Belgium’s Energy Grid: Why It’s Perfectly Positioned for Dynamic Pricing

Belgium might seem like an unlikely place for dynamic energy tariffs to take hold. It is a small, densely populated country with a historically centralised energy system built around nuclear power. But a combination of infrastructure investment, regulatory progress, and a shifting generation mix means Belgium is, in fact, one of the more fertile markets in Europe for the kind of real-time pricing that 10s Energy provides.

Smart Meter Rollout

The digital meter — Belgium's term for the smart meter — is the essential infrastructure that makes dynamic tariffs viable for retail customers. Without 15-minute interval consumption data, there is no way to bill customers accurately against hourly spot prices.

In Flanders, the digital meter rollout has been proceeding steadily, with new connections and meter replacements progressively increasing coverage. The Flemish Energy Regulator (VREG) has been supportive of tariff innovation that takes advantage of smart meter data, and the regulatory framework for dynamic tariffs has been developing accordingly. Wallonia and Brussels follow their own but broadly aligned trajectories.

An Evolving Generation Mix

Belgium's generation mix is changing in ways that increase price volatility — and therefore the opportunity for dynamic tariff customers to benefit. The planned phaseout and subsequent partial extension of nuclear capacity has introduced more uncertainty into the supply stack. Growth in solar (Belgium has one of the highest solar penetration rates per capita in Europe) and increasing wind capacity in the North Sea create regular periods of very low or negative prices.

This volatility is exactly what a dynamic tariff customer wants. It creates the spread between cheap and expensive periods that makes load shifting financially worthwhile.

Interconnection and the European Market

Belgium's grid is well interconnected with France, the Netherlands, Germany, Luxembourg, and the UK (via the Nemo Link interconnector). This means Belgian prices are strongly influenced by — and in some ways stabilised by — conditions across a much larger market. Strong wind in the North Sea benefits Belgian prices. High French nuclear output spills into Belgian spot prices.

Interconnection generally reduces extreme price spikes, which is positive for customers on dynamic tariffs from a risk perspective, while still maintaining the meaningful daily price variation that makes demand flexibility valuable.

Regulatory Direction of Travel

The EU's Electricity Market Reform, progressing through European institutions, explicitly encourages dynamic tariff offerings and demand-side flexibility. Belgium's regulators — CREG at federal level, and VREG/CWaPE/Brugel at regional level — are broadly aligned with this direction. The regulatory environment for dynamic tariffs is not perfect, but it is improving, and the policy direction is clear.

For customers considering dynamic energy: the infrastructure is increasingly in place, the regulatory framework is developing supportively, and the market conditions are increasingly favourable. The timing is good.

10s Energy — Price Calculator
10s energy

Estimate your electricity bill

See what you'd pay on a standard tariff vs the 10s Smart contract — with the full capacity tariff calculation for Flanders.

CREG-compliant · reference consumption 3,500 kWh/yr · Belgium 2025–2026
1
Household
2
Grid costs
3
Smart apps
4
Results
1
Your household
Region
Network area
Capacity tariff rate varies by area. Check your bill or Mijn Fluvius if unsure.
I don't know my consumption
Use Belgian average for a home without EV or heat pump
Base household consumption 2,200 kWh
Lighting, fridge, TV, cooking — everything except your EV and heat pump. Those are added separately in step 3.
2
Capacity tariff Flanders

Since January 2023, part of your grid cost is based on your peak 15-minute draw each month — not just total consumption. The higher your simultaneous load, the higher your capacity tariff.

Average monthly peak 4.5 kW
Your highest 15-min power draw in a typical month. Find yours in Mijn Fluvius — or estimate below.

Don't know your peak? Estimate from appliances
EV charging
Charger power
Charges per week
Heat pump
Rated power
Hours/day (winter avg)6 h
Oven / hob
Draw when cooking
Washer / dryer
Combined draw

3
Smart appliances on the 10s tariff

These run on real-time Elia quarter-hour pricing. 10s automatically shifts them to the cheapest windows — including negative-price periods when you're paid to consume.

Fetching Elia prices...

EV charging on 10s smart
Scheduled to cheapest overnight windows
I don't know my EV usage
Use Belgian average (3,000 kWh/yr, ~15,000 km)
Battery size
Charges/week

Heat pump on 10s smart
Pre-heats when prices are low (thermal battery logic)
I don't know my heat pump usage
Use Belgian average (3,500 kWh/yr, medium home)
Rated power
Hours/day (winter)6 h

Washing machine
Delayed start to cheapest window
Cycles per week

Dishwasher
Runs overnight during cheapest windows
Cycles per week
Your estimated annual bill
Full breakdown — standard tariff
Total annual consumption
base + smart appliances
Of which on 10s smart tariff
EV, heat pump, appliances
Energy (standard rate)
Distribution (kWh component)
Distribution fixed charge
Capacity tariff
Green certificates
CHP/cogen levy
Federal levies
Elia transmission
All above ex. VAT
VAT (21%)
Total estimated annual bill
What you could pay instead
Three-way comparison
Option 1
Fixed market tariff
CREG reference avg 2025
Option 2
Standard dynamic tariff
Elia day-ahead avg, no shifting
Fixed market tariff
Standard dynamic
10s Smart
Estimated annual saving vs fixed tariff with 10s Smart
Not included in any figure above

Neither the standard dynamic nor the 10s Smart costs include the supplier's commercial margin. The fixed market reference already embeds a typical margin — the dynamic figures do not.

Belgian dynamic tariff providers typically charge €0.015–0.025/kWh above spot plus an annual fee of approximately €50–80/yr (Luminus: €0.021/kWh + €75/yr; Engie: spot × coefficient + fixed constant).

Indicative margin add-on
at your consumption level
Applies to
Standard dynamic & 10s Smart
same for both options
10s Smart — appliance breakdown
Per-appliance cost on real-time Elia pricing
Capacity tariff saving with 10s: Smart shifting reduces your average monthly peak by ~35%, saving /yr on the capacity tariff alone.

Ready to switch to smart pricing?

Join our early bird list and be among the first to access the 10s Smart contract.

Get early bird access
Step 1 of 4