Mine are probably not normal (the Singer HVAC system this place has for heat and air was built in 1980...I googled, it's so old - and is kept together with little more than screws (some missing) and spit). The fridge is also on the outs (there's a leak coming from behind the light bulb that we've attempted to fix on our own twice, flooding the fridge out every day, and a landlord who ignores my complaints about it). Fridge is probably circa 1990s at best.
Also, Other Person runs the a/c more than I like, keeps it colder than I like, and runs the heat more than I would in winter, since I'm all for practically freezing to death before switching it on. We're also paying into a city co-op, not a regular utility, so trash, sewer, fire and water are included in these estimates (so probably not normal, like I said, assuming ConEd or similar covers your area).
Edit: reading through other's comments after adding mine, I should also do some background: we're in an apartment of around 800 square feet with no insulation in the ceiling upstairs, which makes the upstairs way too hot with sun beating down on it all day/into evening, and we have our own (very old) washer/dryer and an antique dishwasher that somehow still works that we run anywhere from 0-3 times a month, because we cook a lot and and the sheer endless amount of dishes/pots/pans can get overwhelming. /edit
That said, the lowest bills we'll have are in late fall and early spring when I can convince OP to shut off forced heat or air - around $140-$175. Winter range: $275-$300. Summer: $200-275, but with the brutal heat this year, much closer to $275 more recently.
Duke Energy was waaaaaay cheaper. I hated them ("Yes, the power's out again - another squirrel on the line, most probably") but they were dirt cheap compared to paying for everything (as the property had its own well and trash/fire/other was paid for through property taxes).
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Mine are probably not normal (the Singer HVAC system this place has for heat and air was built in 1980...I googled, it's so old - and is kept together with little more than screws (some missing) and spit). The fridge is also on the outs (there's a leak coming from behind the light bulb that we've attempted to fix on our own twice, flooding the fridge out every day, and a landlord who ignores my complaints about it). Fridge is probably circa 1990s at best.
Also, Other Person runs the a/c more than I like, keeps it colder than I like, and runs the heat more than I would in winter, since I'm all for practically freezing to death before switching it on. We're also paying into a city co-op, not a regular utility, so trash, sewer, fire and water are included in these estimates (so probably not normal, like I said, assuming ConEd or similar covers your area).
Edit: reading through other's comments after adding mine, I should also do some background: we're in an apartment of around 800 square feet with no insulation in the ceiling upstairs, which makes the upstairs way too hot with sun beating down on it all day/into evening, and we have our own (very old) washer/dryer and an antique dishwasher that somehow still works that we run anywhere from 0-3 times a month, because we cook a lot and and the sheer endless amount of dishes/pots/pans can get overwhelming. /edit
That said, the lowest bills we'll have are in late fall and early spring when I can convince OP to shut off forced heat or air - around $140-$175. Winter range: $275-$300. Summer: $200-275, but with the brutal heat this year, much closer to $275 more recently.
Duke Energy was waaaaaay cheaper. I hated them ("Yes, the power's out again - another squirrel on the line, most probably") but they were dirt cheap compared to paying for everything (as the property had its own well and trash/fire/other was paid for through property taxes).