From 1 October 2015, hundreds of thousands of households will see their vitality payments rise once more as the value cap will increase by 2%, taking the typical annual invoice from £1,720 to £1,755.
Consultants are warning households to behave quick by submitting meter readings earlier than the rise kicks in to keep away from paying over the percentages.
The warning comes as new analysis exhibits one in six households say they merely can’t afford additional hikes.
Pressing motion wanted right this moment
Go.Examine’s vitality spokesperson, Gareth Kloet, mentioned households mustn’t delay.
“Whether or not you are taking guide meter readings or have a sensible meter, it’s important to take a meter studying as shut as attainable to when the worth cap comes into impact and ship it to your supplier,” he urged.
“This ensures that each one the vitality you’ve used up till 1 October is charged on the decrease fee – not tomorrow’s larger one.”
Kloet additionally warned that even small modifications at dwelling might make a giant distinction, urging households to chop down on pointless vitality use now. “Batch cooking, sealing draughts, and solely boiling what you want within the kettle would possibly sound small, however these habits add up – each in your pockets and the surroundings.”
Hundreds of thousands underneath monetary pressure
The comparability website’s survey of greater than 2,000 folks lays naked the stress on households:
- 16% say they can’t afford any extra worth rises in any respect
- 29% admit they’re anxious about vitality payments
- 10% imagine they aren’t getting the very best deal from their present supplier
Regardless of extra tariffs showing in the marketplace, too many households are lacking out on potential financial savings. One in 5 (20%) have by no means switched supplier, whereas almost a 3rd (29%) have stayed put for greater than three years – whilst costs have fluctuated.
Don’t get caught out
Kloet mentioned tomorrow’s rise needs to be a wake-up name for anybody who hasn’t reviewed their vitality tariff. “For those who’ve been with the identical supplier for years, the possibilities are you’re overpaying,” he warned.
He suggested that now can also be the second to contemplate locking in a fixed-rate deal: “With costs inclined to leap in winter, a hard and fast contract might protect you from future will increase – however keep in mind, you’ll be tied in for the size of the deal.”
And for these hesitant to change, Kloet added: “Even in the event you don’t wish to transfer supplier, use this second to problem your present provider. Realizing what else is on the market provides you the ability to barter – and probably minimize your payments.”