- No relief for households as the cost of gas and electricity continues to increase
Millions of homeowners will pay more for energy bills from January, after regulator Ofgem announced its price cap will rise to £1,738 a year.
The price cap, currently £1,717 a year for average energy use, will increase by 1.2 per cent to £1,738 on 1 January 2025.
It means the typical home will pay an extra £21 a year for energy, until the price cap is reset again in April 2025.
The January rise follows Ofgem’s last hike in October 2024, when the price cap increased from £1,568 to £1,717.
The price cap limits the maximum amount an energy firm can charge for the units of gas and electricity households use, as well as daily standing charges.
Most homes in the UK are on price-capped energy deals, though the exact amount each household pays varies depending on gas and electricity use.
Here is how much you will pay for gas and electricity from 1 January 2025 depending on how you pay your energy bills.
Boiling point: The price cap increase tightens the screw on households struggling with bills
Electricity rates
If you are on a standard variable tariff (default tariff) and pay for electricity by direct debit, you will pay on average 24.86p per kilowatt hour (kWh) compared to 24.5p today.
The daily standing charge will fall to 60.97p per day, down from 60.99p. This is based on the average across England, Scotland and Wales, and includes VAT.
Gas rates
If you are on a standard variable tariff (default tariff) and pay for your gas by direct debit, you will pay on average 6.34p per kilowatt hour (kWh) compared to 6.24p per hour today.
The daily standard charge will be 31.65p per day, a slight drop from 31.66p today. This is based on the average across England, Scotland and Wales, and includes VAT.
Why is the price cap so important?
The price cap was brought in during January 2019 to stop energy firms overcharging customers on variable-rate tariffs.
Most households had fixed-rate energy deals at the time, and only moved onto variable-rate tariffs if they did not renew at the end of their term.
But after energy bills began rising in late 2021, gas and electricity companies responded by pulling all new fixed-rate deals from the market.
They did this to try to avoid to the collapse that befell many energy firms, which were suddenly forced to sell power for far less than it cost them to buy it.
Because cheap fixed-rate deals had almost disappeared, almost all homes ended up on variable tariffs regulated by the Ofgem price cap.
Some cheaper energy deals have been launched that undercut the price cap, both now and when the new one kicks in on 1 January.
What is the future of the price cap?
The price cap is reset in April, July and October.
Cornwall Insight thinks the average gas and electricity bill will fall later in 2025.
A Cornwall Insight spokesperson said: ‘Given the price cap rise in October, many will have been hoping to see a fall in the cap for January. Unfortunately, forecasts show that prices will be staying relatively high for the remainder of winter.
‘Looking further ahead, we currently forecast the cap will drop slightly in April 2025 and again in October 2025.’