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4 Original Tips To Reduce Your Energy Bills

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Published in Household Bills on 19 June 2007

Read about the most accurate comparison tool on the Web and three other tips to reduce your bills.

It's time to share some more gas and electricity tips with you. Rather than the usual tips like switch to energy-saving lightbulbs, here are four that are a bit different. (You can read about more commonplace tips in Seventeen Ways To Cut Your Fuel Bills.)

1. Use the most accurate comparison tool on the Web

OK, comparing prices is not a new one! But what will be new to most of you is that we host the most accurate gas and electricity comparison tool available.

Not only does it list all the suppliers in due order, but our unique variable tariff search is unbeaten for accuracy. Users can type in the details of their own tariffs, thereby removing many of the assumptions made by other comparison tools.

So far this year, The Motley Fool's energy comparison service is celebrating almost £400,000 in savings quotes. Compare gas and electricity prices.

2. Get in debt!

40% of us are still paying by cheque, even though it's almost always far cheaper to pay by direct debit.

Thing is, switching to direct debit does come with a small problem. Suppliers often set their direct debits high, so that you are always in credit. Although you can eventually Claim Your Cash Back, you're effectively giving your supplier an interest-free loan. Consequently, your money isn't in your bank earning you interest, or reducing your overdraft.

It's not often The Fool actually recommends that you deliberately go into debt, but this is one of those rare times. You should push for a lower direct debit, so that you're never in credit. Recently I found out that I owed my suppliers an extra £14, which is perfect. It means that even in winter I'm underpaying a little, so they are effectively giving me an interest-free loan!

  • Look back over your past bills and estimate your usage, then contact your supplier to lower your direct debit. This may take some persistence! The strongest argument you have is that you are in a better position to estimate your future usage than they are.
  • When underpaying, the trick is to budget properly; make sure you have savings enough to pay for any excess you owe.

3. Submit your meter readings regularly

It will help you to budget properly if you get regular meter readings. It'll also help to avoid high blood pressure: before I submitted my reading and got a revised bill of £14, my supplier estimated I owed it £340!

There is another advantage to submitting regular readings. Lets say that your supplier reads your meters just once a quarter. Let's also say that its rates go up half-way through a quarter. So, how does it know how much gas and electricity you've used before and after the price rise?

Your supplier might use its 'best guess', which means it may estimate you used more energy during the more expensive period than you actually did. To be safe, I'd submit meter readings to them regularly.

4. Online and paperless tariffs

More than half of us are still on standard tariffs, but online tariffs are usually much cheaper. There are additional benefits too. Firstly, you can view your account online and secondly you can submit meter readings online, which saves the cost of a phone-call (after quite possibly a long wait in a queue).

I'm sceptical about the environmental benefits of green tariffs, but at least with online tariffs you know you're saving paper. Plus, since you save so much more money with online tariffs than green ones, you could always contribute some of the extra money you've saved to a green cause of your choice.

> Compare gas and electricity prices through The Fool. You can filter the results for green and/or online tariffs if you want.

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Comments

The opinions expressed here are those of the individual writers and are not representative of The Motley Fool. If you spot any comments that are unsuitable hit the flag to alert our moderators.

ispy1 27 Jul 2008, 11:23am

npower did this to us. We switched to Sainsburys with fixed tariff to end 2009 (thankfully) , But we were then dumped with a bill for over £500 for `arrears' even though we were on d. debit. so we are now saddled with yet another energy debt, (paying monthly £39 a month); will be reading meters from now on. Time to revert to state-owned energy providers the private market doesn't work anymore.

joesop90 11 Oct 2008, 12:18am

I agree with ispy1
There is no real competition. It used to be gas v electricity.These are provided by the same company now.
There is only one company that maintains the hardware ... one big fiasco similar to this week's credit crunch coming up in the near future !!
The more we economize in the use of gas / electricity the more they are going to charge us because less revenue will be going their way.

larryp1 22 Oct 2008, 8:33am

With many people now generating their own electricity it would be useful if the energy comparison service could include which companies buy back electricity and how much they pay for it.
Incidentally I use Atlantic in Devon but I cannot get their tariff from your comparison service

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