Energy bills to drop by hundreds of pounds tomorrow bringing relief to struggling households

Staff
By Staff

The energy regulator’s new price cap comes into force on Monday, April 1 and will sit at £1,690 – this is down from the current January price cap of £1,928

The Ofgem price cap will fall by around 12% tomorrow meaning energy bills for millions of Brits will become that bit cheaper.

The energy regulator’s new price cap comes into force on Monday, April 1 and will sit at £1,690 for the typical household paying by direct debit. This is down from the current January price cap of £1,928. The April price cap is the lowest level since February 2022 and will be in place until June 30 this year, when it will be revised again. It’s important to note that the £238 drop represents the potential savings across a year and not the three months the price cap covers.

However, despite what its name suggests, there is not actually a total cap on what you can pay for energy, it is a cap on how much you can be charged per kilowatt of energy you use. This means if you use more energy your bills will be more expensive. How you pay for energy, for example, if you pay by direct debit or prepayment, also affects your overall bill, as there are different unit rates. From tomorrow, the unit rate for gas for direct debit users is falling from 7.42p per kilowatt hour (kWh) to 6.04p per kWh and the unit rate for electricity is dropping from 28.62p per kWh to 24.50p per kWh.

The Ofgem price cap also includes the standing charge – which is going up for people who pay by direct debit and on receipt of bills. This is a fixed amount that customers must pay on their energy bills no matter how much gas and electricity they use. Standing charges are used to pay for things such as the upkeep of the energy grids and the amount varies depending on where you live in the UK.

The standing charge for gas for direct debit households will rise from 29.60p a day to 31.43p a day and the standing charge for electricity is rising from 53.35p a day to 60.10p a day. Alongside the standing charge, Ofgem has also introduced a temporary additional payment of £28 a year to cover the cost of customers who fall behind on bills although prepayment metre customers won’t be affected by this extra charge.

Ofgem’s price cap covers 29million people who pay their energy bills by direct debit. There are different unit rates and standing charges for prepayment customers and those who pay on receipt of bills. For those on prepayment meters, the price cap is falling to £1,643 a year. For those who pay on receipt of their bill, the figure is £1,796 a year. Due to the lowering of standing charges for prepayment customers last year, the cheapest way to pay for energy now is prepayment meters.

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