The Mail on Sunday

Start a power surge . . .

Fed up with being hit by energy price shocks? . . . by switching NOW to a cheaper supplier (it will send a thunderbol­t message back to the Big Six)

- By Laura Shannon

MILLIONS of households will soon be struck by higher gas and electricit­y costs as suppliers push up prices and old cheap tariffs come to an end. It means now is the time to find a new deal.

Energy giant SSE is the last of the Big Six to deliver a thunderbol­t to customers. It announced an average annual price rise of £76. The move affects more than two million customers and only spares the vulnerable, those on a fixed-price deal or who use a pre-payment meter.

SSE’s price hike follows similar increases by rival suppliers British Gas, Npower, ScottishPo­wer and EDF Energy, which all take effect between now and the middle of next month. Eon also removed some of its customer discounts earlier this year – the equivalent of a price rise.

Adding to this flood of bad news is the fact that dozens of fixed deals are ending. Those who fail to find a new one will join millions of households on costly standard variable tariffs.

Switching to a new deal or a new provider will protect customers from higher bills. Since all of the major suppliers have revealed their price rises, it is a good time to compare offers without fear of jumping from frying pan to fire.

Peter Earl, head of energy at price comparison website comparethe­market, says: ‘ Energy suppliers rely on consumer inertia, so all it takes to beat soaring prices is a simple switch of tariff or supplier.’

WHERE TO SWITCH

COST is only one considerat­ion when switching. Another big issue is customer service – where there is a wide gap between suppliers.

Joe Malinowski, of switching website TheEnergyS­hop, says: ‘ Customers need to be careful where they move to – the savings will not be worth it if you switch to a company with customer service issues.’

The Big Six are still inundated with complaints – with all but one fielding more customer gripes in the first quarter of this year compared to the final three months of 2017. ScottishPo­wer, Npower, Eon, EDF Energy and SSE all saw the number of grievances from customers increase. Only British Gas saw a decrease, albeit from a high number of complaints. There are also tens of thousands of issues each month across all major suppliers that go unresolved for longer than eight weeks, indicative of a large number of complex disagreeme­nts. Younger companies that have fewer customers and modern technology are less distracted by longstand ing customer service

 ??  ?? SAVINGS: Switching expert Joe Malinowski
SAVINGS: Switching expert Joe Malinowski

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