Abstract. We consider a public utility that provides its service at two different times. Capacity in place can be used in both periods. We study the effects of a change from uniform pricing throughout the day to peak-load pricing, when the utility is constrained to operate with a fixed rate of return on capital. The conventional wisdom seems to be that with peak-load pricing, the peak price will be higher and the off-peak price lower than under uniform pricing, and that peak-load pricing leads to a lower installed capacity. These effects are not generally true. There are plausible cases in which introducing peak-load pricing reduces the price of the service both in peak and off-peak times. Furthermore, peak-load pricing can lead either to g...