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Utility Bills After Moving: How to Avoid Getting Charged for the Next Tenant's Usage

Moving out but still getting utility bills? Learn how to close accounts properly, dispute charges after your move-out date, and avoid final bill surprises.

Last edited on May 26, 2026
6 min read

One of the most common utility billing disputes happens after moving: you get charged for electricity, gas, or water used AFTER your move-out date. Or your final bill is shockingly high. Here's how to close accounts properly and fight incorrect charges.

The Proper Way to Close Utility Accounts

2 Weeks Before Moving

  1. Call each utility (electric, gas, water, trash) to schedule disconnection
  2. Request specific stop date — your actual last day at the property
  3. Ask about final meter reading — request actual (not estimated) read on your last day
  4. Get confirmation number — document date, rep name, and confirmation
  5. Ask about your deposit — when and how it will be refunded
  6. Provide forwarding address — for final bill and deposit refund

On Move-Out Day

  1. Take photos of all meters — document the readings yourself
  2. Note the date and time on the photos
  3. Save these photos — they're your proof if disputes arise later
  4. Confirm stop order is still in the system — quick call to verify

After Moving

  1. Watch for final bill — should arrive within 1-2 billing cycles
  2. Review charges carefully — ensure no charges past your stop date
  3. Monitor for deposit refund — should come within 30-60 days
  4. Don't ignore bills — even incorrect ones can go to collections

Common Final Bill Problems

Problem 1: Charged After Move-Out Date

Cause: Stop order wasn't processed, or next tenant didn't start service Fix: Call utility with your confirmation number and photos of final meter reads. Demand adjustment to your stop date.

Problem 2: Unexpectedly High Final Bill

Causes:

  • Previous months were estimated; final bill is a "true-up" to actual usage
  • Deposit wasn't applied
  • Early termination fee (deregulated markets like Texas)
  • Overlap charges during move (old and new place both billing)

Fix: Request detailed line-item breakdown. Challenge any true-up that seems unreasonable (your usage pattern shouldn't have changed dramatically). Verify deposit was applied.

Problem 3: Final Bill Never Arrived

Cause: Went to old address, wrong forwarding address, or system error Risk: Can go to collections without you knowing Fix: Call utility proactively 30 days after move. Request final bill be sent to your new address. Check credit report for surprises.

Problem 4: Deposit Not Refunded

Cause: Applied to final bill, sent to wrong address, or utility "forgot" Fix: Call after 60 days and formally request deposit refund. Some states require interest on held deposits — ask about that too.

How to Dispute Post-Move Charges

Step 1: Contact Utility

  • Call with your account number and confirmation of stop date
  • Reference your confirmation number from when you scheduled the stop
  • State clearly: "I moved out on [date] and should not be charged after that date"
  • Request immediate adjustment

Step 2: Provide Documentation

  • Move-out confirmation from utility (your original call)
  • Lease end date or new lease showing you moved
  • Meter photos from move-out day
  • Forwarding address change date (USPS)
  • New utility start date at your new address

Step 3: Escalate if Needed

If first-line reps can't resolve:

  • Ask for a supervisor
  • Submit written dispute (email or certified letter)
  • File complaint with your state PUC
  • Note: Disputed amounts should not go to collections while under investigation

Step 4: Protect Your Credit

  • If bill goes to collections despite dispute, file a dispute with credit bureaus
  • Provide documentation showing the charges are incorrect
  • Utility cannot report disputed amounts to credit agencies (in most states) while formal investigation is pending

State Rules on Final Bills

Issue Typical State Rules
Max time to issue final bill 30-45 days after service stop
Deposit refund timeline 30-60 days (some states: 30 days + interest)
Liability after stop date $0 — customer not responsible after confirmed stop
Collections hold during dispute Must hold during formal PUC complaint
Interest on deposits Required in many states (CA, NY, IL, NJ)

Special Situations

Roommate Moved Out, Account in Your Name

  • You remain responsible until YOU close the account
  • Remove roommate's name won't help if account is in your name
  • Options: close account and have remaining roommate open new one, or transfer account

Landlord Didn't Transfer to Their Name

  • Some landlords are supposed to take over utilities between tenants
  • If they didn't, you may be charged until the next tenant starts service
  • Check your lease — it may specify who's responsible for utility transfer
  • This is a landlord-tenant dispute; file with your local housing authority if needed

Early Termination Fees (Texas and Other Deregulated Markets)

  • If you have a contract with a REP (retail electric provider), moving may trigger an ETF
  • Typical ETF: $150-$350
  • Some contracts waive ETF if you transfer service to your new address
  • Read your contract or call your provider to ask about move policies

Quick Checklist

  • [ ] Call ALL utilities 2+ weeks before move-out to schedule stop
  • [ ] Get confirmation numbers and note rep names
  • [ ] Request actual meter read (not estimated) on final day
  • [ ] Take photos of all meters on move-out day
  • [ ] Provide forwarding address for final bill and deposit
  • [ ] Review final bill carefully — dispute any post-move charges
  • [ ] Monitor for deposit refund within 60 days
  • [ ] Check credit report 60-90 days after move for surprises
  • [ ] If disputed: file PUC complaint to protect against collections

Bottom Line

The most important step is calling your utilities 2+ weeks before moving and getting written confirmation of your stop date. Take photos of your meters on the last day — this simple step prevents 90% of post-move disputes. If you do get charged after your move-out date, dispute immediately and reference your stop confirmation. Never ignore a final bill, even an incorrect one — it can go to collections and damage your credit.

Sources

  • Your state Public Utility Commission: naruc.org
  • FTC (utility billing rights): ftc.gov
  • CFPB (credit reporting disputes): consumerfinance.gov
  • USPS forwarding: usps.com/move
Lisa Wei

Lisa Wei

Content Strategist

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