Uswitch Ltd, an RVU Company, The Cooperage, 5 Copper Row, London, SE1 2LH
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Prices, plan names and offers are correct as of 04/02/2025. Deals offered are subject to availability. Deals offered are subject to availability. All suppliers reserve the right to vary or withdraw offers at any time. Please refer to individual supplier’s terms and conditions before applying. If you change your mind after you have switched, you will have a 14-day cooling off period. You will have to pay for any energy you use with any supplier, even if you cancel during your cooling off period.
1Average annual cost of this tariff compared to the current price cap: £1,638 vs £1,738, which is a saving of £100 for dual-fuel customers. Rates will change every three months in line with the price cap, but a discount against your standing charge means dual-fuel customers are guaranteed to save £100 versus the price cap over the course of a 12-month tariff. Electricity-only customers save £50. Actual bill size will vary depending on your individual household consumption. Prices based on customers consuming medium energy usage as defined by Ofgem’s new Typical Domestic Consumption Values (TDCV) (2,700 kWh of electricity and 11,500kWh of gas per year), paying by direct debit, with paperless billing. Prices averaged across all regions. The price cap sets the maximum rates suppliers can charge standard variable tariff customers for their energy and changes every three months as decided by Ofgem.
2Cheapest energy-only fixed tariff from a big supplier in England, Scotland and Wales. Correct as of 24 January 2025. Cheaper fixed energy tariffs may be available from small suppliers, or as part of bundled deals where customers must take two or more products, such as boiler cover.
3Exclusive plans are available through Uswitch, Confused.com and direct via EDF for new and existing customers.
4If you’re no longer on a fixed-term plan, it’s likely you have rolled onto your energy supplier’s standard variable tariff where prices are typically the most expensive. Your rates can go up or down every three months in line with the price cap. After back-to-back price cap increases, the cap is predicted to increase 3% from £1,738 to £1,791 on 1 April 2025. Latest EDF forecast from 27 January 2025.
*Average annual or monthly cost of this tariff based on a dual fuel customer consuming medium energy usage as defined by Ofgem’s new Typical Domestic Consumption Values (TDCV) (2,700 kWh of electricity and 11,500 kWh of gas per year), paying by direct debit, with paperless billing. Prices averaged across all regions. Fixed energy tariffs cap the unit rate and standing charge, and are not a cap on the total amount you will pay. Actual bill size will vary depending on your individual household consumption.
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