We are on annual review with e.on for electricity, the review date is September and as expected the review was done and the direct debit went up from £47 to £57.
Surprisingly, we had the bill for quarter from November and quess what we were reviewed again and gone up from £57 to £66, we rang E.on and was told that E.on were altering the annual reviews to be in spring, being financial year end, would be the predictable reason, sounds nice for p.r.
NOW, couple of things came to mind:-
1) since when was November in spring?
2) does E.on think annual means 6 monthly, quarterly, or just when they feel like it?
3) for those that have review in autumn, having gone through summer with hanging washing out, salads and bar-b-que, long light warm nights with little need for turning lights on and little use of central heating, moving review to spring, after winter with having to used tumble dryers, greater use of cookers for warm food, and cold dark nights with lights and heating on, doesn't this mean that the reviews will come out higher for longer through the year?
4) the power companies said when the cost of crude oil went up that energy production was linked to that and so put up prices straight away, now it's down to $60-$64 from $147 per barrel, even with the drop in dollar exchange rate, the price hasn't dropped that quickly, from our experience, actually gone up?
5) this change has occured without E.on advising customers of the alteration, surely this is illegal?
In short, be careful what you sign up for, they may just make you pay for it.