Recent energy-price reductions were a sham
All the announcements of lower energy prices have not reduced the price of the cheapest tariffs.
I was hammered by readers a few months ago when I told them that waiting until all the energy suppliers have lowered their prices before switching was going to cost them more. (Read Beware of energy switching advice.) That's why I've been compiling the evidence throughout the period in order to prove it to you. Firstly, here are the price decreases of the big six suppliers according to themselves and to the press:
Supplier Gas cut Electricity cut When British Gas 10% 0% 19 February EDF Energy 0% 8.8% 31 March E.ON 0% 9% 31 March npower No announcement No announcement N/A Scottish and Southern Energy 4% 9% 30 March ScottishPower 7.5% 3% 31 MarchBig-six energy-price changes
Although some of these changes aren't effective till the end of the month, lovemoney.com's comparison tool has been updated with the new prices. However, that doesn't make the tiniest difference to the cheapest energy tariffs, as I'll soon demonstrate.
The sham
People on the big six's standard tariffs - the most expensive tariffs the suppliers have - received the cuts mentioned above, and a few people on other tariffs got some sort of reduction, typically a great deal smaller than was announced.
However, the cheapest tariffs are unchanged. The tariffs that were at the top of the table before the cuts remain in place charging the same amount.
Here's one of the examples I tracked. It's dual fuel in a Guildford post code:
Low-energy user in Guildford
Cheapest tariffs before price changes |
Cheapest tariffs after price changes |
npower Sign online 14: £526 estimated bill |
npower Sign online 14: £526 estimated bill |
Utilita energysaver2: £568 estimated bill |
firstutility Smart Energy online paperless: £569 estimated bill |
firstutility Standard energy dual fuel: £581 estimated bill |
firstutility Smart Energy online paper bills: £581 estimated bill |
npower Web 14: £582 estimated bill |
npower Web 14: £582 estimated bill |
British Gas Websaver 1: £592 estimated bill |
ScottishPower PriceSure Energy Online: £593 |
Let's compare the two sides of the table. You'll see that smaller companies have been busy creating new tariffs and removing others from new applications. Utilita has removed its energysaver version 2 and firstutility has got rid of its top tariff and replaced it with two more. This manoeuvreing is normal for all energy companies throughout the year. It's unrelated to the price reductions (or increases) of existing tariffs. In any event, you wouldn't have saved any money by waiting till now to switch.
The big news is that npower's tariff remains top, but no cheaper than before. Despite all the other suppliers reducing prices, their cheapest tariffs haven't got any closer to the top of the table.
Unfortunately, npower hasn't yet reduced prices. The evidence I've got indicates that it won't reduce prices at all. Furthermore, it already has the cheapest tariff in many regions (depending on your usage) so, if it does the extraordinary move of reducing the price of its cheapest tariff, that's a bonus for you.
The standard tariffs of the big six, the ones most affected by the price reductions, remain between £115 and £260 more expensive than the cheapest tariff.
Let's look now at medium-energy users:
Medium-energy user in Guildford
Cheapest tariffs before price changes |
Cheapest tariffs after price changes |
British Gas Websaver 1: £1,058 estimated bill |
British Gas Websaver 2: £1,058 estimated bill |
npower Sign online 14 (and Web 14): £1,059 estimated bill |
npower Sign online 14 (and Web 14): £1,059 estimated bill |
Utilita energysaver2: £1,061 estimated bill |
EDF Energy Online: £1,075 estimated bill |
EDF Energy Online: £1,075 estimated bill |
E.ON EnergyOnline Extra Saver 12: £1,090 estimated bill |
E.ON EnergyOnline Extra Saver 12: £1,134 estimated bill |
EDF Energy Annual Fix 2: £1,099 estimated bill |
British Gas was the cheapest before and it remains the cheapest. It stopped offering version 1 of Websaver and now offers version 2 at a price that's just a few pence different. This will change: Version 1 promises to be at least 10% below British Gas' standard-tariff but version 2 promises to remain just 6% below. At present, Websaver 2 has a reduction of 11%+, and even more versus people who pay quarterly. If you've been waiting to switch tariffs, you might now get the same top price but with a worse guarantee.
I've already mentioned that Utilita pulled its version 2 of the energysaver tariff, hence EDF's promotion in the table. Notice here that you have to get down to fourth place in the column on the right before you see a supplier that has actually decreased its price.
The big six's standard tariffs are still between £100 and £135 more expensive than the cheapest tariff in the table.
High-energy user in Guildford
Cheapest tariffs before price changes |
Cheapest tariffs after price changes |
npower Web 14: £1,441 estimated bill |
npower Web 14: £1,441 estimated bill |
EDF Energy Online: £1,456 estimated bill |
EDF Energy Online: £1,456 estimated bill |
Utilita energysaver2: £1,466 estimated bill |
E.ON EnergyOnline Extra Saver 12: £1,464 estimated bill |
British Gas: Websaver 1: £1,475 estimated bill |
British Gas: Websaver 2: £1,472 estimated bill |
npower Sign online 14: £1,484 estimated bill |
npower Sign online 14: £1,484 estimated bill |
The top two places remain unchanged, so it's just third place that actually makes a (£2) difference, with E.ON swapping in from Utilita at the same price. Fourth and fifth places remain unchanged.
Standard tariffs are between £75 and £215 more expensive than the top tariff.
We must re-think when we switch tariffs
The cheapest tariff for you will vary depending on where you live and what your usage is, but all of the tests I did had the same sorts of results as above: the cheapest tariffs haven't changed.
I hope I convinced a few of you to switch a few months ago when it was colder. If you didn't switch in winter, you'll have paid high prices when your heating usage was high. By waiting until now to switch, you'll have lost out on cheaper energy for no reason. Don't forget for next winter!
> Compare gas and electricity prices at lovemoney.com
Comments are not gone forever!
We've had to take article comments down temporarily as we set up our new home on lovemoney.com, but new comment tools (and your old comments) will be back soon.
Comments
Be the first to comment
Do you want to comment on this article? You need to be signed in for this feature