Hi,
Last October my energy supplier went bust and I was transferred over to Scottish Power by the regulator. If I want to switch to another supplier, do I have to pay a get out fee under these circumstances ?
Cheers
hamer.
Switching suppliers
Moderator: Moderators
-
- Senior Member
- Posts: 5374
- Joined: Wed Feb 26, 2014 9:35 pm
- Has thanked: 108 times
- Been thanked: 1038 times
Switching suppliers
No, if you are switched because your supplier ceases to trade you can transfer at any time with no exit fees. It is recommended you do transfer as you are likely to be put on a standard tariff which won't be cheap so you will want to find a new supplier/cheaper tariff.
It shouldn't be a problem now since it was October but don't switch until you have had confirmation from your replacement (Scottish power in this case) that the transfer was completed, otherwise you complicate matters significantly.
We are going though this exact process right now as our supplier went bust last month.
It shouldn't be a problem now since it was October but don't switch until you have had confirmation from your replacement (Scottish power in this case) that the transfer was completed, otherwise you complicate matters significantly.
We are going though this exact process right now as our supplier went bust last month.
- etaf
- Senior Member
- Posts: 938
- Joined: Sat Nov 15, 2008 10:27 am
- Location: West Sussex, on coast
- Has thanked: 37 times
- Been thanked: 146 times
Switching suppliers
Probably know this, BUT always look at the tariff info - rather than any saving mentioned, based on your current spend.
KWh & the dayrate is really the best way to compare, I have found that comparison sites do not always seem to use these figures and seem to base on £ spent. I have had a few quotes where the actual KWh & Dayrate was actually higher than my current fixed rate figures.
Gas Calc should be on the supplies site, calorific value etc. Details should be on the bill MINE is using Gas units used x calorific value (39.2) x volume correction (1.02264) ÷ 3.6. For imperial meters only (Cubic Feet) - You need to multiply the result x 2.83
KWh & the dayrate is really the best way to compare, I have found that comparison sites do not always seem to use these figures and seem to base on £ spent. I have had a few quotes where the actual KWh & Dayrate was actually higher than my current fixed rate figures.
Gas Calc should be on the supplies site, calorific value etc. Details should be on the bill MINE is using Gas units used x calorific value (39.2) x volume correction (1.02264) ÷ 3.6. For imperial meters only (Cubic Feet) - You need to multiply the result x 2.83
Simple DIYer
Wayne
Wayne
- big-all
- Pro Carpenter
- Posts: 23570
- Joined: Sat Dec 16, 2006 10:11 pm
- Location: redhill surrey an auld reekie laddie
- Has thanked: 734 times
- Been thanked: 2335 times
Switching suppliers
also select" all off market" or "include switches we dont do"
this will include all options not just the ones they make money from
this will include all options not just the ones they make money from
we are all ------------------still learning
-
- Senior Member
- Posts: 5374
- Joined: Wed Feb 26, 2014 9:35 pm
- Has thanked: 108 times
- Been thanked: 1038 times
- big-all
- Pro Carpenter
- Posts: 23570
- Joined: Sat Dec 16, 2006 10:11 pm
- Location: redhill surrey an auld reekie laddie
- Has thanked: 734 times
- Been thanked: 2335 times
Switching suppliers
they also share around half the commission they get as cashback around 2 months later
- Rating: 7.14%
we are all ------------------still learning