Dozens of fixed energy tariffs ending

Loads of fixed energy tariffs are coming to an end, which means many people need to take action to avoid 'bill shock'.
Several fixed rate energy tariffs are coming to an end over the next few weeks. If yours is one of them, make sure you don't get caught out by being moved onto your energy company's much more expensive standard tariff.
In the worst case, your bill could increase by up to £200 a year.
Tariffs ending this week
Seven fixed rate energy tariffs end this week.
- EDF Energy’s Blue+Price Promise September 2014
- Scottish Power’s Online Energy Saver 23
- Scottish Power’s Help Beat Cancer Discounted Energy Online October 2014
- M&S Energy’s Fix & Save
- First Utility’s iSave Fixed v7
- First Utility’s iSave Fixed v8 September 2014
- Scottish Power’s Online Fixed Price Energy October 2014
Of these, customers on M&S Energy’s Fix & Save deal will see the biggest hike in bills. On Fix & Save a typical household would have been paying £993 a year but being moved to to M&S’ standard tariff would see their annual bill increase to £1,186. That’s £193 more.
Customers on Scottish Power’s Online Energy Saver 23 tariff will see the next biggest bill hike – they’ll be paying £141 a year more on Scottish Power’s standard tariff.
Even First Utility customers who face the smallest increase will see their annual bill go up by at least £67.
Which tariffs are ending in October?
It’s a similar story next month – nine fixed rate tariffs come to an end by the end of October.
- British Gas’ Fixed Price October 2014
- Npower’s Online Price Fix October 2014
- Npower’s Energy Online October 2014
- Sainsbury’s Energy Online October 2014
- Scottish Power’s Online Fixed Price Energy November 2014
- Scottish Power’s Platinum Fixed Price Energy November 2014 Online NSC
- Scottish Power’s Fixed Price Energy November 2014 Online
- Scottish Power’s Unifi Fixed Energy November 2014
- SSE’s Discount Bonus Oct 2014
Of these Sainsbury’s customers will see the biggest price hike. A typical bill will go from £1,002 a year to £1,193, an increase of £191.
The best tariffs to switch to
The good news is there are plenty of competitive dual fuel energy deals available and the best ones are cheaper than the tariffs ending in the next month or so.
Smaller energy suppliers have started to give the “big six” a run for their money.
The cheapest deal on offer at the moment is a one-year fix from Extra Energy. Its Fresh Fixed Price Oct 2015 v2 tariff will cost an average of £990 a year.
First Utility’s one-year fix, iSave Fixed October 2015 (v30), is just £2 more expensive, at £992 a year.
Other competitive tariffs come from Sainsbury’s Energy, Ovo Energy, the Cooperative Energy and Green Star Energy.
Why you need to take action now
Although it doesn’t take long to pick a new supplier and get the ball rolling, switching energy deals normally takes about six weeks from start to finish.
So, if your tariff finishes today, you’ll end up paying your current supplier’s standard rates for a few weeks while the transfer goes through. If your current deal ends at the end of October you need to act now to avoid spending more than a week or two on an uncompetitive rate.
Under Ofgem rules, suppliers must send you notice about your plan's upcoming end date 42 to 49 days before the end of your plan. You current supplier will tell you about cheaper deals it offers – but not whether you can get a better price elsewhere.
The cheapest deals are usually managed online with payments by direct debit.
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