Behavioural economics

Redesigning electricity bills to support consumer engagement

BETA and the Department of the Environment and Energy ran a trial to test the impact of bill design on people’s confidence in their ability to look for a better offer and intention to do so.
Complete
Last updated
Trial registration date
Policy area
Energy and environment
Finance
Methodology
Online survey experiment
Interviews and focus groups
Descriptive survey
Randomised controlled trial
Behavioural focus
Framing and formatting
Information provision
Motivation
Reminders and prompts
Systems and context
Document type
Report
One page summary
Pre-analysis plan
Partner agencies
Department of Environment and Energy

Electricity bills are a key way to inform people about their plan and usage, but bills can be confusing and are not really useful to help people navigate the electricity market. BETA and the Department of the Environment and Energy ran a trial to test the impact of bill design on people’s confidence in their ability to look for a better offer and intention to do so. We drew on behavioural insights to design and test six electricity bills. We focussed on simplifying bill design to draw attention to key information, and including a ‘ways to save’ box encouraging people to search for and switch to a better plan. We found simplified bills with ‘ways to save’ information increased people’s confidence by up to 13 per cent. But this did not translate into intention to look for a better offer.