Energy price cap rises again – with cost of bills expected to stay high for months

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Gas and electricity bills will become even more expensive in January, as the energy regulator Ofgem ups the price cap.

A typical yearly bill will be £1,738 from January, an increase of 1.2%.

For billpayers, it means an extra £21 a year or around £1.75 a month.

It’s another blow as falls in prices had originally been forecast for the new year.

It’s also bad news for the prospect of inflation falling again. Costlier energy bills were a key reason inflation rose sharply to 2.3% last month.

Instead of falling steeply, annual bills are expected only to ease by £5 from April, according to analysis from the respected forecasters at Cornwall Insight.

Since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine early in 2022 energy bills spiked and remained high. But even after the rise from next year energy will still be 10% cheaper than the same time in 2024 and 57.2% less than 2023.

The energy price cap sets a limit on how much companies can charge per unit of electricity. Every three months Ofgem revises the cap based on wholesale costs.

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