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Big Energy Saving Week: How to save money on your oil bill

lovemoney staff
by Lovemoney Staff lovemoney staff on 24 October 2012  |  Comments 9 comments

Around 1.1 million households rely on heating oil. If you're one of them, here are some tips on how to cut the cost of your oil bills.

Big Energy Saving Week: How to save money on your oil bill

While 21 million homes in Britain are heated by mains gas and 2.1 million by electricity, around 1.1 million use heating oil, according to figures from Consumer Focus. And gas is the lowest cost fuel, with oil and solid fuel being consistently more expensive.

So what can you do to cut your bills if you use heating oil?

Shop around

The first thing to do is to shop around.  According to experts, many households don't do this: instead, they re-order from the same supplier, year in, year out, and so form a captive (and very profitable) market. Open the Yellow Pages, pick up the phone, and get quotes. You'll be surprised.

Helpful though this is for driving down bills, there's a catch – particularly for customers who pay 'on account'. The price you're quoted won't necessarily be the price you actually pay. The price you're quoted is the price at the time of the phone call – and in today's volatile markets, the price on delivery, which may be several days later, could well be several pence per litre higher.

Use comparison sites

As with other bills, web-based buying can generate even bigger savings. For example, BoilerJuice.com offers an innovative way to both shop around and get a fixed price. Better still, it pits heating oil suppliers against each other, bidding for your business.

Type in your postcode, and how many litres of heating oil you're looking to buy, and BoilerJuice will instantly offer quotes from the various suppliers covering your area.

Better still, because you pay at the time of placing the order, by debit or credit card (there's a surcharge of 1.57% if paying by credit card, though) the price you have been quoted is the maximum that you'll pay. It might be lower, but it won't be higher.

Are there any catches? Only a couple. Don't be surprised if the delivery date quoted by BoilerJuice is several days later than your usual supplier can offer. So keep an eye on the level in the tank, and order a week earlier than you otherwise would. And once you've placed your order you'll need to deal directly with the supplier, not with BoilerJuice.

There's also heatingoil.co.uk, which is owned by GB Fuels and searches prices from their brands and depots, so unlike BoilerJuice you are dealing with the supplier direct, and fueloildirect, which like BoilerJuice compares prices from local suppliers.

Compre prices from a few sites before you make your order.

Bulk buying

BoilerJuice also offer three 'group buying' opportunities.

It automatically groups your order with all the others received that day from your immediate postcode. If there are enough orders to generate a bulk-buying discount, you'll automatically benefit from a lower delivery price.

BoilerJuice also operates periodic 'buying weekends'. Get your friends and neighbours to place orders at the same time, and you'll all likely benefit from a lower price.

And a 'community-based buying' scheme operates on a cashback principle, collectively rewarding members with £1 for every 1,000 litres bought. It's a useful way of painlessly generating funds for local village halls, churches, local sports teams, playgroups or other community organisations.

Or you could form your own oil buying group and negotiate with suppliers individually. The fact that they're likely to have more customers in the same area, and therefore have to make less deliveries, could save up to a few pence a litre.

Other tips

But these aren't the only ways to save money on heating oil. Five more handy tips are worth bearing in mind.

First, make sure that your boiler or oil cooker is properly serviced, in order to make sure that it's running efficiently.

Second, as with other sources of heating, don't leave it running when you don't need to, and turn down the thermostat a degree or two if you can. You almost certainly won't notice the difference, and the savings can be considerable over time.

Third, don't wait to run out before buying oil. Keep an eye on heating oil prices (BoilerJuice publishes a handy chart, for example) and buy when prices are low.  Prices traditionally have a seasonal dip in summer, rising in the autumn before peaking in the winter. So stock up before the peak if you can.

Fourth, don't let your expensive oil go walkabout. Oil thefts are on the rise, say experts, and simple precautions such as a lock on the refilling cap can send thieves away empty-handed.

Finally, and most obviously, don't let your tank run out, meaning you have to organise an expensive emergency delivery. Make sure you regularly check how much oil is left in the tank.

This is a classic lovemoney article that has been updated

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Comments (9)

  • Dave
    Love rating 52
    Dave said

    Recycled oil based bio-diesel is another cheap alternative - the feul can not generally be used by the public for transport, but it can be used for heating fuel.

    If you know somebody who recycles the local cooking oils into fuel for transport companies, you may be able to do a deal with them for a full tank - the 65p a litre above should be bettered by these companies.

    Just make sure you're boiler is in good working order.

    Report on 18 May 2009  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • happylady
    Love rating 0
    happylady said

    I keep my oil costs down by getting lots of people in my village to place an order for oil at the same time. I do the phoning round to them and then phone around the oil suppliers. W e can all order the minimum,500ltrs at the best price for a large order and spread the cost too. I often barter the price down on the basis that the tanker only has to make one journey out for the deliveries rather than several. We often reduce the price per litre by 5p, in this way.

    Report on 21 May 2009  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Kent
    Love rating 6
    Kent said

    I see you are advertising BoilerJuice. For free?

    I would like to think BoilerJuice offered a useful service,, but I monitor oil prices roughly every Friday, and only once have Boiler Juice been cheaper than quotes obtained directly from local suppliers. They average about 3p per litre more expensive than my locals. I presume they cream off any savings from bulk buying, rather than passing them on to customers.

    And group buying would not work round here. The hassle of organising it, and coping with people's ideosyncracies, makes the 1p per litre saved just not worth while.

    What do you do with all your oil? I burned only 1060 litres in the last year, for heat and hot water for a 4/5 bedroom 220square metre bungalow. I have never had my boiler serviced, because I can clean the filter myself, there is nothing adjustable on it, and the flue is clean. How did you "spot a worrying rise in oil consumption", and what were the couple of simple tweeks that had it working "more efficiently than ever"?

    Perhaps the fact that I am a Thermodynamicist explains why, as an academic exercise I measure my oil consumption every day, sometimes every hour, and why I realise that without a flue gas analyser I could not possibly tell whether my boiler was operating efficiently or not, or whether the oil consumption has changed because of effiiciency change, or because of the weater.

    I suspect there is a bit of journalistic embroidery in your article.

    Report on 22 May 2009  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Ginnymay
    Love rating 36
    Ginnymay said

    Are we reading the same article? I couldn't see any reference to a worrying rise in oil consumption, or to a coople of simple tweaks to get it working more efficiently?

    Report on 24 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • JonGar01
    Love rating 0
    JonGar01 said

    Can I suggest you all have a look at Heating Oil Shop? http://www.heatingoilshop.com/

    Input your postcode and this website allows you to get multiple quotations - from all the distributors that deliver to your address. The site is completely independent so has no relationships with any oil distributor and is for quotation-gathering rather than a price-comparison site.

    It's interesting to see the range of quotes that come in, and from which companies, and of course you can choose the best price/service offering. Back in June I managed to save some 6.62p/litre on a 500 litre drop which I thought was very good.

    Report on 24 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • nosbort
    Love rating 125
    nosbort said

    You say " Helpful though this is for driving down bills, there's a catch – particularly for customers who pay 'on account'. "

    Actually the price quoted on the phone is what you should pay, any other price is not acceptable as you have a contract at the price quoted unless they tell you otherwise at the time of quoting. I would never pay any more than the price quoted.

    Report on 24 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Olesuffolkbuoy
    Love rating 0
    Olesuffolkbuoy said

    I thought there was an ongoing investigation into some of the so-called oil comparison sites who were thought to be nothing but a front for a single major owner of several seemingly independant oil suppliers. Come on LoveMoney, you'd better give us all the inside track on this one.

    Report on 25 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Simon Ward
    Love rating 5
    Simon Ward said

    Hi,

    Couple of points. Some of the older comments referred to a previous version of the article.

    In terms of Olesuffolkbuoy's comment, the OFT concluded its investigation into oil comparison and distributor sites last year - http://www.oft.gov.uk/OFTwork/consumer-enforcement/consumer-enforcement-completed/heating-oil/

    The companies all appear to have complied with the ruling in terms of text on their websites and BoilerJuice is no longer owned by oil company DCC.

    I use heating oil but I use the comparison sites as an indicator of price for negotiation, not necessarily as a place to buy.

    Best wishes

    Simon

    News Editor

    Report on 25 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Olesuffolkbuoy
    Love rating 0
    Olesuffolkbuoy said

    Hi Simon,

    Thanks for posting the OFT link - I had not seen the conclusion. Lets hope their intervention will sort the problem.

    As a matter of caution to one and all and re one of the posts, for goodness sake dont think that because you cant see anything adjustable inside the front cover of your boiler that it does not need regular servicing. The atomising nozzle alone will wear just from the passage of the fuel into the combustion chamber and this will alter the combustion efficiency in the course of a years use. There are a number of adjustments that are made to get the fuel-air burn ration correct - and safe.

    Lastly, to one and all, if you want to keep the costs down in an oil based household then go for a mixed fuel solution and use eco 7, solar, solid fuels etc to give the right mix and level of heat for the season and use.

    Report on 26 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves

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