Cooling Is the New Priority Load
Air conditioning is the single largest reason the summer on-peak window sits in the middle of the day. When temperatures climb, cooling loads climb with them, and that demand pattern is exactly what the TOU schedule is priced against. A home running central AC through a July heat wave consumes the most electricity at precisely the hours those kilowatt-hours cost the most.
The best lever here is pre-cooling. A smart or programmable thermostat can bring the home to a cooler setpoint during the off-peak or mid-peak morning — say, 6 to 10 a.m. — and then let the temperature drift up a few degrees across the on-peak block. The envelope of the house acts as thermal storage. You're not skipping cooling, you're timing it. Households without smart thermostats can achieve a coarser version of the same thing by manually bumping the setpoint two or three degrees at 11 a.m. and dropping it again at 5 p.m.
A handful of envelope moves compound this. Closing blinds on west- and south-facing windows during peak sun reduces solar gain. Sealing gaps around doors and windows limits the cool air that leaks out. Ceiling fans let you raise the thermostat setpoint without feeling warmer — fans cool people, not rooms, so turn them off when you leave.
Flexible Loads: Laundry, Dishwashing, EV Charging
These are the easiest wins, because the timing is fully under your control. Laundry, dishwashing, and EV charging run on schedules you set, not schedules the weather sets.
For laundry and dishwashing, the summer target is simple: after 7 p.m. on weekdays, or anytime on weekends and holidays. Most modern machines have delay-start timers that will launch a load at a set hour. Washing clothes in cold water reduces the kilowatt-hour load per cycle regardless of when you run it, so that habit stacks cleanly with the timing shift.
EV charging has the biggest absolute dollar impact, because a typical overnight charge pulls 30 to 60 kWh — enough that a single on-peak session can cost more than a week of off-peak sessions. Level 2 home chargers almost universally support scheduled charging (the full setup is covered in our home EV charging guide). Set the charger, or the vehicle itself, to begin drawing power at 7 p.m. or later. Households with meaningful daily EV miles should also run the OEB bill calculator on ULO versus TOU — the overnight 3.9¢ ULO rate often beats off-peak TOU on charging cost alone, though the 39.1¢ weekday on-peak penalty has to be weighed against it.
Loads That Don't Move
Some loads run around the clock and can't meaningfully be shifted: refrigerators, freezers, networking equipment, standby electronics, and anything plugged in for comfort or safety. The lever here isn't timing — it's reducing consumption. Replacing older bulbs with LEDs, unplugging idle electronics, and switching off the "always-on" standby modes on entertainment systems all help. According to the OEB's consumer bill brochure, Ontario households already consume nearly two-thirds of their electricity during off-peak hours. The remaining third — split between mid-peak and on-peak — is where optimization lives.