Energy Bills After the Budget: What Comes Next?
Across the UK, households are bracing for another winter of
The Autumn Budget brings a small dose of relief to households still recovering from years of volatile energy prices. The headline is simple: some costs are coming off bills. But the story underneath is more complicated.
Here’s what matters.
This is a real saving. Legacy levies will shift into general taxation.
But your final bill depends on the wider system. And parts of that system are moving in the other direction.
The Budget lowers what the bill might have been.
It does not guarantee what the bill will be.
Network upgrades
The grid is being reinforced for electric heat, EVs and renewables. That work is essential, but expensive. Network charges are expected to rise.
Support scheme costs
More funding for low-income energy support means more administrative cost in the system.
Wholesale prices
Global energy prices remain unpredictable. A small shift can ripple into household bills.
Together, these forces mean the Budget helps, but cannot fully stabilise prices.
These changes pull costs down. Other pressures push them up. The balance will become clear early next year.
From April 2028, EVs will pay a mileage-based tax:
Still cheaper than petrol or diesel.
The £7,500 Boiler Upgrade Scheme stays unchanged.
A rare moment of policy stability.
Bills will likely be lower than they would have been.
But the system is still in flux, and energy costs will remain sensitive to network upgrades and global markets.
The clearer picture arrives in January, when Ofgem updates the price cap.
Until then, think of this Budget as breathing space, not a cure.
If you want help understanding what these Budget changes mean for your home, or how to prepare for the months ahead , get in touch with us. A clearer, steadier energy plan starts with a conversation.
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