Switching energy suppliers is one of the easiest ways to cut hundreds of EUR from your annual energy bills. Yet 67% of households never switch, leaving money on the table year after year. This guide walks you through the entire process: comparing suppliers, understanding contracts, avoiding hidden fees, and making the switch without losing power or gas.
Why Switch Energy Suppliers?
Energy prices fluctuate constantly. A supplier offering the best rate last year might be the most expensive today. Switching is how you stay competitive with your own household energy costs.
Studies from European energy regulators show that active switchers save an average of EUR 150-400 per year on electricity alone, and EUR 100-250 on gas. That's a real, measurable impact on household finances with zero effort once the switch is complete.
Beyond cost, switching gives you access to:
- Green energy (renewable-only tariffs for environmentally conscious households)
- Smart meter bundles (electricity + gas discounts)
- Loyalty bonuses (cashback, vouchers, reduced rates after year 1)
- Customer service improvements (some suppliers have better reputations)
- Fixed-rate certainty (lock in prices for 1-2 years, ignore market volatility)
Before You Switch: 5 Things to Check
Don't jump into switching blindly. Here are the critical checks that separate smart switchers from those who waste time and money.
1. Check Your Current Contract End Date
Your first action: find your current energy bill and locate the contract end date. This is usually on the first page or in a summary section. Common terms are 12 months, 24 months, or 36 months.
If you're mid-contract, switching early means paying an early termination fee (also called 'Kündigungsgebühr' in Germany, 'frais de résiliation' in France). These fees range from EUR 25-150 depending on the supplier and how much time is left. Calculate: Is the fee less than your annual savings? If yes, switch now. If no, wait until contract end.
2. Gather Your Meter Information
You'll need your meter number (Zählernummer/Compteur) and current annual consumption. Both are on your energy bill.
Annual consumption is measured in:
- kWh for electricity (kilowatt-hours)
- m³ or kWh for gas (cubic meters or converted to kWh)
Don't have your bill? Log into your online account with your current supplier, or call and ask. They're required to provide this within 24 hours in most EU countries.
3. Review Your Current Tariff
Understand what you're currently paying:
- Variable tariff (price changes every month/quarter, tracks wholesale market)
- Fixed tariff (price locked for 1-2 years, protected from market spikes)
- Night/day tariff (cheaper rates during off-peak hours, requires smart meter)
If you're on a variable tariff during rising prices, switching to a fixed-rate supplier NOW could save you 20-40% over the next 12 months. See our detailed comparison guide on 'fixed-vs-variable-energy-tariff'.
4. Identify Your Property Details
Suppliers need to know:
- Property address (exact, with postal code)
- Move-in date (if recently moved)
- Property type (apartment, house, commercial)
- Fuel type (electricity only, gas only, or dual fuel)
Some suppliers don't serve certain postcodes or remote areas. Knowing your details upfront prevents wasted time on unavailable offers.
5. Check Your Credit Score
Some suppliers require a credit check before approval (especially for annual billing or large consumption). A healthy credit score speeds up approval. Check your score for free via national credit registries in your country (e.g., Bonita in Germany, Equifax in the UK).
Step-by-Step: The Switching Process
The EU has standardized the switching process. Most switches take 3-6 weeks from start to finish. Here's the exact sequence:
Step 1: Compare Suppliers (2-3 days)
Use online comparison tools to see all available suppliers in your area. The best tools show:
- Total annual cost (including base fees)
- Unit price per kWh for electricity or m³ for gas
- Contract length options (12, 24, 36 months)
- Fixed vs. variable rates
- Bonuses (welcome cashback, loyalty rewards)
- Customer ratings (satisfaction, complaints)
Popular EU comparison tools: Verivox (Germany), Compara.pt (Portugal), Comparaenergia (Spain), Energientel (Czech Republic). Each country has local alternatives. Be careful: some 'independent' comparison sites earn commission on referrals and may not show all suppliers.
Step 2: Get Your Data Ready (1 day)
From your current bill, extract:
- Meter number (Zählernummer)
- Current supplier name
- Contract end date
- Annual consumption (kWh or m³)
- Your address (postal code is critical)
Copy this into a text file or spreadsheet so you can fill supplier forms quickly. This saves time across multiple quotes.
Step 3: Request Switching Quotes (1 day)
Contact your top 3-5 supplier candidates. You can:
- Use online quote tools on supplier websites (instant, 2-3 minutes)
- Call their sales line (speak to a human, 15-30 minutes)
- Email inquiry (slow, 24-48 hour response)
Online tools are fastest. You'll get a quote instantly showing the annual cost, monthly payment, and any bonuses. Write down the offer code (usually valid for 14-30 days).
Step 4: Review & Sign Contract (2-3 days)
Once you've chosen your winning quote, you'll sign the contract. This is now mostly digital:
- Digital signature (email + online portal, no print/post needed)
- Instant confirmation (contract valid immediately)
- 14-day cooling-off period (EU law: you can cancel within 14 days with zero penalty)
Read the contract carefully for:
- Price lock period (12, 24, or 36 months)
- Automatic renewal terms (do they extend automatically? at what price?)
- Exit clause (can you leave early? what's the fee?)
- Payment method (direct debit, quarterly billing, monthly)
- Notice period (how much advance warning needed to cancel?)
Step 5: New Supplier Notifies Current Supplier (automatic)
After you sign, your new supplier automatically notifies your current supplier. You don't do anything. The current supplier has a legal timeframe (usually 5-10 business days) to confirm the switch is possible.
During this window, your current supplier might contact you with a retention offer: "We'll give you EUR 50 credit" or "We'll match their rate." This is normal and happens in ~40% of switches.
Step 6: Current Supplier May Offer Retention Deal (5-7 days)
Your current supplier doesn't want to lose you. They might offer:
- Rate reduction (5-15% discount for staying)
- Welcome bonus (EUR 25-100 credit)
- Extended contract (lock in lower rate for 24 months)
- Service upgrades (faster customer support, green energy option)
Evaluate retention offers carefully. Sometimes staying is better than switching if the discount is real. But watch out:
- Are they lowering the base rate or just the first-year price? (check year 2 cost)
- Is the discount guaranteed in writing or just verbal?
- Does it require a new 24/36-month contract (locking you in longer)?
If retention offer is competitive, you can accept and cancel the switch. You have 14 days to change your mind.
Step 7: Final Switch Date Set (14-21 days)
Once both suppliers confirm, the switch date is locked in. This is typically 21-28 days after your initial sign date. You'll receive a letter or email with the exact date.
You do NOT need to do anything on this date. Power and gas keep flowing. Suppliers coordinate the meter reading automatically.
Step 8: No Power Loss - Continuous Supply Guaranteed
This is crucial: EU law guarantees that power/gas will never be cut off during a switch. You might have a brief moment when the old supplier's contract ends and the new one begins (literally 1-2 seconds), but service is continuous.
You'll never wake up without power because you switched suppliers.
Step 9-11: Billing & Final Confirmation (14-21 days after switch)
After the switch date:
- Both suppliers read your meter on the switch date (final reading from old supplier, opening reading for new supplier)
- Old supplier calculates final bill (any remaining credit or balance due)
- New supplier sends first bill (starting from their reading date)
- Final meter reading is confirmed by both (ensures accuracy, audit trail)
Timeline: expect final bill from old supplier within 4-6 weeks of switch date, and first bill from new supplier within 2-4 weeks.
Hidden Fees to Avoid
This is where many switchers lose money. Energy contracts often hide costs in confusing language. Here's what to watch:
| Early Termination Fee (Kündigungsgebühr) | Penalty for leaving contract before end date | EUR 25–150 | Check contract end date; don't break contract early unless savings exceed fee |
| Annual Service Charge | Yearly admin fee on top of energy cost | EUR 15–40/year | Compare total annual cost, not just per-kWh rate |
| Payment Method Fee | Charge for paying by credit card vs. direct debit | EUR 2–10/month | Always choose direct debit (usually free) over card payments |
| Meter Reading Fee | Cost to manually read your meter if smart meter absent | EUR 10–20 per reading | Ensure supplier offers online meter reporting or smart meter |
| Customer Service Fee | Charge for phone support or bill corrections | EUR 5–15 per call | Read reviews: do they charge for normal support? |
| Late Payment Fee | Penalty if you miss a payment deadline | EUR 10–50 per late payment | Set up automatic payments to avoid completely |
| Switching Fee | Charge by new supplier to handle your switch | EUR 0–20 | Most suppliers waive this; don't accept it if offered |
| Broker/Agent Commission | Hidden markup if you switch via intermediary, not direct | EUR 5–50 | Switch directly with supplier website or call; avoid brokers |
Pro tip: When comparing suppliers, ask for the 'all-in cost' or 'total annual cost'. This includes all fees. Never compare just the per-kWh rate.
Comparing Suppliers: A Real Example
Let's say you use 3,500 kWh of electricity per year (average for EU household). Here's how three suppliers compare:
| Your Current (Incumbent) | EUR 0.28 | EUR 120 | EUR 1,100 | Variable (auto-renewal) | None | 3.2/5 stars (slow support) |
| Supplier A (Green Energy) | EUR 0.26 | EUR 100 | EUR 1,010 | Fixed 24 months | EUR 50 welcome bonus | 4.1/5 stars (eco-focused) |
| Supplier B (Cheapest) | EUR 0.24 | EUR 90 | EUR 930 | Fixed 12 months | None | 3.8/5 stars (no frills) |
Decision matrix:
- Supplier B saves EUR 170/year (15% cheaper), but only locked in for 12 months. After that, rate could jump.
- Supplier A saves EUR 90/year, locks in for 24 months (price certainty), and is green-certified (better for environment-conscious buyers).
- Your current supplier is the most expensive AND has variable pricing (risk of future increases).
Best choice? Depends on your values. Supplier B for short-term savings, Supplier A for 2-year peace of mind + green energy.
Fixed vs. Variable: Which Should You Choose?
This decision is critical. See our full guide on 'fixed-vs-variable-energy-tariff' for deep dive, but here's the quick version:
- Variable tariff: Price changes monthly/quarterly, tracks wholesale markets. Good when prices are falling, bad when rising. Cheaper upfront, but risky.
- Fixed tariff: Price locked for 12, 24, or 36 months. You're protected from market spikes. Slightly more expensive initially, but predictable. Better for budgeting.
EU energy crisis (2021-2023) taught us: variable prices can TRIPLE in a year. If you switched to fixed-rate in early 2022, you saved EUR 500+ compared to variable-rate households.
Current advice (2026): Energy prices are stabilizing but still volatile. New switchers should default to fixed rates unless you're confident prices will keep falling.
Green Energy & Sustainability: Does It Cost More?
Many new suppliers offer 100% green energy (wind, solar, hydro). Myth: green energy costs significantly more. Reality: often the same or cheaper.
Why? Green energy suppliers often:
- Have lower overhead (minimal customer service, online only)
- Buy renewable energy in bulk (lower costs)
- Receive government subsidies in some countries (passed to customers)
In 2025, green energy providers were competitive on price in Germany, Netherlands, Belgium, and Spain. Compare before assuming it's a premium.
What If You Recently Moved?
If you're new to a property, you start fresh with a new supplier. The previous tenant's contract ends automatically. You can choose any supplier without early termination penalties.
Don't accept the default supplier (usually the incumbent monopoly player in your region). Switch immediately to get the best rate. Many new switchers don't realize they have choice on move-in.
Dual Fuel: Electricity + Gas Bundle
Some suppliers offer both electricity and gas at one company. Benefits:
- Bundle discount (5-10% off combined bill)
- Single invoice (easier accounting)
- One customer service contact
- Synchronized billing (both bills arrive same day)
Downside: you're locked with one company for both services. If they're great for electricity but poor for gas, you're stuck. Evaluate each fuel separately before bundling.
FAQ: Common Switching Questions
Assessment: Is Switching Right for You?
Switching isn't for everyone, and that's okay. Here's how to decide:
Scoring: 7-9 points = Switch now. 5-6 points = Switch soon (within 1-2 months). 3-4 points = Only switch if strong reason (green energy, better service). 0-2 points = Stay put for now.
Related Reading & Next Steps
Switching is one piece of energy savings. For the full picture, explore these related guides:
- Why is my energy bill so high? - Diagnose the root cause (consumption vs. tariff)
- How can I lower my electric bill? - 12 tactics beyond switching
- Fixed vs. variable energy tariff - Deep dive into contract types
- Electricity cost per kWh - Understand what you're paying
- Smart meter vs. analog meter - Benefits of upgrading
- Calculate energy consumption (kWh) - Measure your actual usage
- How to read an electricity meter - Manual meter reading guide
- Energy efficiency grants available - Financial help for upgrades
- Why is my gas bill so high? - Gas-specific diagnosis
Final Checklist: Before You Switch
Use this checklist to ensure you're ready:
Resources & Tools
Helpful resources to support your switching:
- European Energy Authority (Official EU consumer protection guidance)
- Your national regulator (e.g., BNetzA in Germany, Ofgem in UK) - publishes approved suppliers
- Online comparison tools: Verivox, Check24, Compara.pt, Comparaenergia, Energyntel
- YouTube guides: 'How to switch energy suppliers [your country]' - visual walk-through
- Consumer rights organizations: Often have switching guides specific to your country
Conclusion: You Have the Power to Switch
Switching energy suppliers is low-effort, risk-free, and often saves EUR 150-400 per year. The EU's open market means you're not locked in forever. Use comparison tools today, understand the fees, sign within 14 days, and let the process run automatically.
The biggest regret most switchers have? Not switching sooner. Even if you save 'just' EUR 100 per year, that's EUR 1,000+ over a decade with zero effort after the initial 3-6 week switch window.
Start now. Check your current bill for meter number and contract end date. Then compare 3 suppliers online. The whole process takes 30 minutes, and the payoff lasts for years.
Remember: Every EUR saved on energy is a EUR earned toward your financial independence. Switching is one of the easiest EUR per hour you can save.
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