Published: 25 February 2026 . The English Chronicle Desk. The English Chronicle Online
Millions of households across Great Britain are set to see a reduction in their annual energy bills from 1 April, following a planned overhaul of the costs consumers pay for gas and electricity. The expected savings come as regulator Ofgem prepares to cut the energy price cap and the government implements changes to how policy costs are funded, part of wider efforts to ease cost‑of‑living pressures.
Under forecasts published ahead of the official announcement, the price cap — which limits what suppliers can charge on standard variable tariffs — is expected to fall by about £117 to approximately £1,641 per year for a typical dual‑fuel household. That represents roughly a 7 per cent reduction compared with the current cap and follows measures announced in last year’s Budget to reduce average energy bills by around £150 by moving certain charges off domestic bills and into general taxation.
Chancellor Rachel Reeves set out the changes in the government’s Autumn Budget, including plans to scrap the Energy Company Obligation (ECO) scheme — a levy on bills intended to fund energy‑efficiency improvements in certain homes — and ease other green policy costs that previously added to household charges. Suppliers are expected to reflect the reduced price cap in unit prices from April, though the exact savings individual households will see can vary significantly depending on energy usage, tariff type and property size.
Consumer groups have welcomed the shift as a needed relief for many families facing elevated costs this winter, though experts caution that bills remain well above pre‑pandemic levels and continued investment in energy infrastructure and the transition to cleaner sources could create upward pressure on future costs. Analysts also note that while the headline cut stems largely from policy cost changes, higher standing charges and network costs will partly offset savings for some households.
Ofgem’s formal announcement on the updated price cap is expected in the coming days, and suppliers will notify customers directly about how changes will affect their individual tariffs. The government and consumer advocates have urged households to review energy usage and consider options such as fixed‑rate deals to maximise potential savings as the market adjusts to the new price cap regime.


























































































