Champion Energy is a UK business electricity supplier aimed at small and medium-sized businesses. It is the trading name of Farringdon Energy Limited and should not be confused with other companies called Champion Energy in the UK or overseas.
The supplier’s own positioning is clear: it describes itself as an independent electricity supplier that wants to serve small businesses with cost-effective electricity and better customer service. It does not currently present itself as a gas supplier, a domestic energy supplier or a large industrial procurement specialist.
From a pricing point of view, Champion Energy is not the easiest supplier to compare. It does not publish a simple public table of current business electricity unit rates and standing charges. Its terms state that most Champion Energy tariffs are bespoke, and customers need to check their quote or welcome pack for the relevant unit rates, standing charge, Climate Change Levy and VAT.
That means Champion Energy may be worth considering as part of an SME electricity comparison, but businesses should not sign without seeing a detailed quote, checking the full annual cost, and understanding the supplier’s recent regulatory history. Ofgem has taken enforcement action against Farringdon Energy, trading as Champion Energy, in relation to billing, customer payments and operational capability. This is a major factor in any review.
Champion Energy business electricity at a glance
| Category | Champion Energy business electricity review |
|---|---|
| Supplier name | Champion Energy |
| Legal company name | Farringdon Energy Limited |
| Company number | 09256369 |
| Incorporated | 9 October 2014 |
| Registered office | Endeavour House 3rd Floor, Coopers End Road, Stansted, England, CM24 1SJ |
| Company status | Active |
| Main product | Business electricity |
| Business gas | No clear current business gas product |
| Domestic supply | No, non-domestic focus |
| Target customer | Small and medium-sized businesses |
| Public contracted tariff table | No |
| Tariff structure | Mostly bespoke |
| Contract lengths advertised | 1, 2 or 3 years |
| Deemed rates published? | Not clearly published on the current price page |
| Payment methods | Direct Debit, BACS and card |
| Smart/advanced metering | Advanced metering and smart metering information provided |
| Main strength | SME electricity focus and quote-led fixed contracts |
| Main weakness | Limited price transparency and serious recent Ofgem enforcement history |
| Overall view | A supplier to approach cautiously and compare carefully |
Our verdict on Champion Energy for business electricity
Champion Energy is a small business electricity supplier, not a dual fuel provider or a major commercial energy company. It may appeal to SMEs looking for a direct electricity supplier that claims to understand small business needs and offers fixed electricity contracts for 1, 2 or 3 years.
However, it is not possible to judge whether Champion Energy is cheap from public tariff tables because standard contracted prices are not published. Its own terms say most tariffs are bespoke, which means the important numbers should be found in the quote and welcome pack.
The biggest concern is not only the lack of public pricing. Champion Energy’s legal entity, Farringdon Energy Limited, has been subject to significant Ofgem enforcement action. In 2025, Ofgem imposed a £214,580 penalty for operational capability breaches linked to taking payments from customers it was not supplying. In March 2026, Ofgem also announced that Farringdon would pay £525,000 into the Voluntary Redress Fund after an investigation found serious and persistent mismanagement, including customer overcharging and inaccurate billing.
For EnergyCosts.co.uk readers, the practical verdict is cautious. Champion Energy may still be an option to compare for business electricity, but businesses should insist on clear contract documentation, accurate meter reads, a transparent renewal process and written confirmation of rates before signing.
Champion Energy business ratings
| Area reviewed | Rating | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Price transparency | 2/5 | No clear public table of contracted unit rates and standing charges |
| SME suitability | 3/5 | The supplier is aimed at small businesses, but caution is needed |
| Large business suitability | 2/5 | Not positioned as a large-user procurement specialist |
| Tariff simplicity | 3/5 | Fixed 1, 2 and 3-year contracts are referenced, but rates are bespoke |
| Green energy credentials | 2/5 | No strong public green tariff proposition found |
| Customer service confidence | 1.5/5 | Recent Ofgem enforcement raises serious concerns |
| Billing confidence | 1/5 | Ofgem findings specifically involved billing and payment issues |
| Overall rating | 2/5 | Potentially relevant for SMEs, but significant due diligence is needed |
Who is Champion Energy?
Champion Energy is the trading name of Farringdon Energy Limited. The company is registered in England and Wales with company number 09256369.
Champion Energy’s website describes the business as an independent electricity supplier serving small businesses. It says it specialises in connecting businesses with reliable and affordable energy supplies and helping SMEs make electricity purchasing decisions.
The company is based in Stansted, Essex. It is a licensed electricity supplier focused on non-domestic customers. Its own financial report says all revenue is derived from electricity supply to non-domestic customers only and that the company does not serve gas or domestic electricity customers.
Is Champion Energy the same as Champion Energy Ltd?
No. Businesses should be careful because there are other companies with similar names.
The supplier reviewed here is Farringdon Energy Limited, trading as Champion Energy. Its company number is 09256369.
There has also been a separate company called Champion Energy Ltd with company number 15477865, which was incorporated in February 2024 and dissolved in July 2025. That dissolved company should not be confused with Farringdon Energy Limited.
When reviewing any quote, a business should check that the legal entity on the contract is Farringdon Energy Limited and that the MPAN, site address, rates and supply start date are correct.
What does Champion Energy offer?
Champion Energy offers business electricity rather than a broad range of energy products.
| Product or service | Available from Champion Energy? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Business electricity | Yes | Main product |
| Business gas | No clear current offer | The supplier’s current focus is electricity |
| Domestic electricity | No | Non-domestic customers only |
| Fixed electricity contracts | Yes | The website refers to 1, 2 and 3-year contracts |
| Flexible procurement | Not clearly advertised | Not positioned like a large-user trading-led supplier |
| Green electricity tariff | Not clearly advertised | No strong public green tariff proposition found |
| Smart metering | Yes, information provided | Smart meter rollout information is published |
| Advanced metering | Yes, information provided | The supplier refers to automated advanced metering |
| Online quote | Limited public detail | Quotes are bespoke |
| Broker/referral partnerships | Yes | Partner and broker pages are referenced |
| Deemed contracts | Yes, referenced in terms | Public deemed pricing is not clearly shown on the price page |
Champion Energy business electricity prices
Champion Energy does not publish a simple current tariff table for contracted business electricity customers.
Its price page says it offers a range of competitive tariffs tailored to business energy needs, but it does not provide live unit rates, standing charges, contract examples or regional rate tables. Its terms and conditions state that most Champion Energy tariffs are bespoke and that customers should refer to their quote or welcome pack for their tariff details.
That means a Champion Energy quote will probably depend on:
| Pricing factor | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Business address | Network charges vary by location |
| MPAN | Identifies the electricity supply point |
| Meter type | Single-rate, two-rate, smart and advanced meters can price differently |
| Annual consumption | Higher usage can change the unit rate and standing charge |
| Current supplier | Needed for switching and contract timing |
| Contract end date | Helps avoid termination issues or renewal problems |
| Contract length | Champion Energy refers to 1, 2 and 3-year contract periods |
| Credit assessment | The supplier’s terms allow credit checks and possible security deposits |
| Payment method | Direct Debit is generally expected unless otherwise agreed |
| Broker involvement | Commission may be included in some business energy quotes |
| Meter read quality | Accurate reads are crucial for billing |
| Site changes | Usage changes can affect forecasts and billing |
Businesses should not rely on headline promises of “competitive tariffs”. The important test is the actual annual cost, calculated from the quoted unit rate, standing charge and expected kWh use.
Does Champion Energy publish deemed rates?
Champion Energy’s terms refer to deemed contracts, and its switching page says a deemed rate may apply when a business moves into premises already supplied by Champion Energy. However, the current public price page does not clearly show a deemed tariff rate table.
This is a drawback. Deemed and out-of-contract rates are often much higher than negotiated fixed contract rates. If your business moves into a property supplied by Champion Energy, you should contact the supplier quickly, request the current deemed rates in writing and compare a fixed contract or switch quote.
Why business electricity rates are quote-led
Champion Energy is not unusual in using bespoke prices. Most non-domestic electricity contracts are quote-led because business energy prices vary by site and usage profile.
| Variable | Example impact |
|---|---|
| Region | Distribution charges differ across network areas |
| Usage level | A 5,000 kWh shop and a 250,000 kWh warehouse are priced differently |
| Meter profile | Half-hourly, smart and standard meters create different billing structures |
| Contract timing | Wholesale prices change daily |
| Fixed term | One-year and three-year pricing can differ materially |
| Payment terms | Poor credit can lead to deposits or different terms |
| Standing charge | A low unit rate may be offset by a higher daily charge |
| Broker commission | Commission can be built into the rate |
| Pass-through charges | Some costs may vary during the contract |
| Renewal status | Default and deemed supply can be expensive |
This is why businesses should compare the total annual estimated cost rather than looking only at pence per kWh.
UK business electricity benchmark prices
The following table shows wider UK non-domestic electricity benchmarks. These are not Champion Energy prices. They provide context for reviewing a Champion Energy quote.
| Business electricity size band | Annual consumption | Q4 2025 UK average price including CCL |
|---|---|---|
| Very small | 0–20 MWh | 36.106p/kWh |
| Small | 20–499 MWh | 29.570p/kWh |
| Small/medium | 500–1,999 MWh | 28.395p/kWh |
| Medium | 2,000–19,999 MWh | 25.356p/kWh |
| Large | 20,000–69,999 MWh | 23.555p/kWh |
| Very large | 70,000–150,000 MWh | 22.514p/kWh |
| Extra large | More than 150,000 MWh | 21.128p/kWh |
| Average | All non-domestic users | 23.988p/kWh |
For most Champion Energy customers, the most relevant bands are likely to be “very small” and “small”, because the supplier is positioned towards SMEs.
Example annual electricity costs using market benchmarks
The table below uses wider UK non-domestic benchmark rates, not Champion Energy quote prices. It shows how annual electricity costs can vary by usage level.
| Example business | Annual electricity use | Benchmark used | Indicative annual cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small office | 5,000 kWh | 36.106p/kWh | £1,805 |
| Small shop | 10,000 kWh | 36.106p/kWh | £3,611 |
| Café or salon | 15,000 kWh | 36.106p/kWh | £5,416 |
| Larger retailer | 25,000 kWh | 29.570p/kWh | £7,393 |
| Small warehouse | 50,000 kWh | 29.570p/kWh | £14,785 |
| Restaurant or workshop | 100,000 kWh | 29.570p/kWh | £29,570 |
| Larger SME site | 250,000 kWh | 29.570p/kWh | £73,925 |
| Multi-site or larger user | 500,000 kWh | 28.395p/kWh | £141,975 |
These figures exclude standing charges, VAT, some site-specific charges and any broker commission. They are useful for sense-checking a quote. For example, if a small shop using 10,000 kWh is quoted far above £3,600 before standing charges and VAT, it should ask why.
Example costs at different electricity unit rates
Because Champion Energy does not publish current contracted rates, the table below shows how annual electricity cost changes at different p/kWh rates. This can help businesses test whether a quote is competitive.
| Annual use | 25p/kWh | 30p/kWh | 35p/kWh | 40p/kWh | 45p/kWh |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5,000 kWh | £1,250 | £1,500 | £1,750 | £2,000 | £2,250 |
| 10,000 kWh | £2,500 | £3,000 | £3,500 | £4,000 | £4,500 |
| 15,000 kWh | £3,750 | £4,500 | £5,250 | £6,000 | £6,750 |
| 25,000 kWh | £6,250 | £7,500 | £8,750 | £10,000 | £11,250 |
| 50,000 kWh | £12,500 | £15,000 | £17,500 | £20,000 | £22,500 |
| 100,000 kWh | £25,000 | £30,000 | £35,000 | £40,000 | £45,000 |
| 250,000 kWh | £62,500 | £75,000 | £87,500 | £100,000 | £112,500 |
A difference of only 5p/kWh can be significant. For a business using 100,000 kWh per year, 30p/kWh costs £30,000 before standing charges and taxes, while 35p/kWh costs £35,000.
Standing charge impact
Standing charges can make a big difference, especially for low-usage businesses. A supplier can appear competitive on unit rate but be expensive once the daily charge is included.
| Daily standing charge | Annual standing charge per meter |
|---|---|
| 50p/day | £182.50 |
| £1/day | £365 |
| £2/day | £730 |
| £3/day | £1,095 |
| £5/day | £1,825 |
| £10/day | £3,650 |
A business with several meters should multiply this by the number of MPANs. A multi-site business should also check whether each site has separate standing charges.
Champion Energy contract lengths
Champion Energy’s price page says it offers contracts that allow businesses to keep commodity costs consistent for 1, 2 or 3 years.
| Contract length | Potential benefit | Potential drawback |
|---|---|---|
| 1 year | Shorter commitment and more frequent market review | Less long-term price certainty |
| 2 years | Balance between stability and flexibility | May miss out if market prices fall |
| 3 years | More budget certainty | Longer lock-in and higher exit risk |
For SMEs, a 12-month contract is often easier to review, while a 24 or 36-month contract can make sense if the price is strong and the business wants certainty. Longer contracts should be checked carefully because business energy deals may not include a domestic-style cooling-off period.
Champion Energy fixed tariffs
Champion Energy’s public pricing language suggests its core offer is fixed business electricity rather than fully flexible procurement. Fixed tariffs can be useful for SMEs because they provide clearer budgeting.
A fixed tariff normally includes:
| Fixed tariff feature | What to check |
|---|---|
| Unit rate | The p/kWh rate for each meter or time band |
| Standing charge | Daily fixed charge per meter |
| Contract term | Start and end dates |
| Estimated annual cost | Total based on your expected usage |
| VAT | Usually excluded from business quote rates |
| Climate Change Levy | Check whether included or added separately |
| Metering charges | Some costs may apply separately |
| Broker commission | Ask whether it is included |
| Renewal terms | What happens when the contract ends |
| Exit terms | Charges for leaving early |
A fixed tariff does not guarantee the same monthly bill. The unit rate may be fixed, but the business still pays for the electricity it actually uses.
Does Champion Energy offer green electricity?
Champion Energy’s current website does not appear to promote a major green electricity tariff or 100% renewable electricity product in the same way as suppliers such as Bryt Energy, Good Energy, Ecotricity or 100Green.
This does not necessarily mean a renewable option is unavailable, but it means businesses should not assume Champion Energy is a green specialist. If renewable electricity matters, ask for:
| Evidence to request | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Fuel mix disclosure | Shows the mix of generation sources |
| REGO confirmation | Confirms renewable electricity certificate backing |
| Contract wording | Shows whether the green claim is part of the supply agreement |
| Annual certificate | Useful for ESG reporting |
| Scope 2 reporting wording | Helps avoid overstated carbon claims |
For a business with environmental targets, Champion Energy should be compared against dedicated renewable electricity suppliers.
Champion Energy financial data
Champion Energy publishes a consolidated segmental statement for the period November 2023 to October 2024. This shows that the supplier is small compared with major business energy companies.
| Champion Energy financial data | Figure |
|---|---|
| Reporting period | November 2023 to October 2024 |
| Revenue from sale of electricity | £4.2m |
| Total revenue | £4.2m |
| Direct fuel costs | £2.0m |
| Transportation costs | £0.5m |
| Environmental and social obligation costs | £0.5m |
| Other direct costs | £0.5m |
| Indirect costs | £0.7m |
| EBITDA | £0.0m |
| EBIT | £0.0m |
| WACO | £142.14/MWh |
| Average meter points | 1.0k |
| Business type | Non-domestic electricity supply only |
These figures suggest Champion Energy is a small supplier with around 1,000 average meter points in the reporting year. That can be positive for businesses wanting a more specialist SME supplier, but it also means customers should consider supplier resilience, billing processes and customer service capacity.
Approximate financial indicators
Using Champion Energy’s published figures, it is possible to calculate rough indicators. These are not tariff prices.
| Indicator | Calculation | Approximate result |
|---|---|---|
| Revenue per average meter point | £4.2m / 1,000 meter points | £4,200 per meter point |
| Direct fuel WACO | Published figure | £142.14/MWh |
| Direct fuel WACO per kWh | £142.14/MWh converted | 14.2p/kWh |
| Transportation cost as share of revenue | £0.5m / £4.2m | Around 12% |
| Environmental/social obligation cost as share of revenue | £0.5m / £4.2m | Around 12% |
| Other direct costs as share of revenue | £0.5m / £4.2m | Around 12% |
| Indirect costs as share of revenue | £0.7m / £4.2m | Around 17% |
These figures help show why business electricity bills include much more than wholesale energy. Even if wholesale electricity costs are lower than the final unit rate, suppliers must also recover network charges, policy costs, metering, billing, customer service, bad debt risk and overheads.
Metering and billing
Champion Energy says it uses automated advanced metering to support accurate invoicing. Its metering page also says customers can request up to 12 months of historic energy use data in a machine-readable format, and that the supplier will respond within 10 working days.
The website also references a free energy use dashboard designed to help customers make informed choices about consumption.
| Metering feature | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Advanced metering | Can reduce reliance on manual readings |
| Automated meter reads | Helps bills reflect actual consumption |
| Historic usage data | Useful for switching and energy efficiency |
| Data access within 10 working days | Helpful for business reporting |
| Energy use dashboard | Can support usage monitoring |
| Smart meter rollout | Relevant for future billing accuracy |
Accurate metering is especially important given Ofgem’s findings about Farringdon Energy’s billing and customer account management. Any Champion Energy customer should keep their own meter records and compare invoices against actual usage.
Champion Energy smart meter rollout
Champion Energy’s metering page says it delayed its smart meter rollout to 2026. It also lists historical smart meter installation targets and actual installations.
| Year | Installation target | Installation actual |
|---|---|---|
| 2022 | 21 | 0 |
| 2023 | 23 | 0 |
| 2024 | 41 | Not clearly completed in the public table |
For a small business, smart metering can help reduce estimated bills, improve energy data and make switching easier. If Champion Energy supplies your site, ask when a smart or advanced meter will be installed and whether there are any charges.
Payments
Champion Energy accepts payment by BACS transfer, Direct Debit and card. Its terms say that, unless otherwise agreed, customers are required to set up a Direct Debit before the supply start date.
| Payment method | Available? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Direct Debit | Yes | Generally expected unless otherwise agreed |
| BACS transfer | Yes | Payment reference should include contract number |
| Card payment | Yes | Credit or debit card payment by phone |
| Advance payment | Possible | Terms refer to advance payment in some circumstances |
| Security deposit | Possible | Terms allow the supplier to request a deposit in some cases |
Businesses should ask whether any security deposit, advance payment or payment condition applies before signing. These can affect cash flow, especially for small businesses.
Credit checks and security deposits
Champion Energy’s terms allow it to carry out credit checks and request a security deposit in some circumstances. The deposit amount depends on the customer’s circumstances and anticipated electricity payments.
This is not unusual in business energy, but it is important for SMEs because deposits can be material.
| Deposit issue | What to ask |
|---|---|
| Is a deposit required? | Confirm before signing |
| How much is it? | Ask for the exact amount |
| When is it payable? | Check cash flow impact |
| How is it held? | Ask how funds are protected or accounted for |
| When is it returned? | Confirm return conditions |
| Can it change? | Champion’s terms say the amount may fluctuate |
| Can supply be delayed? | Terms say supply may wait for payment in full |
A business should not agree to a contract without understanding any deposit requirement.
Switching to Champion Energy
Champion Energy says the switching process starts with a call to its sales team and that the business should provide details from its current bill.
| Information Champion Energy may request | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Business name and address | Needed to identify the site |
| Current supplier | Helps process the switch |
| Tariff name | Useful for comparison |
| Contract end date | Avoids termination problems |
| Electricity usage | Needed for accurate pricing |
| Meter number | Helps identify the correct supply point |
| Up-to-date meter reading | Needed for final and opening bills |
| Contract documents | May be needed for verification |
| Tenancy agreement | Relevant for change of tenancy |
The supplier says switching can be as quick as three days, although complications may make it longer. For moving premises, it says switching can take up to 30 days depending on documents.
Moving into premises supplied by Champion Energy
If a business moves into premises already supplied by Champion Energy, a deemed rate may apply. Champion Energy’s switching page says this is generally higher than fixed supply agreements.
This is important because new tenants can unknowingly pay high rates if they delay arranging a contract or switch.
| Step | What to do |
|---|---|
| Take an opening meter reading | Record the day you take responsibility |
| Confirm the supplier | Check who supplies the MPAN |
| Contact Champion Energy | Tell them you have moved in |
| Ask for deemed rates | Request them in writing |
| Request a quote | Compare a fixed contract |
| Compare other suppliers | Check whether switching is cheaper |
| Provide tenancy evidence | Lease, solicitor letter or tenancy agreement |
| Keep records | Save all emails and meter readings |
This process is especially important given Ofgem’s previous findings about customers paying for energy where supply responsibility was not properly handled.
Moving out of premises supplied by Champion Energy
Champion Energy says businesses moving into or out of premises supplied by it should provide at least 30 days’ notice so an accurate final bill can be generated.
The supplier says supporting documents may include:
| Document | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Solicitor’s letter | Evidence of move |
| Deed of Surrender | Evidence tenancy has ended |
| Lease agreement | Confirms occupation |
| Certified tenancy agreement | Confirms tenancy details |
| TR1 Land Registry transfer | Evidence of property transfer |
Businesses should keep written confirmation that their account has closed and ask for a final bill based on an actual meter reading.
Complaints process
Champion Energy’s complaints page says customers can raise complaints by email and that the supplier aims to sort out queries and complaints within 5 working days. It also says unresolved complaints can be escalated to a Director and, after 8 weeks, referred to the Energy Ombudsman.
| Complaint stage | What to do |
|---|---|
| Initial complaint | Email Champion Energy with details and desired outcome |
| Evidence | Include bills, meter reads, contract documents and payment records |
| Escalation | Ask for Director-level escalation if unresolved |
| 8-week point | Refer to the Energy Ombudsman if still unresolved |
| Deadlock letter | Use it to escalate sooner if issued |
| Record keeping | Keep all emails and notes of calls |
Given the supplier’s enforcement history, customers should keep detailed records from the start of the relationship.
Ofgem enforcement history
Champion Energy’s recent regulatory history is the most important risk factor in this review.
Farringdon Energy Limited, trading as Champion Energy, has been subject to Ofgem enforcement action relating to operational capability, billing, payments and customer treatment.
Key points include:
| Date | Ofgem action or finding | What it means |
|---|---|---|
| 9 May 2024 | Ofgem issued a Provisional Order | Ofgem intervened over apparent operational capability concerns |
| 16 June 2025 | Ofgem confirmed a £214,580 penalty | Penalty related to operational capability and payments taken from customers not supplied |
| June 2025 | £9,096 goodwill payments referenced | Additional payments were made to affected customers |
| 20 March 2026 | Ofgem announced £525,000 Voluntary Redress Fund payment | Linked to serious and persistent mismanagement and overcharging |
| 20 March 2026 | Director resignation agreed | Ofgem said the director agreed to resign from the board |
| 20 March 2026 | Enhanced monitoring and audits agreed | Ofgem said Farringdon would be subject to monitoring and independent audits |
Ofgem said Farringdon had overcharged 159 customers by £347,717.25 and that affected customers had been refunded with an additional £50 compensation payment each.
This is a serious concern for any business considering Champion Energy. It does not automatically mean a current quote should be rejected, but it does mean the buyer should perform more due diligence than usual.
What the Ofgem findings mean for business customers
The Ofgem findings are directly relevant because they involved non-domestic customers, many of which were small independent businesses.
For a business buyer, the practical lessons are:
| Risk area | Practical response |
|---|---|
| Billing accuracy | Check every bill against meter reads |
| Direct Debit payments | Monitor payment amounts and timing |
| Change of tenancy | Keep written proof of occupation dates |
| Supply start date | Confirm the MPAN is registered to the correct supplier |
| Final bills | Get written confirmation of account closure |
| Advance payments | Ask how they are treated if supply does not start |
| Early termination fees | Check when they can be applied |
| Back-billing | Understand your rights and contract terms |
| Complaint escalation | Keep evidence from day one |
| Renewal | Avoid falling onto deemed or out-of-contract rates |
This is not just theoretical. Ofgem’s findings related to real payment, billing and account management problems.
Customer reviews
Champion Energy does not have a clearly reliable, high-volume UK review profile in the way that many larger suppliers do.
There is a Trustpilot profile for “Champion Energy”, but it appears to be for Champion Energy Services, LLC in Houston, United States, not Farringdon Energy Limited in the UK. Some UK reviews appear to have been left there, but because the profile is for a different legal business, it should not be used as a clean measure of Champion Energy UK’s customer service.
For this supplier, Ofgem’s official enforcement record is a more important and reliable indicator than review platform scores.
Champion Energy pros and cons
Pros
| Advantage | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| SME electricity focus | The supplier is aimed at small businesses |
| Business-only supply | Products are designed for non-domestic customers |
| Fixed contracts referenced | 1, 2 and 3-year contracts can support budgeting |
| UK-based contact details | Customer service line and email are published |
| Metering data access | Customers can request historic usage data |
| Energy dashboard referenced | Could help businesses monitor electricity use |
| Multiple payment methods | Direct Debit, BACS and card payments are available |
| Complaints route published | Ombudsman route is explained |
| Small supplier | Some SMEs may prefer a specialist to a major supplier |
Cons
| Disadvantage | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| No public contracted tariff table | Businesses cannot compare rates without a quote |
| No clear public deemed rate table | Deemed pricing transparency appears limited |
| Electricity only | Businesses needing gas must use another supplier |
| No strong green tariff proposition found | Not a clear choice for renewable electricity buyers |
| Serious Ofgem enforcement history | Major risk factor for customers |
| Billing concerns | Ofgem findings involved inaccurate billing and overcharging |
| Payment concerns | Ofgem findings involved payments taken where supply had not started or had ended |
| Security deposits possible | Can affect cash flow |
| Direct Debit generally expected | Customers should monitor payments closely |
| Limited reliable review data | Harder to judge service quality from review platforms |
Who is Champion Energy best for?
Champion Energy is most likely to be relevant for small and medium-sized businesses that only need electricity and want a fixed contract quote.
| Business type | Possible fit |
|---|---|
| Small shops | May fit if the quote is competitive |
| Offices | May fit for straightforward electricity use |
| Salons | May fit if electricity-only supply is needed |
| Takeaways and small restaurants | Electricity supply may fit, but gas needs another supplier |
| Convenience stores | May fit if billing and contract terms are clear |
| Small warehouses | May fit if consumption data is accurate |
| Workshops | May fit for fixed electricity pricing |
| Multi-site SMEs | Possible, but due diligence is important |
Businesses with complex metering, high electricity demand or strong sustainability requirements may want to compare larger or greener suppliers.
Who should be cautious?
All businesses should compare carefully, but some should be especially cautious.
| Business situation | Why caution is needed |
|---|---|
| Moving into premises | Deemed rates may apply and supply responsibility must be clear |
| Moving out of premises | Final bills and account closure need careful documentation |
| Paying in advance | Ofgem findings involved retained advance payments |
| Paying by Direct Debit | Payment amounts should be monitored closely |
| Low usage | Standing charges can dominate costs |
| Poor record keeping | Meter reads and contract evidence are essential |
| Complex tenancy arrangements | Supply start and end dates can become disputed |
| Businesses needing gas | Champion Energy is not a dual fuel solution |
| Businesses needing green electricity | No strong green product is clearly promoted |
| Businesses with little admin capacity | The supplier’s history means bill checking is important |
Champion Energy compared with other SME suppliers
Champion Energy should be compared against a range of SME electricity suppliers before signing.
| Supplier | Electricity | Gas | Main positioning |
|---|---|---|---|
| Champion Energy | Yes | No clear current offer | SME electricity supplier |
| British Gas Business | Yes | Yes | Large mainstream business supplier |
| EDF Business | Yes | Yes | Large mainstream business supplier |
| E.ON Next Business | Yes | Yes | Mainstream SME supplier |
| Octopus Energy for Business | Yes | Yes | SME-friendly supplier with strong brand reputation |
| Yu Energy | Yes | Yes | SME-focused business energy supplier |
| Valda Energy | Yes | Yes | Small business energy supplier |
| Bryt Energy | Yes | No | 100% renewable business electricity |
| Drax Energy Solutions | Yes | No | Renewable electricity and larger business supply |
| 100Green | Yes | Yes | Renewable electricity and green gas |
Champion Energy may compete with SME suppliers on price, but its regulatory history is a major differentiator and should be part of the comparison.
Alternatives to Champion Energy
The best alternative depends on what the business needs.
| Business priority | Suppliers to compare |
|---|---|
| Simple SME electricity | British Gas, EDF, E.ON Next, Yu Energy, Valda Energy |
| Electricity and gas together | British Gas, EDF, E.ON Next, Octopus, Yu Energy |
| Green electricity | Bryt Energy, Good Energy, Ecotricity, Drax |
| Green electricity and green gas | 100Green, Good Energy, Ecotricity |
| Better public brand recognition | British Gas, EDF, E.ON Next, Octopus |
| Broker-led comparison | Bionic, Love Energy Savings, Utility Bidder and other brokers |
| Larger electricity users | Drax, SSE Energy Solutions, TotalEnergies, Brook Green Supply |
For many SMEs, the right approach is to get a Champion Energy quote but compare it against at least three alternatives.
What to check before signing a Champion Energy contract
Before signing with Champion Energy, ask for the following in writing.
| Item | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Legal supplier name | Should show Farringdon Energy Limited if this is the Champion Energy supplier |
| MPAN | Confirms the correct electricity meter |
| Site address | Prevents supply registration errors |
| Supply start date | Confirms when Champion becomes responsible |
| Unit rate | Main p/kWh cost |
| Standing charge | Daily fixed cost |
| Contract length | 1, 2 or 3-year commitment |
| VAT treatment | Business prices are usually shown excluding VAT |
| Climate Change Levy | Check whether included or added |
| Broker commission | Ask whether any commission is embedded |
| Deposit requirement | Important for cash flow |
| Payment method | Confirm Direct Debit amount and frequency |
| Deemed rate | Ask what applies if no contract is in place |
| Renewal process | Avoid unexpected out-of-contract charges |
| Final bill process | Important if you move premises |
| Complaint route | Useful if billing issues arise |
| Meter read process | Helps keep bills accurate |
Do not rely on verbal assurances alone. Business energy contracts can be binding even when agreed by phone.
Questions to ask Champion Energy
- What is the exact unit rate?
- What is the daily standing charge?
- Are prices excluding VAT and CCL?
- Is the contract for 1, 2 or 3 years?
- Is the tariff fully fixed?
- Are any costs passed through separately?
- Does the quote include broker commission?
- Is a security deposit required?
- What Direct Debit amount will be taken?
- When will Direct Debit payments start?
- What happens if supply does not start?
- What happens if we move premises?
- What deemed rates apply?
- Are out-of-contract rates published?
- What happens at renewal?
- How do we submit meter readings?
- Will we receive a smart or advanced meter?
- Can we access historic usage data?
- What is the complaints process?
- What improvements have been made after Ofgem’s enforcement action?
The final question is important. Given the recent enforcement history, businesses should ask Champion Energy what controls have changed and how current customers are protected.
Is Champion Energy cheap?
Champion Energy may offer competitive prices, but there is not enough public data to confirm whether it is cheap.
The supplier says it offers competitive tariffs and uses “frugal innovation” to keep costs low, but businesses need the actual unit rate, standing charge and annual cost to judge value.
A quote should be compared against:
| Comparison point | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Other SME suppliers | Shows whether Champion is price competitive |
| Same annual kWh usage | Prevents misleading comparisons |
| Same contract length | A 1-year and 3-year quote are not directly comparable |
| Standing charges | Can change the annual cost materially |
| Payment terms | Deposits and advance payments affect cash flow |
| VAT and CCL | Ensure quotes are compared on the same basis |
| Broker commission | Check whether included |
| Service risk | A cheaper rate may not justify billing risk |
| Renewal terms | Avoid expensive default or deemed rates |
A low quote is not enough on its own. For Champion Energy, the buyer should also weigh billing accuracy, payment handling and regulatory history.
Final verdict: should your business choose Champion Energy?
Champion Energy may be worth comparing if your business wants an electricity-only supplier and is looking for a fixed contract tailored to SME usage. It is clearly positioned around small businesses, and it offers 1, 2 and 3-year contracts designed to keep commodity costs consistent.
However, this is one of the more caution-heavy supplier reviews. Champion Energy does not publish standard contracted prices, does not clearly publish current deemed rates on its price page, and does not offer a visible dual fuel or green specialist proposition. More importantly, Farringdon Energy Limited, trading as Champion Energy, has a serious recent Ofgem enforcement record involving billing, payments, overcharging and operational capability.
For EnergyCosts.co.uk readers, the recommendation is to treat Champion Energy as a supplier that requires extra due diligence. Get a quote if it appears competitive, but compare it against several other suppliers, insist on written rates and contract terms, monitor Direct Debit payments, keep meter records and avoid staying on deemed rates after moving into a premises.
If Champion Energy is significantly cheaper than alternatives and the contract is clear, it may still be considered. If the quote is only marginally cheaper, many businesses may prefer a supplier with stronger price transparency, more public service evidence or a cleaner recent regulatory record.
FAQ
Yes. Champion Energy is a business electricity supplier. It is the trading name of Farringdon Energy Limited.
Champion Energy’s current public offer is focused on electricity. It should not be treated as a dual fuel supplier unless it confirms a gas product in writing.
No clear public table of contracted business electricity unit rates and standing charges is published. Its terms say most tariffs are bespoke.
Champion Energy is the trading name of Farringdon Energy Limited, company number 09256369, registered in England and Wales.
Champion Energy is aimed at small businesses, but SMEs should compare carefully because public pricing is limited and the supplier has a serious recent Ofgem enforcement history.
Yes. Champion Energy’s price page refers to contracts that keep commodity costs consistent for 1, 2 or 3 years.
Champion Energy does not currently appear to promote a major green electricity tariff on its public website. Businesses should ask for fuel mix and REGO evidence.
Ofgem took enforcement action against Farringdon Energy, trading as Champion Energy, over operational capability, billing and customer payment issues. This included penalties, redress and enhanced monitoring.
Not necessarily, but you should approach with caution. Compare quotes, check all rates in writing, monitor payments and keep accurate meter records.
Champion Energy may be considered if its electricity quote is competitive and the contract terms are clear. Businesses should compare several suppliers before signing.