Banking

Switching Bills Guide UK — How to Save Hundreds on Household Costs

Step-by-step guide to switching your energy, broadband, mobile, and insurance to save money. When to switch, how to compare, and typical savings for UK households.

Most household bills automatically increase when your deal ends, moving you to the provider’s most expensive default tariff. Switching regularly is one of the easiest ways to save money — and the process is usually straightforward and handled by the new provider.

Energy (Gas & Electricity)

When to Switch

  • When your fixed deal ends and you move to the standard variable tariff (SVT)
  • When cheaper deals become available (check every few months)
  • When your usage changes (e.g. working from home, new EV)

How to Switch

  1. Find your current tariff name and annual usage (on your bill or supplier’s app)
  2. Compare deals on Ofgem-accredited comparison sites — Uswitch, Compare the Market, MoneySupermarket
  3. Choose a new deal (usually a fixed-rate tariff)
  4. The new supplier handles the switch — usually takes 5 working days for a standard switch
  5. There is a 14-day cooling-off period if you change your mind

Typical Savings

Scenario Typical Annual Saving
SVT → best fixed deal £100–£400
Expired fixed deal → new fix £50–£200
No change (already on good fix) £0 (stay put)

Important: Currently, energy prices are regulated by the Ofgem price cap. Savings depend on market conditions — sometimes fixed deals are not cheaper than the cap.

Broadband

When to Switch

Broadband contracts typically last 18–24 months. When yours expires, the price usually increases by £5–£15/month.

How to Switch

  1. Note when your contract ends (check your bill or call your provider)
  2. Compare deals on broadband comparison sites — consider speed, data allowance, and contract length
  3. Negotiate first — call your current provider and ask for a retention deal. Many match or beat competitors’ prices
  4. If not satisfied, switch — the new provider manages the transfer

Typical Savings

Switch Typical Monthly Saving
Out-of-contract → new deal (same provider) £5–£15
Out-of-contract → new provider £10–£20
Annual saving £60–£240

Negotiation Script

“Hi, my contract is ending on [date] and I’ve seen [competing provider] offering a similar package for [price]. I’d like to stay but I need a competitive deal. What can you offer?”

This works more often than you might expect. Providers would rather keep you at a discount than lose you entirely.

Mobile Phone

SIM-Only vs Contract

The biggest mobile saving comes from switching to SIM-only once your handset contract ends:

Plan Type Typical Monthly Cost Data
Handset contract £30–£60 Varies
SIM-only (12 month) £8–£15 10–100GB
SIM-only (30 day) £6–£12 5–50GB

Annual saving from switching: £200–£500 if moving from a handset contract to SIM-only.

If you need a new phone, consider buying it outright (or on 0% finance) and pairing it with a cheap SIM-only deal — often cheaper overall than a bundled contract.

Car Insurance

Never auto-renew car insurance. See our car insurance guide.

How to Save

  1. Compare prices 3–4 weeks before renewal (not earlier — quotes are priced for the start date)
  2. Use multiple comparison sites — not all insurers appear on all sites
  3. Increase your voluntary excess (if you can afford a higher claim excess)
  4. Check telematics/black box policies — especially valuable for young drivers
  5. Pay annually instead of monthly — monthly payments typically add 15–25% APR

Typical Savings

Action Potential Saving
Compare and switch £50–£200
Increase voluntary excess £20–£50
Pay annually £30–£80
Add security features £10–£30

Home Insurance

Similar to car insurance — compare annually using comparison sites. See our home insurance guide.

TV and Streaming

Review Your Subscriptions

Service Monthly Cost Action
Sky TV £25–£50+ Negotiate at contract end, or switch to streaming
Netflix £5–£18 Downgrade plan or rotate with other services
Amazon Prime £8.99 Worth it if you use delivery and Prime Video
Disney+ £5–£11 Consider annual plan for discount
Multiple services £40–£80 total Rotate — subscribe to one at a time

Rotation strategy: Instead of paying for four streaming services simultaneously, subscribe to one for a month, watch what you want, cancel, move to the next.

Switching Calendar

Set reminders for these key dates:

Bill When to Review Lead Time
Energy When fixed deal ends 4–6 weeks before
Broadband When contract ends 4 weeks before
Mobile When contract ends 4 weeks before
Car insurance Annual renewal 3–4 weeks before
Home insurance Annual renewal 3–4 weeks before
TV/streaming Monthly review Cancel anytime
Council tax Annual (April) Check discounts once

Total Potential Savings

Bill Low Estimate High Estimate
Energy £100 £400
Broadband £60 £240
Mobile £100 £500
Car insurance £50 £200
Home insurance £30 £100
TV/streaming £50 £300
Total £390 £1,740

Most households can realistically save £500–£1,000/year by switching bills regularly. Combine this with cashback sites and our other money saving tips for maximum impact.