Gas and electricity bills will fall on 1 July, when the new energy price cap takes effect.
The drop will more than reverse the increase which millions of households faced on 1 April when the current cap began.
The energy price cap sets the maximum amount customers can be charged for each unit of energy, but actual bills depend on how much gas and electricity you use.
What is the energy price cap and how is it changing?
The energy price cap covers around 21 million households in England, Wales and Scotland and is set every three months by Ofgem.
It fixes the maximum price that can be charged for each unit of energy on a standard – or default – variable tariff for a typical dual-fuel household which pays by direct debit.
This means the annual bill for a dual-fuel direct debit household using a typical amount of energy is £1,849 per year, an increase of £111 from the previous cap.
However, from 1 July, this annual bill falls £129 to £1,720.
Between 1 July and 30 September 2025, gas prices will be capped at 6.33p per kilowatt hour (kWh) and electricity at 25.73p per kWh.
Those who pay their bills every three months by cash or cheque pay more, but those on prepayment meters pay a little less.
The cap does not apply in Northern Ireland, which has its own energy market.
What is a typical household?
Your energy bill depends on the overall amount of gas and electricity you use, and how you pay for it.
The type of property you live in, how energy efficient it is, how many people live there and the weather all make a difference.
The Ofgem cap is based on a “typical household” using 11,500 kWh of gas and 2,700 kWh of electricity a year with a single bill for gas and electricity, settled by direct debit.
The vast majority of people pay their bill this way to help spread payments across the year. Those who pay every three months by cash or cheque are charged more.
Should I take a meter reading when the energy cap changes?
Submitting a meter reading when the cap changes means you will not be charged for estimated usage at the wrong rate.
This is especially important when prices go up.
Customers with working smart meters do not need to submit a reading as their bill is calculated automatically.
What is happening to prepayment customers?
About four million households had prepayment meters in January 2025, according to Ofgem.
Between April and June, households on prepayment meters paid slightly less than those on direct debit, with a typical bill of £1,803, a rise of £113 from the previous quarter.
From 1 July, households on pre-payment meters will still pay slightly less than those on direct debit, with a typical annual bill of £1,672.
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Many pre-payment meters have been in place for years, but some were installed more recently after customers struggled to pay higher bills.
Rules introduced in November 2023 mean suppliers must give customers more opportunity to clear their debts before switching them to a meter. They cannot be installed at all in certain households.
Households who pay their bills by cash or cheque will pay more than pre-payment or direct debit customers, with a typical annual bill of £1,855
Can I fix my energy prices?
Fixed-price deals are not affected by the energy price cap, which changes every three months and can rise and fall.
They offer certainty for a set period – often a year, or longer – but if energy prices drop when you are on the deal, you could be stuck at a higher price. You may also have to pay a penalty to leave a fixed deal early.
Ofgem, the energy regulator, says customers who want the security of knowing what their bill will be should consider moving to a fixed deal. However, it says they should make sure they understand all the costs.
Martin Lewis, founder of Money Saving Expert, recommends checking whole-of-market energy price comparison sites to help find the best deal.
What are standing charges and how are they changing?
Standing charges are a fixed daily fee to cover the costs of connecting to gas and electricity supplies. They vary slightly by region.
On 1 April, the average electricity standing charge fell from 60.97p to 53.8p but the average gas standing charge increased from 31.65p to 32.67p
Some customers in London and the North Wales and Mersey region saw larger increases.
From 1 July, standing charges will typically fall to 51.37p a day for electricity and 29.82p a day for gas.
Campaigners argue standing charges are unfair because they make up a bigger proportion of the bill of low energy users.
While the economy started this year strongly, Wednesday saw another example of a surprise to the markets in the wrong direction.
In May the economy slowed again, and now inflation has quickened faster than expected. It is expected to stay well above the Bank of England’s target level until autumn.
For consumers, still reeling from years of higher prices and a recent pickup in food prices, the new number is less a surprise, more the confirmation of their ordinary day-to-day challenges.
On top of that, and just as important for some people, the bounce in inflation complicates the Bank’s rate cut plan.
Investors have been treating it as pretty much nailed on that rates will come down again in August, from the current 4.25%.
Now there is definitely a sense of renewed caution.
A former rate setter at the Bank, the economist Andrew Sentance, even said it would be “irresponsible” for interest rates to be cut next month.
Expectations remain that the cut in August and another one later in the year will go ahead.
But the Bank will have to explain why it is looking beyond this current rise in inflation, into next year’s expected drop-back to the 2% target.
It will mean the return of old questions around whether the UK is more inflation-prone than other countries, for example because of increasing wage and tax costs being passed on in the form of higher prices.
A weakening jobs market is another part of the deliberations. The latest employment figures will be published on Thursday.
If, as expected, they show a continued fall in vacancies, then that strengthens the argument for going ahead with a cut in rates. Bloomberg is predicting a 4.9% unemployment rate, up from the 4.6% reported last month.
But as always it is important to keep all the figures in perspective.
True, other major economies have not seen a similar bounce in inflation. The eurozone’s latest inflation rate is just 2%. But inflation is nowhere near the highs of the energy crisis, and will come down as energy prices fall in the autumn.
Growth is definitely slowing, but we are not in recession, and the very latest activity figures suggest recovery in some sectors.
US inflation jumped last month as President Donald Trump’s tariffs took hold, pushing up prices for items from clothing to coffee.
Consumer prices rose 2.7% in the year to June, up from 2.4% the previous month, with prices rising at the fastest pace since February, the Labor Department said.
Higher energy and housing costs, such as rents, were the major drivers of the increase.
But the data also suggested that consumers are starting to feel the impact of tariffs, as some firms begin to pass along the costs of Trump’s new taxes on imports.
Coffee prices jumped 2.2% from May to June, while prices for citrus fruits climbed 2.3%. Toy prices rose 1.8%, appliance prices increased 1.9%, while clothing prices gained 0.4% – the first increase to hit the sector in months.
But the overall increase remained contained and came in largely within expectations, offset by declines in prices for new and used cars, airfare and hotel bookings.
“There is a trickle of what is likely tariff-induced inflation in some categories, particularly household appliances and furnishings,” said Olu Sonola, head of US economic research at Fitch Ratings.
“This trickle is likely to gain momentum in the coming months.”
The average effective tariff rate in the US has surged this year, as Trump imposed a 10% tax on most goods entering the country, hitting key items, such as steel and car with even higher levies.
Though he suspended some more aggressive plans, in recent weeks, he has said he is planning to raise tariffs on goods from most countries, with duties set to come into effect on 1 August.
The president has claimed that introducing tariffs will protect American businesses from foreign competition and also boost domestic manufacturing and jobs.
The White House has dismissed forecasts that the measures will lead to higher prices for Americans, arguing that companies and foreign exporters will absorb the costs.
That view is at odds with most economic forecasters, who have argued the US economy has been shielded so far because firms stocked up on many goods in advance.
Ryan Sweet, chief US economist at Oxford Economics, said the latest figures were unlikely to settle the debate.
Ownership of the Post Office could put into the hands of its postmasters, the government has suggested, as it launched a public consultation over the future of the service.
The minister responsible, Gareth Thomas, said it was time for “a fresh vision” for the service, but said the government did not plan to reduce the number of branches.
The Post Office operates counters or shops in more than 11,500 locations around the country and is fully state-owned and subsidised by the taxpayer.
Plans for mutualisation have been under discussion for more than a decade, but were sidelined as the scandal around the wrongful conviction of sub-postmasters unfolded.
The government said it also wanted to transform the organisation’s culture in the wake of the scandal which saw hundreds of sub-postmasters wrongly accused of false accounting and theft at the branches they were running on the basis of data from faultyaccountancysoftware.
The scandal was brought back into the spotlight last week after the public inquiry into what went wrong published its first report, focusing on the impact on sub-postmasters and their families.
“We all know, sadly, the the grim legacy… so this is about fixing the fundamental problems,” Thomas told the BBC.
The Post Office had to be transformed so that it was trusted by its postmasters as well as by the general public again, he said.
But he said he also wanted the 12-week consultation to start a national debate over how the organisation should be run in the future, including the options of mutual-ownership or a charter model like the BBC.
Post Office Minister Gareth Thomas said the review was about fixing “fundamental problems”
The consultation includes a question over whether the Post Office should still be required to operate 11,500 branches. However, Thomas said the government believed the current size of the network was “broadly right” and did not foresee closures.
The minister also announced a further £118m to support the work already underway to deliver changes in the Post Office.
Future services
As well as the question of ownership, the government is asking for views on what services the Post Office should offer in future, with a particular focus on banking, as major lenders continue to close High Street branches.
Currently customers can use the Post Office to pay in and withdraw money from accounts at most banks.
They can buy foreign currency, pick up welfare benefit forms and payments, and submit passport applications. But the full range of services are only offered at larger sites.
Research published alongside the so-called Green Paper on the future of Post Office suggests it adds “social value” of £5.2bn per year to households and £1.3bn annually to small and medium sized businesses.
But the business has struggled to make a profit, relying on tens of millions of pounds of state subsidy, as customers posted fewer letters and turned to online services and other delivery operators, bypassing Post Office counters.
According to the Post Office, currently 99.7% of the population live within three miles of a Post Office and 4,000 of its branches are open seven days a week.
The Post Office has already announced it is shifting its last remaining standalone shops to the model that the majority are already run on, which grants franchise-holders the right to offer Post Office services alongside other retail services.
The government said it did not plan to pursue “potentially expensive” shifts in ownership structure until the Post Office had achieved “financial and operational stability”.
However, it floated two alternatives for longer-term change:
A joint-venture between the government and a sub-postmaster-owned mutual to run the Post Office
A charter model – as used for the BBC and universities – with the government setting out guiding principles but relinquishing its ownership role
The idea of shared-ownership was first raised in 2012 after the Post Office was split from the Royal Mail, the service that delivers post to the door.
Many smaller businesses already use mutual models, but the most well-known larger UK businesses run that way are the John Lewis Partnership and the Co-operative.
In mutually-run organisations, staff are more closely involved with decision-making and have a greater stake in the performance of the business.
Last year, Thomas told parliament nearly half of branches were not profitable or made only a small profit from Post Office business. That has led to a stagnation in pay for postmasters.
Rose Marley, chief executive of Co-operatives UK, a body that promotes the mutual ownership of businesses said that employee-owned businesses were proven to be more productive and in this case the switch could be “genuinely transformative”.
She said the Horizon scandal would have been much less likely under shared ownership.
“A stakeholder-led Post Office would be far better placed to surface concerns early and protect those on the front line,” she said.
“It would hardwire in a culture of transparency and shared responsibility.”