Energy & Utilities

Prepayment Meters UK — How They Work + Your Rights

Everything you need to know about prepayment meters. How they work, costs, topping up, switching to credit, and your rights if you're forced onto prepay.

Around 4 million UK households use prepayment meters — paying for energy before you use it. Whether you have chosen prepay or been placed on it for debt, understanding how it works helps you manage costs and know your rights.

How Prepayment Meters Work

Feature Detail
How you pay Top up before you use energy
What happens if empty Supply disconnects (“self-disconnection”)
Top-up methods Apps, PayPoint/Payzone, key/card, online, phone
Emergency credit Small amount available when you run out
Friendly credit Supply stays on overnight/weekends even if empty
Standing charge Deducted from balance daily

Types of Prepayment Meter

Type How You Top Up
Traditional (key/card) Physical token at PayPoint/Payzone shop
Smart prepayment Via app, online, text, or at shop

Smart prepay is much more convenient — you can top up from home at any time.

Topping Up

Where to Top Up

Method Availability Fee
Supplier app 24/7 Usually free
Online (supplier website) 24/7 Usually free
PayPoint (shops) Shop hours Usually free
Payzone (shops) Shop hours Usually free
Post Office Shop hours Usually free
Automated phone line 24/7 Usually free

Minimum Top-Up

Method Typical Minimum
App/online £5–£10
Shop (key/card) £5–£10
Emergency credit £5–£10 (automatically deducted on next top-up)

Emergency and Friendly Credit

Emergency Credit

Feature Detail
What it is Small credit available when balance reaches £0
Amount Usually £5–£10
How to activate Depends on meter (button press or automatic)
Repayment Automatically deducted from next top-up

Friendly Credit

Feature Detail
What it is Supply stays on during certain hours even if empty
When Typically overnight, weekends, bank holidays
Purpose Prevents disconnection when shops are closed
Not a loan You must still top up when shops open

Self-Disconnection

What It Means Detail
Definition Running out of credit and losing supply
Risk No heating, lighting, or cooking ability
Who’s affected Around 2 million households self-disconnect annually
What to do Top up as soon as possible; contact supplier if struggling

If You Cannot Afford to Top Up

Action Detail
Contact your supplier They must help vulnerable customers
Ask about hardship funds Many suppliers offer emergency credit or grants
Contact Citizens Advice Free support and advice
Use emergency credit Short-term solution
Check benefits eligibility May qualify for support (energy grants)

Costs Compared

Tariff Type Price Cap Level
Prepayment Same as credit meter (since July 2023)
Standard variable (credit) Same as prepayment
Fixed tariff May be more or less than cap

Note: While unit rates are now the same, prepay customers may have additional costs:

  • Travel to top up
  • Time spent topping up
  • Risk of running out (no supply)

Switching from Prepay to Credit

Why Switch

Reason Benefit
Access to more tariffs More competition, potentially better deals
Convenience No topping up
Direct Debit discounts Often cheaper to pay monthly by DD
No disconnection risk Supply continues even if you miss a payment

How to Switch

Step Detail
1 Clear any debt on your prepay meter
2 Contact your supplier
3 Pass a credit check (usually soft check)
4 Supplier arranges meter swap or remote switch
5 Set up Direct Debit payments

If You Have a Smart Meter

Feature Detail
Switch remotely No engineer visit needed
Same-day change Often completed quickly
No physical meter change Just a mode switch

Being Forced onto Prepay

When Suppliers Can Force-Install

Allowed Not Allowed
After exhausting other debt recovery options Without warning or court warrant
With proper notice (usually 7+ days) To vulnerable customers (elderly, disabled, seriously ill)
If debt is for energy (not other debts) During winter for certain customers
With engineer access or warrant Without considering circumstances

New Protections (Since 2023)

Protection Detail
Vulnerability assessment Mandatory before forced installation
Winter ban No forced installs for certain vulnerable groups in cold weather
Ofgem scrutiny Suppliers face penalties for improper installs
Right to challenge Can dispute with supplier and Energy Ombudsman

If You’re Being Threatened with Forced Prepay

Action Detail
Contact your supplier Explain your circumstances
Mention vulnerabilities Illness, disability, elderly, children
Negotiate payment plan Often the supplier will agree
Ask for help Apply for hardship funds
Seek advice Citizens Advice, StepChange
Challenge the decision Formal complaint, then Ombudsman

Your Rights

Right Detail
Same pricing Prepay cap now matches credit meter cap
Emergency credit All prepay meters must offer this
Priority Services Register Extra support if vulnerable
Switch to credit Right to request if you clear debt
Challenge forced install Formal complaints process
Supplier must not disconnect Elderly, disabled, seriously ill in winter (if on Priority Register)

For more on managing energy costs, see our energy price cap guide and energy grants and schemes.