Refund Claim
Key takeaways
- A refund claim is a request to your supplier to return money you’re owed — usually a credit balance or correction of an overcharge.
- Suppliers normally have internal timelines for processing refunds; if those slip, you can complain.
- After 8 weeks without a resolution, you can escalate to the Energy Ombudsman.
What is a refund claim?
A refund claim is a formal request to your energy supplier to give back money you’re owed. The two most common triggers are a credit balance built up by direct debit payments that exceeded actual usage, and billing corrections where you’ve been overcharged.
For business accounts, refunds also come up at the end of a contract, after a billing dispute, or after a meter fault has been corrected.
How to claim
- Check the balance and recent meter readings; document the period you believe was overcharged.
- Ask the supplier in writing for the refund, with the calculation and dates.
- Keep a record of every interaction — date, who you spoke to, what they promised.
- If 8 weeks pass without a resolution, escalate to the Energy Ombudsman.
Common reasons for delay
The account is in dispute or a re-bill is underway.
There’s an outstanding balance on a different meter at the same business.
The supplier is waiting for an updated read to confirm the credit isn’t needed for ongoing usage.