Understanding Fixed Business Gas

p>Choosing a fixed rate business gas contract can feel oddly high stakes. You want a bill you can plan around, but you also do not want to lock in at the wrong time.

This page explains what a fixed rate business gas contract is, how it works in the UK market, where the real advantages and trade offs sit, and how to choose one in 2026. If you want the wider context on business gas supply, metering, and switching, our main Business Gas guide gives the bigger picture.

Quick Summary

A fixed rate business gas contract locks your unit rate for a set term, usually one to three years. Your total bill still changes with usage, but the price per kWh stays the same during the agreed period. Fixed rates became especially valuable during the 2022 energy crisis when wholesale prices moved fast and many businesses saw sudden contract renewals come in far higher than expected. The main trade off is that if market prices fall after you sign, you do not automatically benefit.
Direct answer
If you are asking, should I get a fixed rate gas contract for my business in 2026, the practical answer is this. Fixed rates suit businesses that prioritise predictable budgeting and want to reduce exposure to market spikes. They are less suitable if you are comfortable riding price changes month to month and can cope with sudden increases.

How fixed rates create budget certainty

A fixed rate contract makes one part of your energy cost predictable. The unit rate stays the same for the length of the agreement.

That predictability is useful because most businesses budget in advance. You might set weekly targets, plan staffing, or price menus and services months ahead. A fixed unit rate means you are not rewriting those plans every time the wholesale market moves.

It helps to separate two ideas.

  • Price certainty the unit rate is agreed up front and does not change during the term
  • Bill certainty your total bill still changes because your usage changes

If you want the wider context on how business gas works, including supply, metering, and switching, the main Business Gas guide gives the bigger picture.

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How fixed rate business gas contracts work

A fixed rate business gas contract is an agreement where your supplier commits to a set unit rate for the contract term. You then pay that rate for every kWh you use.

Think of it like agreeing a set day rate with a contractor for a planned refurbishment. The number of days can change if the job changes, but the day rate stays the same, which makes the overall budget easier to manage.

Fixed contracts also protect you from short notice pricing shocks. That mattered during the 2022 energy crisis when the wholesale market moved quickly. Businesses that were renewing, or that had fallen out of contract, often faced much higher prices with little time to adjust.

Key takeaway
Fixing is a safety net against sudden market spikes. It does not remove all uncertainty, because usage still varies, but it removes the risk of your unit rate jumping mid contract.
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Volume tolerance explained in plain English

Many fixed contracts include a volume tolerance clause. This is a rule that links the price you agreed to an expected level of consumption.

Suppliers use it because they buy gas ahead of time based on forecasts. If your actual usage is much higher or much lower than the estimate used to price the contract, the supplier can end up with a mismatch.

Volume tolerance is usually expressed as an allowed percentage range around an agreed annual usage figure. If you fall outside that range, the contract terms may allow the supplier to charge extra, reprice part of the consumption, or adjust the contract in another defined way.

This is where a bit of homework pays off. Understanding how unit rates and standing charges flow through to an invoice makes it easier to spot when something looks off. If you want that step by step view, this guide explains how business gas bills are calculated.

Pro tip
If your site is changing, like a new kitchen, longer opening hours, extra machinery, or a partial closure, flag it early. Big changes are where volume tolerance issues tend to appear.
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Pros and cons of fixed rate contracts

Fixed rates are popular because they simplify planning, but they come with trade offs.

Pros

  • Predictable unit costs helpful for budgeting and setting prices
  • Protection from volatility less exposure to sudden market spikes during the term
  • Less day to day market watching you do not need to track wholesale movements

Cons

  • Limited benefit if the market falls your unit rate does not drop mid term
  • Early exit fees can apply leaving early is often expensive
  • Forecasting matters volume tolerance can become relevant if usage shifts a lot

If you want to understand what suppliers are building into their offers, this explainer covers how business gas prices are calculated in a way that is easier to apply when you read a contract.

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Should you choose a fixed rate gas contract for your business in 2026

This depends on how much risk your business can comfortably carry.

A fixed rate is usually a sensible choice in 2026 if you recognise any of these.

  • Your margins are tight and sudden cost swings cause real problems
  • You need predictable overheads for budgeting, tenders, or pricing
  • You would rather trade potential market drops for fewer surprises

A fixed rate can be less suitable if your situation looks like this.

  • You expect major changes in opening hours, equipment, or occupancy that make usage hard to forecast
  • You may move premises soon and want short term flexibility
  • You actively track the market and accept the risk of increases

If you are in the last camp, it can help to learn how other contract styles work. This guide to flexible business gas contracts explains the basics and why they are usually aimed at larger users.

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Common pitfalls with fixed contracts

Fixed rate contracts can go wrong for predictable reasons.

  • Accidentally ending up on deemed rates if you take over a site, or a contract ends without a new one in place, you may be supplied on a default rate. These are often higher and can change. This guide explains deemed business gas rates and the usual triggers.
  • Not checking volume tolerance wording if your consumption shifts a lot, you may fall outside the agreed range.
  • Assuming your bill will be flat your unit rate is fixed, but usage drives totals, so winter bills can still be higher.
  • Ignoring exit rules early termination charges and move out terms are worth reading carefully.

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FAQ

What is a fixed rate business gas contract

A fixed rate business gas contract locks the unit rate you pay per kWh for a set term. Your total bill can still change because your usage changes.

How does a fixed rate contract protect my budget

It protects your budget by keeping the unit rate steady during the term. That makes it easier to forecast costs and reduces the risk of sudden mid contract price increases.

What is volume tolerance in a fixed business gas contract

Volume tolerance is a clause that links your fixed pricing to an expected level of consumption. If your usage is far higher or lower than forecast, the supplier may have the right to apply charges or adjust pricing, depending on the contract wording.

Should I get a fixed rate gas contract for my business in 2026

Choose fixed in 2026 if you want predictable unit costs and you would struggle with sudden price rises. Avoid fixing for long terms if your premises or consumption are likely to change significantly and you need flexibility.

What happens if I do nothing when my contract ends

You may be placed on a default out of contract or deemed rate. These rates are often higher and can change, so it is worth understanding deemed rates and planning renewals early.

Why did fixed contracts matter during the 2022 energy crisis

Because wholesale prices rose quickly, many variable and renewal offers changed fast. Businesses on fixed terms were insulated from those mid term price spikes, which helped stabilise budgeting.
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