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Standing Charges could finally fall from April under Government plans – Martin Lewis says it's 'a step in the right direction'

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Clare Casalis
Clare Casalis
Senior Energy & Utilities Analyst
8 December 2025

Gas and electricity Standing Charges in England, Scotland and Wales could be cut by £39 a year from April 2026 if new proposals from the Government are implemented. MoneySavingExpert.com founder Martin Lewis has welcomed the news, but warned that more needs to be done on the future structure of energy bills.

Standing Charges – which you pay just for the facility of having gas and electricity, even if you don't use any – currently make up £320 of the average annual energy bill. We've long called for these charges to be lowered, as they penalise lower-use households and those looking to cut their usage.

Martin Lewis: 'It's a step in the right direction'

Reacting to the Government's announcement on X today (Monday 8 December), Martin wrote:

Martin Lewis
Martin Lewis
MSE founder & chair

News. Energy Standing Charges finally to fall? Delighted the Government has listened and is consulting on shifting the Warm Home Discount costs off the Standing Charge and onto the unit rate. This is exactly the right direction. You can respond to the consultation here.

If implemented, it would remove a typical £39 a year from the Standing Charge (roughly split between gas and electricity), starting next April. That timing aligns with the planned reduction in unit rates announced in the Budget (via moving some other policy costs into general taxation).

Overall, assuming all else stays equal (which it won't, as I've written before), this means the Standing Charge should fall, and the unit rate should still fall too, because the added cost from this shift is smaller than the reduction from removing the policy costs.

It's only a baby step, but it's a step in the right direction. I now hope Ofgem follows this route in its long-term consultation on the future structure of energy bills.

The current Standing Charge is a moral hazard that disincentivises lower usage and keeps bills high for people who use very little energy. It's the biggest single cause of complaint I get about energy bills, by a mile.

Paying £300+ a year simply for the facility of having energy is too much. It also penalises older people who don't use gas in the summer yet still pay for it every day.

I've pushed on this for years, and it's good to finally see some (albeit small) movement. So do feed in to the consultation to ensure it happens.

The Government's proposals in more detail

As Martin explains above, the Government has launched a consultation about the costs of the Warm Home Discount scheme, which was expanded to millions more households earlier this year.

Currently, the scheme is funded through consumers' gas and electricity Standing Charges, but the Government is proposing to move these costs to the unit rates instead – this is the amount you pay for each kilowatt hour (kWh) of energy used.

This proposal is in addition to the £150 energy bills cuts announced in the Budget last month, which will come into effect from 1 April 2026. The Government has said these latest changes could also come in from April next year.

💬 HAVE YOUR SAY IN THE CONSULTATION

You can read the full consultation on Gov.uk. You can then share your feedback:

The consultation will close at 11.59pm on 6 January 2026.

What else is happening with Standing Charges

Earlier this year, industry regulator Ofgem separately confirmed new plans to require energy suppliers to offer at least one low Standing Charge tariff to all customers by January 2026.

But Martin has shared serious concerns over the plans, which may not help those who need it most – for more on this, see 'Why can't you just cut Standing Charges?', Martin asks regulator boss.

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Standing Charges could finally fall from April under Government plans

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