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More specifically I'm trying to find the averages for Cleveland, OH, New York, NY, Chicago, IL, Atlanta, GA, and Washington DC.

2007-03-25 04:00:12 · 3 answers · asked by Juliette 1 in Business & Finance Renting & Real Estate

3 answers

Contact the major utility companies - they might be able to give you the info you are looking for. In any case, they should be able to give you their rates, which is what you really need in order to compare costs.

Averages aren't going to mean much, since there would be such a wide range depending on the individual property - how big it is, how well insulated, etc., and it would depend on what type of heat the property has, what appliances, how they're used..... and way too many more variables for you to be able to guess what YOUR costs would be.

2007-03-25 04:17:43 · answer #1 · answered by Judy 7 · 0 0

Just what good will this do if that is all you are comparing. You would get large and small homes alike without knowing the diffeence. You can't compare cold climates with warm. There have been several questions like this and I can't see for the life of my why you would want to know. The average number is so vague that youcouldn't do anything with it. A high cost per KWH but low usage would appear to be less effective than a low cost per KWH and high usage.

2007-03-25 04:35:14 · answer #2 · answered by ttpawpaw 7 · 0 0

There are lots of websites that offer cost of living comparisons between cities. A Yahoo search for "cost of living comparisons" (include the quotation marks in the Yahoo search box) will yield lots of sites to explore. If you do the same search, and are willing to spend a few minutes exploring, I'm sure that you will quickly find the information you seek.

Good luck with your search for information.

2007-03-25 05:08:15 · answer #3 · answered by exbuilder 7 · 0 0

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