kcflhrc
Veteran Member
If I have learned anything in my 2 years living in the country, everything is expensive. And when you do a budget you may as well plan on doubling that figure and you should come out about right.
In ohio the power company picks up most of the cost and owner pays remainderIn any case, congrats on your homestead, and welcome to the forum. There is a wealth of information on here, and a lot of good people. We are in a similar situation except we haven't really done anything with our land yet since I have been overseas. My brother in law built on the piece of land next to ours and the power company rolled the cost of power poles into his bill, and he paid it off in installments along with his utility bill over the course of ten years or so. But I don't think it was anywhere close to the amount you are talking about. I think what he paid for was the labor of having the poles and lines installed, the power company owns the lines and poles, so they are the ones who bought the materials. This was in Ohio so different companies do things differently. I would like to do underground utilities as well (once we build). From what I am hearing, you can save money by digging the trench yourself.



That $25K price is nuts.Overhead primary line should be MUCH cheaper than Underground wire.Has the power company actually sent someone out to your property for a estimate or are they blowing smoke over the phone?How do I know?I retired last year after 37 years as a electric lineman.Hey all, newer to the forums.
We purchased 32 acres and are planning on placing the house to the back of the properties (or the middle to be more precise) so we can enjoy the open views. That being said, it means our driveway is 1300' long. Which in turn means an EXPENSIVE electrical run! The local utility (National Grid) is estimating $25k to run my power 1300 feet from the road to the house.
Anyone have a similar situation - what did you do? Can I dig it myself to save money and have them place it? I've looked at going off-grid, but the batteries don't tend to last long enough for a good ROI. Even the new Tesla batteries I'm a bit uncertain of.
I also need to run cable/internet feed as I work from home!
Thoughts/Suggestions?
Chris...
That $25K price is nuts.Overhead primary line should be MUCH cheaper than Underground wire.Has the power company actually sent someone out to your property for a estimate or are they blowing smoke over the phone?How do I know?I retired last year after 37 years as a electric lineman.
Are they the only electric provider in your area?I assume you are running a single phase primary line?Make sure they put it in 4 inch Pipe for the full run.Ask them how much you will save trenching it yourself verses them trenching it.I had our local power company quote me a price to run 7 spans of overhead wire (1400 ft.)to my hunting cabin and was quoted $9,000-$10,000 bucks.IMHO that price is more in the ball park verses $25,000 grand.They told me overhead would be MORE expensive (I'd rather have underground anyhow). I was told they wouldn't come on-site (a second time) for a concrete quote until I have something started on the property (kinda backwards, isn't it?). I figure perhaps I'll get the well dug or something.
I was hoping I could trench the hole using a ditch witch and then have them come do what they need to (I guess I figure that would be the most work intensive). Not sure at this point, but I KNOW I don't have $25k in the budget!
Pappy,you bring up a excellent point about deregulation,that thought never entered my mind until you said it.Michigan from what I have heard is going threw a similar debate at this time.I tell folks be careful what you wish for.The price you are being quoted is the result of Texas' deregulation of electricity. It used to be that the power company absorbed the cost of installing the infrastructure because they knew they were going to collect revenue from you for a long time as your retail electricity provider. These days, they won't do that because you could switch to another retail provider and the company that installed the infrastructure would be left to absorb the costs without any offsetting revenue.
It sucks, but I can't say I blame them. I do think they take advantage of the consumer, though, by charging outrageous amounts to install the infrastructure. I think it has become a profit center for them.
P.S. Rural dsl internet is very hit or miss. We were 2500 feet from the switch, and the promised 3 mbps was more like 1.2 on a good day, dropping to less than 25% of that if it rained. And the latency, a number few people even think about was vey high 250 ms or so. If cable internet is available check that out first. Cable comes within 0.5 mile of us, but they will not extend their area. End of discussion. We ended up with microwave internet, which hits the 3 mbps mark and has latency of about 20 ms. This is not available everywhere.
Knowing what I know now, I would be certain of the availability of internet before I broke ground. DW works from home and internet is essential for us. We lucked out after the fact, but I would keep on looking for property until I found something with good internet. Satellite internet is better than dial-up, but has huge latency issues.
P.P.S. While you are building, make provision for a back-up generator. It will never be easier or cheaper. Rural areas have many more power outages than urban or suburban ones, and they tend to last longer. We typically have 2 to 6 outages per year, which last 4 to 8 hours each. And, we have short outages compared to many people. There is a transformer yard about a mile away, so the service crews give our area priority. 2 years ago a number of people we know were out of power for several weeks in the middle of winter.
Welcome to the country. EVERYTHING costs more out here. My backup generator is running right now, sucking up 2 gallons of propane per hour. But otherwise, it would be dark and hot here, so it runs. I spend a lot on gas, since it is a drive to get anything out here. It isn't cheap living out here.
Almost everything... when a 600 square foot shack on an 800 square foot lot sell pushes a million and average 50 year old homes on slab foundations range from 500 to 800k 20 miles out... not quite everything costs more.