How Many Units Is R125 Electricity in South Africa?
R125 of prepaid electricity in South Africa buys you anywhere from 32 kWh (most expensive first-block muni: City of Cape Town) to 50.2 kWh (cheapest: Eskom direct supply at R2.49/kWh). That's the headline range - but block stacking on inclining tariffs can push the worst-case down to 10.4 kWh for the same R125 late in the billing month. Pick your provider in the calculator below for the precise number.
R125 Electricity by Provider (2025/2026)
| Provider | Avg R/kWh* | Units (kWh) | Est. Days |
|---|---|---|---|
| Eskom Homelight 20A | R2.49/kWh | 50.2 kWh | 5 days |
| Eskom Homelight 60A | R3.16/kWh | 39.6 kWh | 4 days |
| City Power (Johannesburg) | R3.06/kWh R3.06-R4.00/kWh steps | 40.9 kWh | 4.1 days |
| City of Cape Town | R3.91/kWh R3.91-R4.65/kWh steps | 32 kWh | 3.2 days |
| City of Tshwane (Pretoria) | R3.42/kWh R3.42-R4.70/kWh steps | 36.6 kWh | 3.7 days |
| eThekwini (Durban) | R3.77/kWh | 33.2 kWh | 3.3 days |
| Ekurhuleni | R2.97/kWh R2.97-R11.99/kWh steps | 42.1 kWh | 4.2 days |
* Average R/kWh = R125 ÷ kWh for this purchase. Days at 10 kWh/day average usage.
Pick your provider and how much you have already bought this month
Block boundaries shown are kWh thresholds for the current calendar month - they reset on the 1st. Eskom Homelight and eThekwini Durban use a single flat rate, so the block selector is disabled for those.
Why R125 can buy 50%+ fewer units later in the month
Most municipalities reset block tariffs on the 1st of the month. Your first R125 top-up is on the cheapest block. As your monthly consumption climbs, every new purchase rolls into a more expensive block. The same R125 can buy half the units (or worse) by the end of the month - this is the single biggest reason households see wildly different totals on the same Rand amount.
- First 350 kWh40.8 kWhR3.06/kWh
- 351 - 500 kWh35.6 kWhR3.51/kWh
- Above 500 kWh31.3 kWhR4.00/kWh
- First 600 kWh32 kWhR3.91/kWh
- Above 600 kWh26.9 kWhR4.65/kWh
- First 100 kWh36.5 kWhR3.42/kWh
- 101 - 400 kWh31.3 kWhR4.00/kWh
- 401 - 650 kWh28.7 kWhR4.36/kWh
- Above 650 kWh26.6 kWhR4.70/kWh
- First 600 kWh42.1 kWhR2.97/kWh
- 601 - 700 kWh26.9 kWhR4.64/kWh
- Above 700 kWh10.4 kWhR11.99/kWh
Why does R125 buy 32 kWh in one place and 50.2 kWh in another? Seven things change the answer: your municipality, tariff code, inclining block tariffs, fixed monthly charges (City Power adds R200/month), the channel you buy through (Shoprite charges 1.3%), sub-meter resellers, and whether your account is in arrears. Read the full guide.
What Can R125 of Electricity Power?
With 50.2 kWh (Eskom rate), you could run approximately:
- LED lights (10W each): 209 days of 24-hour lighting per bulb
- TV (120W): 418 hours of viewing
- Fridge (150W avg): 14 days
- Electric geyser (2kW): 25 hours of heating
- Washing machine: approximately 100 loads (0.5 kWh per cold cycle)
Rates have risen sharply. Eskom's regulated tariff is up roughly 115% since 2020 and over 16x what it was in 2000. The same R125 bought far more units a few years ago. See the full Eskom tariff history.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many units of electricity do you get for R125?
R125 buys roughly 32 to 50.2 kWh in South Africa, depending on your provider. Eskom Homelight direct supply at the flat rate of R2.49/kWh is cheapest at 50.2 kWh. City Power Johannesburg gives about 40.9 kWh, City of Cape Town Domestic about 32 kWh, eThekwini Durban a flat 33.2 kWh, and Tshwane around 36.6 kWh for a first-in-month purchase. The wide range exists because each municipality sets its own tariff, several use inclining block (IBT) rates that step up as you buy more in a billing month, and some add fixed monthly service charges (City Power adds R200/month) that effectively raise the cost per unit.
How long will R125 electricity last?
At a typical urban household usage of 10 kWh per day, R125 of Eskom electricity (50.2 kWh) will last approximately 5 days. Low-use rural households (3-5 kWh/day) can stretch it to 13 days, while high-use homes with electric geysers and pool pumps (around 18-20 kWh/day) typically work through it in 3 days.
How much is 1 unit of prepaid electricity in South Africa?
On Eskom Homelight (2025/2026), 1 unit costs R2.49 on the 20A tariff. Municipal rates vary: City Power Joburg prepaid high is about R3.06/kWh on the first 350 kWh of the month (VAT-inclusive energy estimate), Cape Town Domestic about R3.91/kWh on the first 600 kWh, Tshwane R3.42/kWh on the first 100 kWh stepping up to R4.70/kWh above 650 kWh, Durban (eThekwini) is a flat R3.77/kWh, and Ekurhuleni Tariff A2 is R2.97/kWh on the first 600 kWh stepping up sharply above. All VAT-inclusive energy-only estimates. For block tariffs, the rate you actually pay depends on how much you already bought this month.
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