US electricity consumption will hit successive record highs in 2026 and 2027, according to the US Energy Information Administration's latest outlook on Tuesday.
According to the Short-Term Energy Outlook, total national power demand will scale to 4,271 terawatt-hours in 2026, from 4,195 TWh in 2025, eventually reaching 4,397 TWh in 2027, driven by artificial intelligence data centers and rapid electrification.
The EIA forecasts that commercial electricity sales will jump to a record 1,547 TWh.
Meanwhile, residential consumption is expected to moderate slightly to 1,512 TWh, down from its all-time high of 1,515 TWh.
Concurrently, industrial electricity consumption is tightly rebounding, with 2026 forecasts pointing to 1,066 TWh, effectively breaking a long-standing 26-year sector record originally set back in the year 2000.