Business
May 15, 2026
British Gas Customers Set to Receive £112m in Prepayment Meter Compensation
British Gas will pay up to £112m in compensation and debt write-offs to customers who had prepaymen…
The Force-Fitted Meter Scandal UnfoldsThousands of British Gas customers who had prepayment meters (PPMs) force-fitted in their homes will receive up to £112m in compensation and debt write-offs on their energy bills. This substantial settlement comes after Great Britain's energy regulator, Ofgem, found that British Gas illegally installed these meters in homes struggling to pay bills during the height of the Russian gas crisis, marking one of the most complex Ofgem investigations in its history.Regulatory Action and Financial PenaltiesOver three years after the scandal emerged, British Gas faces significant consequences. The supplier must pay a £20m penalty into Ofgem's voluntary redress fund to compensate customers who suffered unfair treatment and write off debt worth up to £70m. Additionally, British Gas will continue to provide the remainder of a £22.4m voluntary support package launched in the wake of the scandal, specifically aimed at supporting customers on prepayment meters.Industry-Wide Problem and Previous InvestigationsThe investigation into British Gas concluded about one year after a separate investigation found that most of Great Britain's major energy suppliers—including ScottishPower, EDF, E.ON, Octopus Energy, Utility Warehouse, Good Energy, TruEnergy, and Ecotricity—had also forced prepay meters into customers' homes during the 2022 energy cost crisis. These suppliers collectively agreed last May to pay 40,000 households more than £18.6m in compensation and debt write-offs.Regulatory Response and Consumer ProtectionsOfgem temporarily banned the practice of forcing prepayment meters on households that missed repeated payments after The Times reported in early 2023 that debt agents working for British Gas had ignored signs of vulnerability to fit the meters. The regulator later allowed suppliers to restart forced meter installations less than a year after its moratorium, although forced fittings in homes with young children or residents over 75 remain banned.Industry Response and Future OutlookTim Jarvis, Ofgem's chief executive, emphasized that "the installation of prepayment meters under warrant should only be a last resort, with rigorous checks to ensure debt is recovered lawfully, proportionately and safely." This investigation forms part of Ofgem's wider work to raise standards across the energy market and strengthen consumer protections.Chris O'Shea, chief executive of Centrica (which owns British Gas), acknowledged: "What happened should never have happened, and I am sorry to the prepayment customers who were affected." He added that the company has "made changes to our practices and put safeguards in place to ensure we deliver the standards our customers have every right to expect."
#British Gas
#Ofgem
#prepayment meters
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