A fixed tariff buys price certainty. It does not guarantee a fixed bill, because your bill still moves with usage. This calculator compares a fixed quote with a variable path you control.
UK households can choose between fixing energy unit rates for 12-24 months or staying on the Ofgem price cap. Each has clear trade-offs.
Dimension
Fixed-rate tariff
Variable (Ofgem cap) tariff
Price certainty
Locked unit rates for 12-24 months
Changes every quarter (Jan/Apr/Jul/Oct)
Typical 2026 cost (dual fuel, average usage)
~£1,600-£1,650/year
~£1,700 (cap level)
Protection from price rises
Yes — fully insulated for fix period
No — you pay whatever the new cap is
Benefit if prices fall
None — you keep paying the fixed rate
You pay the new lower rate the day the cap drops
Exit fees
£50-£150 per fuel typically
None
Standing charge
Fixed in advance
Adjusts with the cap
Best switching window
After cap-change announcement
No need to switch — it's the default
Smart meter requirement
Some tariffs require one
Not required
Time-of-use option
Rare on fixed deals
Available (Economy 7, Octopus Agile)
Best for
Risk-averse, planning a budget, expecting prices to rise
Confident prices will fall, want flexibility, low usage
Figures use 2026/27 UK tax-year rates and thresholds. Verify your specific situation against HMRC, FCA or MoneyHelper guidance before deciding.
Worked examples — see the math on real numbers
How fixed and variable energy tariffs compare in 2026, including the Ofgem price cap dynamics.
Cautious household — fixed-tariff preference
Annual electricity
2,700 kWh
Annual gas
11,500 kWh
Current variable (cap)
£1,720/year
12-month fixed deal
£1,650/year (£70 saving)
Risk of cap rising in next 12 months
Moderate
The math:
Fixed tariff saves £70 if cap stays at current level
If cap rises 5% (£86 increase): fixed protects → £86 additional saving
If cap falls 5% (£86 decrease): fixed costs £16 vs cap
Historical pattern: cap moves quarterly, average move <5%
Decision: fixed wins more often than variable but not by huge margins
Result: For risk-averse households, fixed at a small discount makes sense — peace of mind plus modest savings. Switching at the right moment (after a cap announcement) gets the best fixed rates.
EV night charging at 7-10p/kWh vs day rate 28p/kWh
Heat pump pre-heat overnight vs daytime running
Net saving over typical fixed tariff: £400-£800/year
Required: smart meter + IHD + behavioural adjustment
Result: For EV + heat pump households, time-of-use variable tariffs are dramatically cheaper than fixed — typically £400-£800/year extra savings. For traditional gas+electric homes with no time-shifting opportunity, fixed-rate or default cap is usually fine.
Figures use 2026/27 UK tax-year rates and thresholds. Always verify against your specific payslip or tax statement before acting.
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