MISO Unveils $8.8 Billion Transmission Expansion โ $3.1B Earmarked for Data Center Load Growth
MISO released the draft of its 2026 Transmission Expansion Plan (MTEP 26) on March 4, 2026, totaling a source-reported $8.8 billion in grid infrastructure investment โ with $3.1 billion (35%) tied to rapid load growth from data center interconnections in the Midwest. MISO also flagged that some substation demand is running 5 years ahead of original projections, prompting another review of a long-range transmission project. For commercial electricity buyers across the MISO footprint, the practical issue is how approved transmission projects and cost allocation could affect delivery charges over time. The plan is slated for final MISO Board approval in December 2026.
What's in the $8.8 Billion Plan
MTEP 26 is MISO's annual transmission planning process that identifies grid upgrades needed to maintain reliability and serve growing load. The source-reported $8.8 billion draft figure makes cost allocation and load-growth classification central questions for commercial buyers watching the Midwest transmission build-out.
The $3.1 billion load growth allocation targets specific substations and transmission corridors where data center clusters are requesting interconnection. MISO flagged that some substations are seeing demand materialize 5 years earlier than planned โ a sign that data center developers are moving faster than transmission planners anticipated.
The Long-Range Transmission Project: Third Review
In a notable development reported by RTO Insider, MISO has initiated a third review of a long-range transmission project after unexpected substation demand surfaced five years earlier than projected. The concern is whether the developer can meet regulatory timelines given the accelerated need. This is a canary-in-the-coal-mine signal for the broader infrastructure challenge: data centers are requesting grid interconnection faster than the planning-to-construction cycle can deliver.
What This Means for Commercial Rates
Transmission costs are a passthrough on commercial electricity bills. When MISO approves multi-billion-dollar grid investments, those costs are allocated across the footprint based on load-ratio share. The key question for commercial buyers is cost allocation methodology: will states attracting the data centers (primarily Indiana, Iowa) bear proportionate costs, or will the burden be socialized across all MISO zones?
MISO's current cost allocation for "market efficiency" projects spreads costs based on projected economic benefits. For "reliability" projects, costs typically fall on the local zone. The categorization of data-center-driven projects will be a contentious political and regulatory battle over the next year.
๐๏ธ Commercial Buyer Strategy
Budget for transmission sensitivity: MTEP 26 investments would enter rates over time as projects move from planning to approved and in-service status. Ameren Illinois, Indiana Michigan Power, and Entergy Louisiana customers should model delivery-charge scenarios rather than assuming flat transmission costs.
Monitor MISO cost allocation proceedings: How MTEP 26 costs are allocated will determine whether your zone bears disproportionate charges. Participate in MISO stakeholder processes (RASC, PAC) if your facility has significant load.
Evaluate behind-the-meter generation: As transmission charges rise, the economics of on-site generation (solar + storage, CHP) improve. Facilities in high-cost MISO zones should run updated payback analyses.
Sources: MISO MTEP 26 Draft (March 4, 2026), RTO Insider, Go15 Global Reliability Organization, MISO Energy Market Rates.