“A meaningful cut for household bills”: Uswitch responds to April energy price cap announcement

Uswitch author headshot
Written by Uswitch
Updated on
Share

Richard Neudegg, director of regulation at Uswitch.com, said: “This 7% drop in April’s energy price cap is a meaningful cut for household bills, taking default tariffs to their lowest level in almost two years. While energy won’t feel ‘cheap’ for consumers, this is a welcome move in the right direction. 

“The main driver of this price drop is the Budget decision to remove some levies from consumer bills. 

“Critically, this Government-led reduction means every household in Britain will see their rates reduced from April, not just those on the typically more expensive price cap default tariff. 

“The levy changes are mostly in the electricity unit rates, so the exact reduction in bills will vary per household, based on energy usage. This is not going to be a uniform £150 cut to bills - higher-usage homes will see the biggest savings, while those using less energy may see a more modest change.

“Within the price cap, there will also be changes in standing charges - those households with gas supply will see a decrease. Standing charges overall remain a frustration point for many consumers, making up around 19% of the average household’s bill.

“Despite this change, households stuck on the price cap should not rest on their laurels. Customers switching to a cheap fixed tariff could see their bills up to 19% cheaper than today’s standard rates once the reduction kicks in, compared with the 7% reduction from simply sticking with the price cap.

“There are currently 30 fixed energy deals on the market that undercut the current price cap. With savings of up to £260 for the average household, taking action is a must - and their rates will get even cheaper from April.”  

ENDS

For more information

Rianna York | Energy PR Manager

rianna.york@rvu.co.uk

Twitter: @UswitchPR

Notes to editors

* Current price cap: £1,758. The current cheapest whole of market fixed tariff: £1,498.

Removing the Renewables Obligation charge from this tariff (£78) = £1,420.

£1,758 to £1,420 = 19.2% decrease (current price cap vs the price fixed deals could be from April with the levy removal)

Table: Unit rates and standing charges changes

GasElectricityTotal standing charges (p/day)
Unit rate (p/kWh)Standing charges (p/day)Unit rate (p/kWh)Standing charges (p/day)
1 January 20265.9335.0927.6954.7589.84
1 April 20265.7429.0924.6757.2186.30
Changedown 3.2%down 17.1%down 10.9%up 4.5%down 12.6%