the state.
| Zone | Covers | Supply c/day | Usage c/kWh | Derived annual* |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CitiPower | Melbourne CBD & inner suburbs | 121.1c | 26.0c | $1,481 |
| Powercor | Western Melbourne & western Victoria | 138.1c | 28.2c | $1,633 |
| United Energy | South-east Melbourne & the Mornington Peninsula | 119.1c | 27.4c | $1,529 |
| Jemena | North-west Melbourne | 127.1c | 27.5c | $1,563 |
| AusNet Services | Eastern & north-eastern Victoria | 128.2c | 32.0c | $1,747 |
* Derived at 4,000 kWh/year — the ESC publishes components, not an annual figure.
Who sets it, and where it applies
The Victorian Default Offer is set by the Essential Services Commission, Victoria's state regulator. Victoria sits outside the national Default Market Offer and runs this scheme of its own instead. It applies right across the state, adjusted for Victoria's five electricity distribution zones, because network costs differ depending on which part of the state you're in.
What it actually is
Like the DMO, the VDO is a cap and a reference price, not the rate everyone pays. It protects households on a standing offer from overpaying, and gives everyone else a clear baseline. Retailers can and do compete below it, so a market offer will often sit under the VDO. It's designed to be a simple, trustworthy default rather than the cheapest deal available.
How it's structured
The VDO is published as its underlying components, a daily supply charge plus a usage rate, rather than as a single annual figure. Splitting it out this way lets you compare a plan's standing charge and its per-unit rate separately, which is how a retailer actually bills you. Because there are five distribution zones, the exact figures vary by where you live.
Why it matters to you
The VDO is your yardstick in Victoria. Line your plan's supply and usage rates up against it, and you'll quickly see whether you're ahead or behind. If your rates are higher, it's a signal to look at market offers; if they're lower, you're already doing well.
When it changes
The VDO resets every 1 July with the rest of Australia's regulated prices. We re-verify Victoria's figures at that reset and show the date each page was last checked. This is general information, not energy-retail advice.
Related
- CitiPower rates
- Powercor rates
- United Energy rates
- Jemena rates
- AusNet Services rates
- The national DMO
- VIC feed-in tariff
The VDO 2026–27 applies 1 July 2026 – 30 June 2027.