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How Many Units Is R15 Electricity in South Africa?

R15 of prepaid electricity in South Africa
3.8 - 6 kWh
City of Cape Town (lowest) to Eskom Homelight 20A (highest)
On Eskom direct supply at R2.49/kWh you get 6 kWh (lasts ~0.6 days at typical 10 kWh/day household use).⚠ Worst case: as little as 1.3 kWh if your purchase lands in a punitive top block (e.g. Ekurhuleni above 700 kWh/month at R11.99/kWh). See why below.

R15 of prepaid electricity in South Africa buys you anywhere from 3.8 kWh (most expensive first-block muni: City of Cape Town) to 6 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 1.3 kWh for the same R15 late in the billing month. Pick your provider in the calculator below for the precise number.

R15 Electricity by Provider (2025/2026)

Estimate: Block tariffs depend on how much you have already bought this month. These figures assume a first top-up in the billing month. Municipal block tariffs are estimated as if this is the first purchase in the billing month. Actual tokens can differ later in the month.
ProviderAvg R/kWh*Units (kWh)Est. Days
Eskom Homelight 20A
R2.49/kWh
6 kWh0.6 days
Eskom Homelight 60A
R3.16/kWh
4.8 kWh0.5 days
City Power (Johannesburg)
R3.06/kWh
R3.06-R4.00/kWh steps
4.9 kWh0.5 days
City of Cape Town
R3.91/kWh
R3.91-R4.65/kWh steps
3.8 kWh0.4 days
City of Tshwane (Pretoria)
R3.42/kWh
R3.42-R4.70/kWh steps
4.4 kWh0.4 days
eThekwini (Durban)
R3.77/kWh
4 kWh0.4 days
Ekurhuleni
R2.97/kWh
R2.97-R11.99/kWh steps
5.1 kWh0.5 days

* Average R/kWh = R15 ÷ kWh for this purchase. Days at 10 kWh/day average usage.

Your exact scenario

Pick your provider and how much you have already bought this month

On Eskom Homelight 20A, first purchase this month (block 1), R15 buys
6 kWh
at R2.49/kWh, lasts ~0.6 days at typical 10 kWh/day household use

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 R15 can buy 50%+ fewer units later in the month

Most municipalities reset block tariffs on the 1st of the month. Your first R15 top-up is on the cheapest block. As your monthly consumption climbs, every new purchase rolls into a more expensive block. The same R15 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.

How to read this: Each bar shows how many kWh R15 buys in that block. As you spend more in a billing month, your purchases roll into the next block and you get fewer kWh per Rand. The drop on the right is from Block 1 to the top block.
City Power (Johannesburg)
R15 buys 22% fewer kWh in the top block
  • First 350 kWh4.9 kWhR3.06/kWh
  • 351 - 500 kWh4.3 kWhR3.51/kWh
  • Above 500 kWh3.8 kWhR4.00/kWh
City of Cape Town
R15 buys 16% fewer kWh in the top block
  • First 600 kWh3.8 kWhR3.91/kWh
  • Above 600 kWh3.2 kWhR4.65/kWh
City of Tshwane (Pretoria)
R15 buys 27% fewer kWh in the top block
  • First 100 kWh4.4 kWhR3.42/kWh
  • 101 - 400 kWh3.8 kWhR4.00/kWh
  • 401 - 650 kWh3.4 kWhR4.36/kWh
  • Above 650 kWh3.2 kWhR4.70/kWh
Ekurhuleni
R15 buys 75% fewer kWh in the top block
  • First 600 kWh5.1 kWhR2.97/kWh
  • 601 - 700 kWh3.2 kWhR4.64/kWh
  • Above 700 kWh1.3 kWhR11.99/kWh
No block stacking on these providers: Eskom Homelight 20A stays at R2.49/kWh (6 kWh per R15); Eskom Homelight 60A stays at R3.16/kWh (4.7 kWh per R15); eThekwini (Durban) stays at R3.77/kWh (4 kWh per R15). Your purchase position in the month does not change the rate.

Why does R15 buy 3.8 kWh in one place and 6 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.

Rates have risen sharply. Eskom's regulated tariff is up roughly 115% since 2020 and over 16x what it was in 2000. The same R15 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 R15?

R15 buys roughly 3.8 to 6 kWh in South Africa, depending on your provider. Eskom Homelight direct supply at the flat rate of R2.49/kWh is cheapest at 6 kWh. City Power Johannesburg gives about 4.9 kWh, City of Cape Town Domestic about 3.8 kWh, eThekwini Durban a flat 4 kWh, and Tshwane around 4.4 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 R15 electricity last?

At a typical urban household usage of 10 kWh per day, R15 of Eskom electricity (6 kWh) will last approximately 0.6 days. Low-use rural households (3-5 kWh/day) can stretch it to 2 days, while high-use homes with electric geysers and pool pumps (around 18-20 kWh/day) typically work through it in 1 day.

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.

Need to calculate a different amount or compare providers in detail?

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