If your last electricity bill made you do a double-take, you’re not alone. I decided it was time to stop complaining and start understanding where my money was going. By focusing on a few key areas, I managed to significantly reduce my bill without any major lifestyle changes.
Hereโs a practical, step-by-step guide based on what worked for me.
Step 1: Understand Your Bill (It’s Simpler Than It Looks)
Your bill is built on two main charges. Once you understand these, everything else makes sense.
- Supply Charge: This is a fixed daily fee just for being connected to the grid. You pay this every day, even if you use no power at all.
- Usage Charge (cents per kilowatt-hour): This is the cost for the electricity you actually consume. The rate can vary based on your tariff:
- Flat Rate: The same rate all day, every day.
- Time of Use: Different rates for different times (e.g., expensive ‘peak’ periods on weekday evenings, cheap ‘off-peak’ overnight).
- Controlled Load: A special, cheaper rate for a single, high-energy appliance like a hot water system, which runs on a separate circuit at specific times.
My Realisation: I discovered I was on a “time of use” plan and was unknowingly running my dishwasher and washing machine during the expensive peak period. A simple shift in timing made a big difference.
Step 2: Compare and Negotiate Your Plan
This is where you’ll find the biggest savings. Loyalty to an energy provider often costs you money.
My Strategy for a Better Deal:
- Get the Facts: I used the government’s Energy Made Easy website. For the most accurate comparison, I entered my NMI (National Meter Identifier), which is found on my bill. This allowed the site to use my actual past usage to compare plans.
- Find Leverage: I found a competitor’s plan with a lower usage rate and a cheaper daily supply charge.
- The Phone Call: I called my current provider and said: “Hi, I’ve reviewed my plan using a comparison service and have found an offer from [Competitor] for [X cents/kWh]. Based on my usage, this would save me a significant amount over the year. I’d like to stay with you, but I need you to match this offer or I’ll have to switch.”
Key Things to Watch For:
- “Pay on Time” Discounts vs. Lower Rates: A plan with a high “discount” off an inflated rate is often worse than a plan with a straightforward, lower flat rate.
- Check Your Hot Water: If you have an electric hot water system, ensure it’s on the best possible ‘controlled load’ tariff.
Step 3: Implement Smart, Low-Effort Habits
This isn’t about sacrifice; it’s about efficiency. I targeted “vampire power”โthe energy devices waste just by being plugged in on standby.
My Top Targets for Easy Savings:
- Entertainment Units: Game consoles, TVs, and sound systems are some of the biggest phantom power users. I plugged mine into a power board and switch it off when not in use.
- Office Equipment: Computers and monitors were left on or in sleep mode 24/7. I now turn them off at the power point at the end of the day.
- Chargers & Small Appliances: Phone chargers, microwaves, and kettles were left plugged in. I unplug them now, which takes seconds.
- Laundry & Dishes: I run my washing machine and dishwasher outside of peak hours (if you’re on a time-of-use plan) or later in the evening.
The Most Effective Purchase: A simple power board for my entertainment centre. For a small one-time cost, it eliminated standby power for multiple devices with one switch.
By understanding my bill, shopping around for a better deal, and making a few small changes to how I use power, the savings were real and noticeable. Itโs about being proactive, not going without.