- Mar 14, 2005
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I haven't done a detailed analysis, but I have always believed that fixed rate deals rarely actually cost you less in the long run (unless you jump to a different provider).
As someone has expressed you may get what seems like a good deal initially, but when it expires and its time to renew, the new charge is disproportionately higher, So the savings you think you made in the first round, you end up paying back in the second deal, and as most of these deals are based on regular fixed monthly payment, so the companies estimate your fuel usage, generally in their favour, or despite having meter readings, they don't use them to revaluate your actual usage, and you can end up with a surprise excess demand at the end of the period.
I can see how some people like to be able to budget with a fixed monthly payment. but personally I prefer to pay for what I have actually used quarterly - but about a two years ago my electricity company was sold to another large supplier and they now bill me monthly, and despite having meter readers call round 2 or 3 times a year, virtually every bill is "estimated" rather than using proper readings.
As someone has expressed you may get what seems like a good deal initially, but when it expires and its time to renew, the new charge is disproportionately higher, So the savings you think you made in the first round, you end up paying back in the second deal, and as most of these deals are based on regular fixed monthly payment, so the companies estimate your fuel usage, generally in their favour, or despite having meter readings, they don't use them to revaluate your actual usage, and you can end up with a surprise excess demand at the end of the period.
I can see how some people like to be able to budget with a fixed monthly payment. but personally I prefer to pay for what I have actually used quarterly - but about a two years ago my electricity company was sold to another large supplier and they now bill me monthly, and despite having meter readers call round 2 or 3 times a year, virtually every bill is "estimated" rather than using proper readings.