Energies
What Happens If You Can't Pay Your Energy Bill?
What to do if you can't afford your energy bill, your rights, supplier obligations, payment plans, and emergency help available. UK guide.
Struggling to pay energy bills is increasingly common. The good news is that energy suppliers have strict obligations to help you, and there are emergency support options available.
What Happens Step by Step
| Stage |
What happens |
Your rights |
| 1. Payment missed |
Supplier sends a reminder or contacts you |
You have time to respond |
| 2. Continued non-payment |
Supplier offers a payment plan |
Must be affordable — based on your income |
| 3. Payment plan rejected or not agreed |
Supplier may offer a prepayment meter |
You can object — see below |
| 4. Continued debt |
Debt may be passed to collections |
Supplier must follow Ofgem rules |
| 5. Last resort |
Disconnection (extremely rare) |
Strict protections for vulnerable people |
Your Rights When You Can’t Pay
| Right |
Details |
| Payment plan |
Supplier must offer one based on what you can reasonably afford |
| Cannot disconnect without warning |
Must follow a formal process with written notice |
| Winter disconnection ban |
Cannot disconnect pensioners, disabled or chronically ill people October–March |
| Cannot disconnect if vulnerable |
Protected households include elderly, disabled, seriously ill, families with young children |
| Prepayment meter protections |
Supplier cannot force-fit a prepayment meter if it is not safe and reasonably practicable |
| Ability to pay assessment |
Supplier must assess your ability to pay before setting repayment amounts |
| Free debt advice referral |
Supplier must signpost you to free debt advice |
What to Do If You Can’t Pay
| Step |
Action |
| 1. Contact your supplier immediately |
Do not ignore bills — call or use online chat |
| 2. Explain your situation |
Tell them you are struggling to pay |
| 3. Ask for a payment plan |
Based on what you can actually afford |
| 4. Ask about hardship funds |
Every major supplier has one |
| 5. Check if you qualify for Warm Home Discount |
£150 off your bill |
| 6. Apply for government and charity grants |
See below |
| 7. Get free debt advice |
Citizens Advice, StepChange, or National Debtline |
Supplier Hardship Funds
| Supplier |
Fund name |
What they offer |
| British Gas |
British Gas Energy Trust |
Grants to clear energy debt (and sometimes other debts) |
| EDF |
EDF Customer Support Fund |
Grants to help with energy debt |
| E.ON |
E.ON Next Energy Fund |
Grants to clear or reduce energy debt |
| OVO |
OVO Energy Fund |
Grants for energy debt and energy-saving measures |
| Octopus Energy |
Octo Assist & Octopus Assist Fund |
Grants and emergency credit |
| Scottish Power |
Scottish Power Hardship Fund |
Grants to reduce energy debt |
| So Energy |
So Energy Customer Support |
Debt relief and payment plans |
These funds can write off hundreds or thousands of pounds of energy debt. You usually need to demonstrate financial hardship and be on a payment plan already.
Government Help
| Scheme |
What it provides |
Eligibility |
| Warm Home Discount |
£150 off electricity bill (winter) |
Pension Credit recipients (automatic) or low-income households (apply through supplier) |
| Winter Fuel Payment |
£100–£300 (varies by eligibility) |
State Pension age residents (now means-tested) |
| Cold Weather Payment |
£25 per 7-day cold spell |
Pension Credit, Income Support, JSA, ESA, UC (limited costing element) |
| ECO4 scheme |
Free insulation or heating improvements |
Means-tested benefits + inefficient home |
| Council welfare funds |
Emergency payments |
Contact your local council |
Prepayment Meters — What to Know
| Issue |
Details |
| Force-fitting a meter |
Supplier can apply to court to fit one, but Ofgem rules now restrict forced installations for vulnerable customers |
| Self-disconnection |
If your prepayment meter runs out of credit, your supply stops — this counts as self-disconnection |
| Emergency credit |
Most prepayment meters have £5–£10 emergency credit |
| Friendly hours |
Some suppliers do not disconnect prepayment meters overnight or at weekends |
| Debt repayment on prepayment |
Supplier adds a debt repayment amount to each top-up — should be affordable |
| If on a prepayment meter and struggling |
Contact supplier for emergency credit, reduced debt repayment rate, or fuel vouchers |
Fuel Vouchers
If you have a prepayment meter and cannot afford to top up, you may be able to get emergency fuel vouchers.
| Source |
How to access |
| Your energy supplier |
Call and ask for emergency credit or fuel vouchers |
| Citizens Advice |
Can issue fuel vouchers in emergencies |
| Local council welfare assistance |
Some councils provide energy vouchers |
| Charities (Turn2Us, SSAFA, etc.) |
Depends on circumstances |
Will Energy Debt Affect My Credit Score?
| Situation |
Impact on credit file |
| Missed payment — still with supplier |
No — energy companies do not report to credit agencies by default |
| On a payment plan with supplier |
No |
| Debt passed to debt collection agency |
Yes — third-party debt collectors report to credit agencies |
| County Court Judgment (CCJ) obtained |
Yes — stays on credit file for 6 years |
| Supplier switch with debt |
Supplier may object to the switch until debt is cleared |
Key point: Energy debt on its own does not affect your credit score. Keep talking to your supplier and it stays off your credit file.
Priority and Non-Priority Debts
Energy debt is classified as a priority debt because the consequences of non-payment (disconnection) are more serious than non-priority debts (credit cards, personal loans).
| Priority debts (deal with first) |
Non-priority debts |
| Energy bills |
Credit cards |
| Rent/mortgage |
Personal loans |
| Council tax |
Catalogues |
| Court fines |
Overdrafts |
| Child maintenance |
Store cards |
If you are struggling with multiple debts, always prioritise energy, rent, and council tax.
Scotland — Key Differences
| Difference |
Details |
| Warm Home Discount |
Same scheme applies in Scotland |
| Home Energy Scotland |
Free advice service plus interest-free loans for energy efficiency |
| Crisis grants |
Scottish Welfare Fund provides crisis grants for emergencies |
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