Economy Alert

New Electricity Price Hike: How This Affects Your Small Business

Strategic adjustments for the Sri Lankan SME Community | May 2026

As the nation grapples with the ongoing energy crisis, the Public Utilities Commission of Sri Lanka (PUCSL) has approved a significant 18% tariff revision effective from May 11. For local entrepreneurs, this isn’t just a bill increase—it’s a challenge to operational viability.

The Bottom Line

While users under 180 units are cushioned by a Rs. 15 billion subsidy, businesses in the Industrial, Hotel, and General Purpose sectors will bear the full brunt of the 18% hike to cover a Rs. 38 billion national revenue shortfall.

Estimated Impact on Monthly Overhead

For most small offices or workshops, the jump in costs is significant. Here is how your monthly overhead might shift:

Usage (Units) Old Bill (Rs.) New Bill (Rs.) Increase
210 Units 9,570 11,330 + Rs. 1,760
240 Units 12,120 14,330 + Rs. 2,210
300 Units 17,220 20,330 + Rs. 3,110

Survival Guide: 3 Steps to Protect Your Margin

1

Optimize to Stay Under 180 Units

If you are on the edge, aggressive conservation to stay below 180 units saves you the 18% surcharge. Audit your heavy machinery usage and ensure all lighting is LED-based.

2

Re-evaluate Your Pricing Model

With inflation at 5.4%, your margins are already under pressure. Consider “Peak-Hour” pricing adjustments or offering incentives for clients who utilize your services during off-peak windows.

3

The Solar Transition

The “payback period” for solar investments has dropped by nearly 20% due to these hikes. For any SME with roof access, rooftop solar is now a critical hedge against rising costs.

Stay resilient. The energy landscape is shifting, and early adaptation is the key to business continuity in Sri Lanka.