UK Water Market - A Quick Summary

Before April 2017, UK businesses had no choice over who supplied their water. The regional water company that owned the pipes also did the billing, the customer service, and set the prices. There was no competition.

In April 2017 the English non-household water market deregulated. The same change had already happened in Scotland in 2008. The market was split into two layers: wholesalers (the regional companies that still own the pipes and produce the water) and retailers (a new layer of competing companies that bill customers and handle service). Every English business was automatically assigned to a default retailer — usually the existing supplier — but with the right to switch to any other.

Eight years on, around 40% of eligible businesses have switched at least once. Most don’t realise they can. Many that do think they’re switching the water itself, which they aren’t — they’re switching the company that bills them. The water and the network behind it stay exactly the same.

Understanding the wholesale-retail split changes how you evaluate any water quote you receive. Roughly 80% of your bill is the wholesale charge — fixed by Ofwat and identical across all retailers. The competitive portion is the remaining 20% — the retailer margin. That’s the only number that moves when you switch. Knowing this tells you what good savings actually look like, and where the bigger wins (rebates, audits, trade effluent reviews) actually sit.

What deregulation actually did

The Water Act 2014 paved the way for splitting the English business water market into two parts. The change went live on 1 April 2017. From that day, every English business with a non-domestic water connection became free to choose a different retailer — though the water itself, the network, and the engineering all stayed with the original regional company.

The original regional companies were re-licensed under two separate functions:

Domestic households were excluded from the change and remain on the original supplier with no switching option. This guide is about the business (non-household) market only.

Who your wholesaler is

Your wholesaler is whichever regional water company owns the pipes that physically deliver water to your premises. You can’t choose it; it’s geographic. The eleven regional wholesalers in England are:

WholesalerRegion
Anglian WaterEast and East Midlands
Thames WaterGreater London and Thames Valley
Severn TrentMidlands
United UtilitiesNorth West
Yorkshire WaterYorkshire
Northumbrian WaterNorth East
Southern WaterKent, Sussex, Hampshire, Isle of Wight
Wessex WaterSouth West (Wessex region)
South West WaterDevon, Cornwall
Affinity WaterParts of Greater London and South East
Portsmouth Water / SES Water / othersSmaller regional networks

Wholesale charges (the volumetric rate, standing charges, sewerage rate, surface drainage rate) are set annually by Ofwat as part of the wholesaler’s five-year price control. They don’t vary by retailer. Whichever retailer bills you, the wholesale portion is identical.

Who your retailer is and what they do

Your retailer is the company that issues your bill, handles your customer service, processes meter readings, takes payment, and acts as your point of contact with the market. Major UK business water retailers include:

Plus a long tail of smaller specialist retailers serving specific sectors. Some retailers are owned by, or affiliated with, the wholesalers; others are fully independent.

Retailers compete on three things: the margin they charge above wholesale, the quality of their service and account management, and any additional services bundled in (consumption reporting, water efficiency advice, leak alerts, account management tooling). For most businesses the retailer choice is primarily about price.

Why you cannot switch wholesaler

The wholesaler owns the pipes that physically reach your meter. Building a parallel pipe network from a competing wholesaler would be wildly uneconomic and the regulator wouldn’t license it. Water is a natural monopoly at the network level — different from electricity or gas, where the same physical wires and pipes can carry power from any supplier.

If you don’t like your wholesaler’s service standards or the wholesale rates, the only recourse is via Ofwat as the regulator. Switching retailer does nothing to change the wholesaler relationship.

MOSL and central market settlement

MOSL (Market Operator Services Limited) runs the central registry that keeps track of which retailer is currently registered against which Supply Point Identifier (SPID). When you switch retailer, the switch is processed through MOSL, which updates the central record, manages the data flow between wholesalers and retailers, and reconciles wholesale charges between the parties.

For most businesses MOSL is invisible — you never deal with them directly. They matter operationally because if your account isn’t properly registered in MOSL (which can happen with change of occupier or after a long-dormant supply being reactivated) you’ll have problems getting accurate bills and competitive quotes.

Scotland and Wales are different

Three nations, three different setups:

Cross-border businesses with sites in multiple nations may have a mix of switchable and non-switchable supplies. A broker that operates across England, Scotland, and Wales is the only realistic way to manage that.

What this means for your business

Three takeaways:

1. The competitive savings are smaller than you think. Switching retailer typically saves 5 to 15% on the retail margin portion — that’s the entire deal. The other ~80% of your bill stays the same.

2. The bigger savings are in the audit, not the switch. Surface water drainage rebates, leakage allowances, trade effluent corrections, and sewerage return adjustments often beat the retail margin saving by 5-10x. These exist on the wholesale side and stay claimable regardless of which retailer you use.

3. The retailer relationship matters operationally. The retailer is the entity that pulls the data from MOSL, files your rebate claims with the wholesaler, and pushes back on incorrect bills. A retailer with better operational service and rebate-handling capability is sometimes worth more than the cheapest retail margin.

Working with Clearsight

We work across all UK business water retailers and the regional English wholesalers (plus Scottish Water and Welsh Water where eligible). Every quote we present comes with the wholesale and retail components clearly separated, the rebate eligibility flagged, and a recommendation on the operational fit — not just price.

Get a no-obligation business water quote in 60 seconds.

Related guides: Business water pillar, SPID number explained, How to read a business water bill, How to switch business water supplier, Letter of Authority.

Clearsight Energy
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.