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Would you change supplier?
My current supplier is working out about £63 a year more expensive than Scottish Power are offering on a I year contract with a £30 exit fee.
But I have just started a 2 year price freeze with the current supplier. No exit fees.
Scottish Power could put their tariff rates up next year.
I compared the tariffs on my actual usage.
Is that the sort of saving that would make you change supplier?
But I have just started a 2 year price freeze with the current supplier. No exit fees.
Scottish Power could put their tariff rates up next year.
I compared the tariffs on my actual usage.
Is that the sort of saving that would make you change supplier?
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Comments
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£63 for a two year fix and no exit fees .
I WOULD STICK .0 -
you could consider it a £63x2=£126 saving.
you are unlikely to loose £126 in the 2nd year if you shop around?0 -
The question is ‘what is your annual cost’? If, say, the annual cost is £720/year, then a £126 increase in year 2 is equivalent to:
126/720 x 100 = 17.5% in your Bill. BUT.....
The wholesale cost of energy only accounts for 40p in every £ that we pay. So it follows - all other things being equal - that a 17.5% increase would equate to:
126/288 or an increase in wholesale prices by over 40%
The GOLDEN RULE is that suppliers will never offer a fix of any length that they believe will lose them any money.This is a system account and does not represent a real person. To contact the Forum Team email forumteam@moneysavingexpert.com0 -
It went up 400% yesterday
Yes, for one day or so only because the UK does not stockpile much more than 3 days worth of reserves. We were eating in to our reserves so, as markets do, they put up their prices for a desperate customer. That said, the wholesale cost of gas is rising. This what Bulb told its customers when it announced a 2.8% increase last month:
Quote Since July 2017, wholesale energy costs have increased by around 11% unquote
The important thing to note is that a11% increase in wholesale cost does not translate to a 11% increase in your energy bill.This is a system account and does not represent a real person. To contact the Forum Team email forumteam@moneysavingexpert.com0 -
My current supplier is working out about £63 a year more expensive than Scottish Power are offering on a I year contract with a £30 exit fee.
But I have just started a 2 year price freeze with the current supplier. No exit fees.
Scottish Power could put their tariff rates up next year.
I compared the tariffs on my actual usage.
Is that the sort of saving that would make you change supplier?
My own personal criteria is a saving of £52 per year so yes I would switch. But there are other factors to consider such the length of the contract and exit fee.
However personally I am leaning heavily towards 100% renewable energy which in my region is Outfox The Market with a saving of £84 a year. But I am at the same time leaning heavily towards Co-operative Energy because I am a member of several co-operatives as well as Co-operative Group and that costs an extra £37 a year. Decisions! Decisions!
The above probably illustrates that for some people price and savings is a lesser consideration.0 -
My own personal criteria is a saving of £52 per year so yes I would switch. But there are other factors to consider such the length of the contract and exit fee.
However personally I am leaning heavily towards 100% renewable energy which in my region is Outfox The Market with a saving of £84 a year. But I am at the same time leaning heavily towards Co-operative Energy because I am a member of several co-operatives as well as Co-operative Group and that costs an extra £37 a year. Decisions! Decisions!
The above probably illustrates that for some people price and savings is a lesser consideration.
A fair and reasonable point. As I am sure you know, consumers that pay for green energy have no guarantee that the kWhs that they use are actually green in origin.This is a system account and does not represent a real person. To contact the Forum Team email forumteam@moneysavingexpert.com0 -
I've just been proposed a saving of £55 a year to switch from EDF to a small new supplier. I won't switch, because I have had an excellent relationship with EDF for a long time now. They have a very good, very efficient website that accepts my regular meter readings and acts upon them within a 48 hour moximum. There is a chatline which works and responds quickly and great customer service. Plus I have the Online Saver Aug 2018, which is bound to be upgraded soon. Lose all that for an unknown service and less than £5 a month? No thank you!I think this job really needs
a much bigger hammer.
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