Energy choice is yours in Ohio
Join thousands of households in the Buckeye State switching to clean, renewable energy—with no installation and no change to your utility.

You have the power to choose the cleaner option
Right now, the electricity that comes to your home in Ohio likely includes fossil fuels, which pollute our environment. But by choosing 100% clean energy (from solar, wind, and hydro sources), you can help improve the air we breathe and the world we share.
Natural Gas
59 %
Coal
24 %
Nuclear
12 %
Wind/Solar/Hydro
3 %
Other
2 %
Wind/Solar/Hydro
100 %
Natural Gas
0 %
Nuclear
0 %
Coal
0 %
Other
0 %
Change the world without changing your life
We work in collaboration with Ohio utilities—including AEP, AES (formerly DP&L), Duke, The Illuminating Company, Ohio Edison, and Toledo Edison—to ensure your home is powered by 100% renewable energy.
Switching is easy. And risk free.
Your electricity will continue to be delivered, billed, and serviced by your current utility. You're simply switching your supply to 100% clean energy from CleanChoice Energy—and you can cancel without fees at any time. See how it works in the video below.
Join the ripple effect of clean energy
Join other Ohio households and sign up for 100% renewable energy to help support cleaner air, healthier communities, and a stronger economy.
AS FEATURED IN
Join us in the fight against climate change
We're on a mission to make clean air and renewable energy available to all.
In 2024, our customers had the same environmental impact as planting 19,145,166 trees.*

Frequently asked questions
Learn more about renewable energy in Ohio
Looking for more resources to learn about Ohio clean energy? Check out our comprehensive renewable energy guide for Ohio residents below.
1Typical default utility energy mix for customers in OH. Source: www.eia.gov, 2024 "Electric power industry generation by primary energy source." CleanChoice Energy has high standards for defining "clean" energy. While nuclear does not emit greenhouse gasses, generation from this source has other negative environmental consequences.
*Based on EPA greenhouse gas equivalencies.