What happened (and what people are getting wrong about it)
From April, the Great Britain energy price cap is set to fall by around 7%. The headlines focus on the “typical” annual dual-fuel cost dropping from about £1,758 to £1,641.
That’s real relief for a lot of households — but it’s not a “price drop” in the way most people instinctively think. The cap doesn’t limit your total bill; it limits the unit rate (what you pay per kWh) and the standing charge (the daily fixed cost), assuming a typical usage profile. Your actual bill will still track your home’s heat demand, your boiler efficiency, your thermostat settings, your insulation levels, and how much hot water you use.
The other big detail: this fall is being driven in part by changes to how certain environmental/green costs are funded (moving more into general taxation), while network costs are still nudging upwards. In plain English: some costs are being shifted around rather than disappearing.
Why it matters to homeowners (especially if you heat with gas)
For most homes around Bordon, Whitehill, Liphook, Alton, Farnham and Haslemere, space heating and hot water are still primarily gas-boiler driven. That means a cap change affects you in three ways:
- Running costs: If you’re on a price-cap-linked variable tariff, your per-kWh gas and electricity costs reduce in April. If you’re on a fixed deal, the change matters indirectly because fixed tariffs often follow cap movements.
- Upgrade decisions: When energy prices move, the “payback” maths for a new boiler, smart controls, insulation or a heat pump changes — sometimes more than people expect.
- Support schemes and grants: If schemes such as ECO are being phased down or adjusted, households that were “waiting to apply” may find the window narrows or eligibility becomes tighter.
This is why a price-cap fall can be a moment to act, not a moment to relax. The cheapest energy is still the energy you don’t have to buy.
What it means technically (unit rates, standing charges and the physics of heat)
Most homeowners monitor their bills in pounds per month. Engineers think in kilowatt-hours. The link between the two is simple:
- Gas used (kWh) × gas unit rate = your gas usage cost
- Electricity used (kWh) × electricity unit rate = your electricity usage cost
- Standing charges add a fixed daily amount, regardless of usage
Now add the reality of heating: your home’s heat loss rises sharply when the outside temperature drops. So even if unit rates fall 7%, your winter bills can still be high if you’ve got:
- older loft insulation or patchy cavity wall insulation
- oversized or poorly balanced radiators (hot upstairs, cold downstairs)
- a boiler running at a high flow temperature when it doesn’t need to
- aging controls (simple dial thermostats, no proper schedules, no zoning)
One of the most misunderstood technical points is boiler efficiency in real life. A modern condensing boiler can be very efficient, but it only “condenses” properly (and achieves top efficiency) if the return water temperature is low enough. That usually means lower flow temperatures and radiators able to deliver enough heat at those temperatures. If your system is set to run too hot all the time, you lose the condensing advantage — and you burn more gas than you need to.
Why a price-cap fall doesn’t cancel out poor system setup
Let’s put numbers to it. Imagine two similar homes in Alton:
- Home A has a well-tuned system (balanced radiators, sensible flow temperature, smart scheduling). It uses 12,000 kWh of gas per year.
- Home B has an older setup and runs hotter/longer than necessary. It uses 15,000 kWh of gas per year.
That 3,000 kWh difference is the equivalent of leaving a “small radiator” on permanently through the heating season. A 7% reduction in unit price helps both homes, but Home B will still pay significantly more because it is buying far more energy in the first place.
What it means financially (fixed deals, variable tariffs and payback on upgrades)
The Guardian notes fixed tariffs may also drop by roughly 7–9%. Whether that’s true for you depends on your supplier, your region, your meter type, and your payment method. Practically, it splits homeowners into three groups:
- Cap-linked variable: you’ll likely see the reduction reflected automatically from April.
- Currently on a high fixed rate: you may be paying above what the market is moving towards. Check exit fees, then consider switching when it makes sense.
- Currently on a good fixed rate: do nothing rash. A small fall in April doesn’t necessarily beat a genuinely competitive fixed deal you already have.
How this changes the boiler vs heat pump conversation
Homeowners often ask, “If bills are falling, should I still bother upgrading?” The honest answer is: yes, if your upgrade is aimed at reducing consumption and improving comfort, not just chasing price movements.
However, price shifts do affect the numbers:
- When electricity is expensive relative to gas, heat pump running costs can look less attractive unless the heat pump operates at a high seasonal efficiency (SCOP) and the home is well-insulated.
- When gas prices fall, the short-term payback of switching away from gas can lengthen.
But payback is only one part of the decision. Reliability, future regulation, carbon targets, and the cost of emergency breakdowns matter too. In older properties around Farnham and Haslemere (including period homes with solid walls), the best route is often staged: insulation, controls, system clean-up and emitter upgrades first — then consider bigger changes.
What it means locally (Bordon, Whitehill, Liphook, Alton, Farnham, Haslemere)
National price changes land differently in our area because housing stock varies street by street. In practice we see a few repeating patterns:
- Bordon & Whitehill: a mix of 20th-century homes where straightforward efficiency wins are common — thermostatic radiator valves (TRVs) that actually work, proper programmer settings, and reducing boiler flow temperature without losing comfort.
- Liphook: plenty of family homes with extensions. Extensions often mean the heating system has grown “organically” over time. Balancing and zoning can make a noticeable difference to comfort and bills.
- Alton: a wide range from newer builds to older properties. We often find boilers set to very high flow temperatures because “that’s how it’s always been,” which costs money and can shorten component life.
- Farnham & Haslemere: more period properties and higher likelihood of solid walls, mixed radiators, and tucked-away pipework. These homes can still be efficient, but they benefit from careful system design and realistic expectations (especially with low-temperature heating).
The local point is simple: you can’t spreadsheet your way to lower bills without looking at what your home is actually doing.
What homeowners should do next (practical actions that survive any price change)
1) Check which tariff you’re actually on
Many households assume they’re “on the cap.” You may not be. Find your last bill and confirm:
- tariff type (standard variable vs fixed)
- unit rates and standing charges for gas and electricity
- end date and any exit fees if fixed
If you’re on a high fixed rate with no meaningful exit fee, April’s cap drop could be your cue to shop around. If you’ve got a good fix, keep it.
2) Lower your boiler flow temperature (carefully)
If you have a combi or system boiler, you usually have a central heating flow temperature setting. Many are set at 75–80°C by default. For many homes, you can reduce this and still heat comfortably, while improving condensing efficiency.
- As a starting point for a typical radiator system, try 60–65°C for space heating.
- Give it 2–3 days to judge comfort (homes heat more slowly at lower temperatures, but often more evenly).
- If rooms struggle on colder days, edge it up a little rather than blasting it back to maximum.
Important: hot water settings are separate on many combis. Don’t reduce hot water temperature to unsafe levels. If you’re unsure, get advice — it’s a quick visit for an engineer to set this up sensibly.
3) Get your controls doing the hard work
A price-cap fall won’t fix a home that heats empty rooms. The most cost-effective control improvements we see locally are:
- a proper programmer schedule (not permanent “on”)
- a room thermostat located in the right place (not a cold hallway or sunny window bay)
- working TRVs so bedrooms aren’t heated like living rooms
- smart controls when they match your lifestyle (especially for irregular routines)
Many homes around Liphook and Alton have controls installed but not configured properly after a boiler swap. Getting this right can reduce run hours without making the home colder.
4) Don’t skip the boring stuff: service, system water quality and radiator balance
If your boiler is overdue a service, a price drop is not the time to gamble. A breakdown in March can wipe out a year’s worth of savings from a slightly cheaper unit rate.
Also, if your radiators have cold patches, slow warm-up, or you hear gurgling, your system may have sludge, air, or poor circulation. A clean, well-inhibited system helps heat transfer and protects components like pumps and heat exchangers. Balancing radiators improves comfort and can allow you to run a lower flow temperature.
5) If you were relying on grant support, check your eligibility now
The story mentions the phased removal/adjustment of schemes such as ECO. Whether that is a reduction in availability, a reshaping of eligibility, or a change in what measures are prioritised, one practical message stands out: don’t assume support will be there later.
If you’re in a qualifying household (or believe you might be), gather your paperwork, check what measures are available (insulation, heating controls, boiler upgrades, etc.), and move sooner rather than later. Even if you don’t qualify, the same measures are still worth pricing privately because they reduce kWh usage permanently.
The real takeaway: treat April as a reset point, not a finish line
Cheaper unit rates are welcome. But the households that feel the biggest improvement over the next 12 months won’t be the ones who simply wait for April — they’ll be the ones who use the breathing space to get their heating system set up properly, cut waste, and plan upgrades on their terms rather than in an emergency.
If you’re in Bordon, Whitehill, Liphook, Alton, Farnham or Haslemere and you want a practical plan — from tweaking boiler temperatures and controls through to diagnosing poor circulation, radiator issues, or upgrade options — book an appointment with Embassy Gas on https://www.embassygas.com/book, call (01420) 558993 or email helpdesk@embassygas.com.