EDF vs British Gas: comparing commercial tariffs and features to help you choose for your business

Last updated on 3 July 2026

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EDF and British Gas are two of the largest and most established energy suppliers serving UK businesses. Both provide gas and electricity contracts to small companies, major industrial users and multi-site organisations, but their commercial propositions have several important differences.

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EDF offers small businesses fixed contracts lasting up to four years, including a Fixed Renewable electricity tariff backed entirely by UK Renewable Energy Guarantees of Origin. Larger organisations can choose between several fixed, flexible, renewable and nuclear-backed zero-carbon products.

British Gas provides a particularly broad selection of standardised business tariffs. These include conventional fixed contracts, the digital British Gas Lite service, a 30-day rolling plan and flexible wholesale purchasing for businesses using more than 1GWh annually. Qualifying fixed electricity contracts include zero-carbon electricity as standard, while renewable-only electricity and renewable-gas products are also available.

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EDF is likely to appeal to businesses seeking a long fixed term, a competitive solar export tariff or sophisticated large-company energy procurement. British Gas may be stronger where a company wants a wider range of SME contract structures, renewable gas, half-hourly data tools or a more unified package of supply, metering and commercial energy services.

Neither company is universally cheaper. Business energy quotations depend on the property, meter, consumption, credit profile, contract dates and selected environmental product.

EDF vs British Gas at a glance

FeatureEDF BusinessBritish Gas Business
Small-business electricityYesYes
Small-business gasYesYes
Large-business electricityYesYes
Large-business gasYesYes
Public universal contract pricesNoMaximum microbusiness prices published
Small-business fixed termsOne to four yearsNormally one to three years; some published schedules include four years
Renewable SME tariffFixed RenewableNatural Renewable Electricity
Standard low-carbon electricityDepends on the EDF product selectedZero carbon on qualifying new and renewed fixed contracts
Nuclear-backed productZero Carbon for BusinessZero Carbon Energy for Business
Large-business fixed productsSeveral fixed and partly fixed structuresFixed and tailored contracts
Flexible procurementExtensive, including multi-year purchasingFlex Advantage, Full Flex and Flex Cash Out
Short rolling contractVariable tariff after a fixed termDedicated 30-day Rolling Energy Plan
Digital-only SME productOnline account, but no direct Lite equivalentBritish Gas Lite
Supplier-wide renewable share18.2% in 2024/2535% in 2024/25
Supplier-wide nuclear share54.8%55%
Supplier-wide carbon intensity135g CO₂/kWh53g CO₂/kWh
Renewable business gasNo prominent standard SME equivalentCarbon Neutral Gas and Renewable Gas
Small-business solar export15p/kWh fixed for eligible EDF customers8p/kWh for eligible British Gas supply customers
Commercial solar installationContact Solar and SAS EnergyBritish Gas and Centrica commercial solutions
Corporate PPAsExtensive CPPA and balancing servicesAvailable through British Gas and Centrica
EV chargingEnd-to-end business and public-sector serviceCommercial and communal charging
Consumption monitoringEnergy Hub, Energy View and market toolsEnergy360 DataView
Best suited toLong fixes, high export payments and sophisticated large-user contractsTariff choice, renewable gas, digital SMEs and multi-site services

Which businesses can use EDF or British Gas?

Both companies can supply businesses ranging from independent retailers to large industrial groups.

EDF small-business eligibility

EDF’s online small-business route is primarily intended for companies using no more than:

  • 100MWh of electricity annually, equivalent to 100,000kWh; or
  • 300MWh of gas annually, equivalent to 300,000kWh.

Businesses exceeding either threshold are directed towards EDF’s large-business service.

EDF can also quote separately for companies with:

  • several premises;
  • half-hourly meters;
  • high-voltage supplies;
  • large industrial loads;
  • flexible purchasing requirements; or
  • Corporate Power Purchase Agreements.

British Gas eligibility

British Gas provides standard fixed and rolling tariffs to SMEs, while larger organisations can obtain tailored contracts.

British Gas Lite is designed for small companies that are comfortable with:

  • online-only account management;
  • monthly Direct Debit;
  • smart-meter readings; and
  • support through webchat rather than conventional telephone service.

British Gas’s flexible procurement contracts are aimed at larger consumers.

British Gas productTypical minimum consumption
Flex AdvantageMore than 1GWh annually
Full FlexMore than 10GWh annually
Flex Cash OutMore than 10GWh with variable demand

One gigawatt-hour equals one million kilowatt-hours.

Example routes for different businesses

Example companyAnnual electricity consumptionLikely quotation route
Independent shop12,000kWhEDF small business, British Gas or British Gas Lite
Medium office70,000kWhSmall-business quotation from either supplier
Large restaurant130,000kWhEDF large-business route or standard British Gas service
Hotel400,000kWhLarge-business service from both
Manufacturer3GWhEDF fixed or flexible contract; British Gas Flex Advantage
National retail chain15GWhLarge multi-site contract; British Gas Full Flex may be relevant
Business with extensive rooftop solarVariesImport contract plus export tariff or PPA
Large company seeking a CPPASeveral GWhSpecialist service from either supplier

Meeting a supplier’s normal consumption profile does not guarantee acceptance. Credit history, meter type, premises use and payment risk may also affect whether a contract is offered.

Which supplier is cheaper?

There is no standard EDF-versus-British Gas rate applying to every company.

A business quotation is normally influenced by:

  • the electricity MPAN or gas MPRN;
  • postcode and distribution region;
  • annual consumption;
  • meter profile;
  • half-hourly consumption pattern;
  • agreed electricity capacity;
  • contract start date;
  • contract term;
  • payment method;
  • credit risk;
  • number of premises;
  • renewable or zero-carbon requirements; and
  • wholesale prices when the quote is prepared.

A complete comparison should calculate:

  • Annual consumption × unit rate
  • standing charge × 365
  • capacity charges
  • meter and data costs
  • network and policy charges
  • environmental-product costs
  • VAT and Climate Change Levy where applicable
    − export income and other credits

The supplier offering the lower unit price may still be more expensive if its standing charge or pass-through costs are higher.

How rate differences affect annual costs

Annual consumptionValue of 0.5p/kWhValue of 1p/kWhValue of 3p/kWhValue of 5p/kWh
10,000kWh£50£100£300£500
25,000kWh£125£250£750£1,250
50,000kWh£250£500£1,500£2,500
100,000kWh£500£1,000£3,000£5,000
250,000kWh£1,250£2,500£7,500£12,500
1GWh£5,000£10,000£30,000£50,000
10GWh£50,000£100,000£300,000£500,000

For a company consuming 10GWh, a difference of only 0.5p/kWh is worth £50,000 annually.

How standing charges affect the result

Daily difference per meterAnnual differenceDifference across ten meters
25p£91.25£912.50
50p£182.50£1,825
£1£365£3,650
£2£730£7,300
£5£1,825£18,250

Standing charges can be especially important for seasonal properties, vacant sites, landlords and organisations with numerous low-use meters.

EDF small-business fixed tariffs

EDF offers individually quoted fixed contracts lasting one, two, three or four years.

The supplier says its tariff prices are reviewed weekly, which means a quotation obtained today may differ from one issued several weeks later.

Its standard small-business proposition includes:

  • fixed unit rates;
  • fixed standing charges;
  • online account management;
  • dedicated small-business specialists;
  • electricity, gas or dual-fuel options;
  • Direct Debit and other payment methods;
  • smart-meter installation where eligible; and
  • the ability to arrange a switch up to 150 days ahead.

A longer contract can provide greater protection against wholesale-price increases, but it can also leave the business paying an above-market price if energy costs fall.

Companies should also check the early termination terms. The supplier may have purchased energy in advance to cover the expected consumption throughout the fixed period.

EDF Fixed Renewable

EDF launched its Fixed Renewable electricity tariff for small businesses in April 2026.

Its principal features include:

  • 100% renewable-backed electricity;
  • one-, two-, three- or four-year fixed terms;
  • UK Renewable Energy Guarantees of Origin;
  • fixed unit rates during the agreed period; and
  • market-based zero-emission reporting for purchased electricity.

Each unit consumed is matched with renewable generation through UK REGOs.

The physical electricity delivered to the property still comes through the national grid, where renewable, nuclear and fossil-fuel electricity are mixed. The REGO system provides evidence that an equivalent quantity of renewable power has been allocated to the customer.

The tariff is likely to suit small companies that want both:

  • long-term price certainty; and
  • clear renewable-electricity evidence for customers, tenders or environmental reports.

British Gas fixed contracts

British Gas’s principal Fixed Price Energy Plan normally offers terms of one, two or three years.

Its features include:

  • a fixed unit rate;
  • a fixed standing charge, subject to the full contract terms;
  • Direct Debit discounts;
  • online account management;
  • renewal notifications; and
  • zero-carbon electricity on qualifying fixed agreements.

British Gas’s published maximum-price schedule also contains four-year tariffs. Availability should be confirmed during the quotation process because the main product page normally describes terms of up to three years.

A fixed tariff provides greater budgeting certainty but does not fix the total bill. The amount paid still rises or falls according to consumption.

British Gas Lite

British Gas Lite is a digital-first product for smaller companies.

It provides:

  • fixed electricity or gas prices;
  • online-only account administration;
  • monthly Direct Debit;
  • automated smart-meter readings;
  • electronic billing; and
  • support through webchat.

The lower-service model can reduce administration and supplier costs, potentially helping British Gas offer more competitive prices.

It may not suit companies that require:

  • telephone customer service;
  • complicated billing discussions;
  • numerous premises;
  • wholesale market advice;
  • complex meter arrangements; or
  • a specialist renewable product.

British Gas rolling contract

The 30-day Rolling Energy Plan provides an alternative to a multi-year fixed agreement.

It may suit a business that:

  • expects to move;
  • may close or sell;
  • has uncertain future consumption;
  • is waiting for a property transaction;
  • wants the ability to change tariff quickly; or
  • believes market prices may fall.

Rates can rise as well as fall, so the product gives less budget certainty than a fixed contract.

EDF customers can move onto variable prices after a fixed agreement expires, but EDF does not promote an equivalent rolling product as prominently as British Gas.

EDF published deemed prices

A deemed tariff applies when EDF supplies a business that has not agreed a formal energy contract. This frequently occurs when a company moves into premises already supplied by EDF.

The following EDF small-business deemed rates took effect on 1 June 2026.

Standard electricity meter

Payment methodUnit-rate rangeDaily standing charge
Direct Debit47.07p–56.57p/kWh215p
Cash or cheque48.07p–57.57p/kWh225p
Pay as you go47.07p–56.57p/kWh215p

The unit price varies by distribution region. North Wales has the highest published standard rate, while London has the lowest.

Economy 7 electricity

For Direct Debit customers, EDF’s published regional ranges include:

ChargeRegional range
Day rate48.09p–57.79p/kWh
Night rate43.16p–51.87p/kWh
Standing charge215p per day

EDF also publishes evening-and-weekend, evening-weekend-night and off-peak tariffs.

The value of a multi-rate meter depends on how much electricity the business uses during the cheaper period.

Business gas

Payment methodUnit-rate rangeDaily standing charge
Direct Debit15.27p–16.24p/kWh250p
Cash or cheque16.27p–17.24p/kWh260p
Pay as you go15.27p–16.24p/kWh250p

These deemed rates are variable and are generally more expensive than a negotiated contract.

Illustrative EDF deemed electricity costs

The table below uses EDF’s standard Direct Debit regional range and includes the 215p daily standing charge.

Annual electricity consumptionLowest regional totalHighest regional total
10,000kWh£5,491.75£6,441.75
25,000kWh£12,552.25£14,927.25
50,000kWh£24,319.75£29,069.75
100,000kWh£47,854.75£57,354.75

The figures exclude VAT, Climate Change Levy and any other applicable charges.

Illustrative EDF deemed gas costs

Annual gas consumptionLowest regional totalHighest regional total
25,000kWh£4,730£4,972.50
50,000kWh£8,547.50£9,032.50
100,000kWh£16,182.50£17,152.50
250,000kWh£39,087.50£41,512.50

These are not representative EDF fixed-contract prices. A business moving into EDF-supplied premises should contact the supplier promptly and agree a contract or arrange a switch.

British Gas maximum microbusiness prices

British Gas publishes maximum rates for microbusiness customers entering or renewing a Fixed Price Energy Plan.

These are price ceilings, not typical or average quotations. Many businesses may be offered lower rates.

The figures were current on 27 May 2026 and exclude VAT, Climate Change Levy and other applicable charges.

Single-rate electricity

Fixed termMaximum unit rateMaximum standing chargeEstimated contract cost
One year38.41p/kWh334p per day£9,285
Two years37.81p/kWh379.96p per day£18,654
Three years38.04p/kWh428.43p per day£28,657
Four years38.04p/kWh462.23p per day£38,702

The contract estimates assume electricity consumption of 21,000kWh per year.

TermApproximate average annual cost
One year£9,285
Two years£9,327
Three years£9,552
Four years£9,676

The two-year option has the lowest maximum unit rate, but the one-year plan has the lowest standing charge and lowest annualised cost in the published example.

Day-and-night electricity

Fixed termMaximum day rateMaximum night rateStanding charge
One year40p/kWh31.76p/kWh334p per day
Two years39.37p/kWh31.17p/kWh379.96p per day
Three years39.61p/kWh31.42p/kWh428.43p per day
Four years39.61p/kWh31.42p/kWh462.23p per day

Using the two-year rates:

Consumption occurring at nightWeighted average rate
10%38.55p/kWh
25%37.32p/kWh
50%35.27p/kWh
75%33.22p/kWh

The standing charge must be added before determining the total cost.

Evening-and-weekend electricity

Fixed termEvening and weekendWeekday daytimeStanding charge
One year31.66p/kWh42.27p/kWh334p per day
Two years31.17p/kWh41.20p/kWh379.96p per day
Three years31.48p/kWh40.80p/kWh428.43p per day
Four years31.48p/kWh40.80p/kWh462.23p per day

This structure may suit a leisure, hospitality or entertainment business with substantial evening and weekend consumption.

Gas

Fixed termMaximum unit rateMaximum standing chargeEstimated contract cost
One year12.54p/kWh1,710.28p per day£10,005
Two years11.44p/kWh1,784.47p per day£19,891
Three years10.92p/kWh1,862.57p per day£30,223
Four years11.07p/kWh1,975.41p per day£42,125

The estimates assume annual gas consumption of 30,000kWh.

The standing charges are exceptionally high because these are maximum-price limits rather than normal market quotations.

Can the published prices identify the cheaper supplier?

No.

The EDF and British Gas figures cover different tariff types.

CharacteristicEDF figuresBritish Gas figures
Tariff typeDeemed, without a negotiated contractFixed contract
Pricing purposeDefault price for an uncontracted customerMaximum microbusiness ceiling
Regional ratesYesNational maximum schedule
Price certaintyVariableFixed for the agreed term
Typical new quoteNoNot necessarily
Suitable for direct comparisonNoNo

At 21,000kWh, EDF’s standard deemed electricity would cost approximately £10,669 to £12,664 before VAT and CCL. British Gas’s published one-year maximum example is £9,285.

This does not prove that British Gas is cheaper than EDF. It shows that an EDF customer should avoid remaining on a deemed tariff. A negotiated EDF fixed quote could be considerably lower.

EDF large-business fixed contracts

EDF offers several fixed structures for businesses consuming more than 100MWh of electricity.

Fixed + Peace of Mind

This provides the greatest budget certainty.

It fixes:

  • wholesale electricity costs;
  • eligible non-energy costs;
  • the cost of EDF’s service; and
  • the principal contracted price components.

It supports non-half-hourly and half-hourly meters and can be combined with zero-carbon electricity.

This may suit an organisation that values predictable expenditure more than the opportunity to benefit from falling costs.

Fixed + Standard

This fixes the wholesale electricity component and EDF’s service cost.

Non-energy charges are based on a forecast and may vary.

This may initially be cheaper than a more comprehensive fixed product, but the business accepts greater exposure to changes in:

  • transmission charges;
  • distribution costs;
  • policy levies;
  • balancing costs; and
  • other third-party charges.

Fixed + Energy Trading

This is intended for electricity consumption of approximately 2,000MWh to 20,000MWh.

It allows the customer to:

  • purchase energy in blocks;
  • use EDF’s trading desk;
  • leave some consumption to be managed by EDF; and
  • choose live or reconciliation billing.

This product sits between a conventional fixed contract and a fully flexible procurement arrangement.

Standard Fixed Gas

EDF’s large-business fixed gas contract is normally aimed at consumption above 300MWh.

Wholesale gas costs are fixed, while forecast non-energy charges may change.

EDF flexible contracts

EDF offers extensive flexible purchasing options to large organisations.

Customers can choose to purchase energy:

  • one to three years ahead;
  • three to five years ahead; or
  • more than five years ahead.

The business can also decide:

  • whether to purchase energy in blocks or in full;
  • when trades are made;
  • how much market exposure is retained;
  • whether third-party costs are fixed or variable;
  • how much support EDF provides; and
  • which reporting and monitoring tools are required.

A flexible contract can spread timing risk instead of fixing the entire expected volume on one day.

For example, a business expecting to consume 10GWh might make four separate purchases of 2.5GWh.

Weighted average purchase priceCommodity cost for 10GWh
18p/kWh£1.8 million
19p/kWh£1.9 million
20p/kWh£2 million
21p/kWh£2.1 million
22p/kWh£2.2 million

A movement of 1p/kWh changes annual expenditure by £100,000.

Flexible purchasing can reduce the risk of fixing everything when the market is unusually expensive, but it cannot guarantee a saving.

British Gas flexible procurement

British Gas also offers several flexible structures.

Flex Advantage

Flex Advantage is designed for businesses using more than 1GWh annually, including organisations relatively new to wholesale purchasing.

It allows the customer to:

  • purchase energy in 20% tranches;
  • access market-reflective pricing;
  • monitor its position through an online portal;
  • spread procurement decisions; and
  • receive market information.

Full Flex

Full Flex is designed for organisations using more than 10GWh.

It gives the business greater control over:

  • trade timing;
  • transaction size;
  • fixing;
  • unfixing;
  • market exposure; and
  • portfolio strategy.

Flex Cash Out

Flex Cash Out is intended for larger customers whose actual consumption may differ materially from forecasts.

The contract can use market prices to settle differences between the volume purchased and the energy actually consumed.

This may suit a manufacturer, generator, data centre or industrial operator with variable or weather-dependent demand.

Which supplier is better for flexible procurement?

Both EDF and British Gas have credible large-business services.

EDF may have an advantage where the organisation wants:

  • a wide selection of partly fixed and flexible structures;
  • purchasing more than five years ahead;
  • direct access to an auditable trading desk;
  • sophisticated balancing and shaping;
  • a CPPA integrated into its supply contract; or
  • the choice of nuclear, renewable or mixed energy.

British Gas may be more accessible where the business wants:

  • a clearly defined entry product above 1GWh;
  • purchases in simple 20% tranches;
  • Full Flex above 10GWh;
  • Flex Cash Out for uncertain demand; or
  • one supplier for gas, electricity, metering and multi-site services.

The result depends on the proposed trading framework, service fees and risk policy rather than the supplier name alone.

Comparing renewable and zero-carbon electricity

Both suppliers provide renewable and zero-carbon electricity, but neither company’s overall fuel mix is entirely renewable.

EDF supplier-wide fuel mix

EDF’s electricity mix from April 2024 to March 2025 was:

SourceEDFUK average
Coal4.2%5.9%
Natural gas21%33.3%
Nuclear54.8%16.2%
Renewables18.2%42.1%
Other1.8%2.5%
Carbon emissions135g/kWh154g/kWh
Radioactive waste0.0038g/kWh0.0011g/kWh

EDF’s overall mix has a lower reported carbon intensity than the UK average because nuclear generation accounts for more than half of its electricity.

Its renewable proportion is nevertheless below the national average.

EDF product fuel mixes

EDF publishes separate environmental characteristics for different products.

ProductNuclearRenewableFossil and otherReported CO₂
Zero Carbon100%0%0%0g/kWh
Renewable0%100%0%0g/kWh
All other products53%0.5%46.5%233g/kWh

The choice of product is therefore crucial.

An organisation buying EDF Renewable receives different environmental reporting evidence from one on an ordinary EDF product.

British Gas supplier-wide fuel mix

British Gas’s corresponding mix was:

SourceBritish GasUK average published by British Gas
Coal1%6%
Natural gas8%33%
Nuclear55%16%
Renewables35%42%
Other1%3%
Carbon emissions53g/kWh205g/kWh
Zero-carbon proportion90%58%

British Gas had:

  • a higher renewable proportion than EDF;
  • a similar nuclear proportion;
  • lower gas and coal use; and
  • a substantially lower supplier-wide reported carbon intensity.

British Gas product fuel mixes

ProductNuclearRenewableFossil and otherReported CO₂
Renewable Energy for Business0%100%0%0g/kWh
Zero Carbon Energy for Business79%21%0%0g/kWh
All other products54%30%16%81g/kWh

British Gas currently says zero-carbon electricity is included as standard for customers starting or renewing qualifying business contracts. British Gas Lite is excluded.

Businesses requiring renewable-only electricity should choose Natural Renewable Electricity rather than relying solely on the words “zero carbon”.

Renewable versus nuclear-backed electricity

Renewable and zero carbon are not identical descriptions.

Renewable sources include:

  • wind;
  • solar;
  • hydroelectricity;
  • biomass; and
  • some other replenishing sources.

Zero-carbon products can also include nuclear generation.

This means:

  • EDF Fixed Renewable is renewable-only;
  • EDF Zero Carbon for Business is nuclear-backed;
  • British Gas Natural Renewable Electricity is renewable-only; and
  • British Gas Zero Carbon Energy combines renewable and nuclear backing.

A company should define its environmental policy before requesting quotes.

Some organisations accept nuclear generation because it produces no carbon dioxide at the point of generation. Others require electricity backed exclusively by renewables because of radioactive waste, internal procurement rules or public commitments.

Which supplier has greener electricity?

There is no single answer.

Environmental priorityLikely stronger fit
Lower supplier-wide carbon intensityBritish Gas
Higher supplier-wide renewable shareBritish Gas
Nuclear-backed zero-carbon productEDF or British Gas
Renewable-only SME tariff with terms up to four yearsEDF
Renewable-only British Gas contractBritish Gas Natural Renewable
Choice between nuclear, renewable and standard electricityEDF
Zero-carbon backing included on qualifying standard contractsBritish Gas
Corporate renewable PPACompare both

The product selected is more important than the supplier-wide figures for market-based emissions reporting.

Comparing business gas

The suppliers differ more significantly in their environmental gas products.

EDF business gas

EDF offers fixed and flexible business gas contracts.

Its ordinary small-business gas tariffs should be regarded as conventional network gas unless the quotation expressly includes certificates or carbon offsetting.

Large organisations can discuss carbon-offsetting and broader net-zero services with EDF, but the supplier does not prominently advertise a standard small-business gas product equivalent to British Gas Renewable Gas.

British Gas Carbon Neutral Gas

British Gas’s Carbon Neutral Gas product is divided into:

Environmental mechanismProportion
UK renewable gas backed by RGGOs10%
Gas supported by carbon offsets90%

The 10% renewable portion is matched with UK-produced biomethane.

The remaining emissions are balanced through qualifying offset projects.

This does not prevent combustion emissions from occurring at the customer’s premises.

British Gas Renewable Gas

British Gas also offers a product under which 100% of the customer’s consumption is matched with UK Renewable Gas Guarantees of Origin.

It is offered to qualifying businesses, including organisations consuming more than 150MWh of gas annually.

The physical gas delivered through the network remains a mixture of fossil and renewable gas. RGGOs provide evidence that an equivalent amount of biomethane has entered the system.

Which supplier is stronger for gas?

British Gas currently has the clearer proposition for a company requiring:

  • a defined renewable-gas percentage;
  • 100% RGGO matching;
  • certificates for environmental reporting; or
  • a combined gas and renewable-electricity package.

EDF remains a credible conventional gas supplier and may be attractive where price, contract structure or procurement flexibility outweigh the need for a standard renewable-gas product.

Smart meters and energy data

Both suppliers install smart meters for eligible business customers.

Benefits can include:

  • automated readings;
  • fewer estimated bills;
  • half-hourly data;
  • more accurate consumption profiles;
  • easier carbon reporting;
  • faster identification of unusual demand; and
  • support for export and flexibility products.

A smart meter does not automatically reduce energy costs. Savings depend on the business using the information to change equipment schedules or consumption.

EDF Energy Hub and MyAccount

EDF’s small-business MyAccount service allows customers to:

  • view invoices;
  • submit readings;
  • make card payments;
  • update account information;
  • manage additional properties; and
  • arrange smart-meter services.

Most customers with compatible smart or AMR meters can use Energy Hub to download consumption information.

Where the meter is configured for half-hourly readings, the business can examine usage patterns more closely and identify potential waste.

EDF’s large-business customers can also access products such as:

  • Energy View;
  • market insight;
  • contract-position reporting; and
  • real-time or near-real-time monitoring.

British Gas Energy360 DataView

Energy360 DataView is available to eligible existing British Gas business customers with compatible smart meters.

It provides:

  • half-hourly consumption graphs;
  • daily updates;
  • downloadable historical information;
  • scheduled reports;
  • out-of-hours analysis;
  • multi-period comparisons; and
  • information to support energy-saving decisions.

The platform may help identify:

  • heating operating outside business hours;
  • unnecessary overnight baseload;
  • refrigeration problems;
  • equipment left running;
  • unusual weekend demand; and
  • changes between different premises.

British Gas has the more prominently developed SME data-analysis platform, while EDF combines SME Energy Hub services with more advanced large-business market tools.

Solar panels and battery storage

Both suppliers can support commercial solar installations.

EDF small-business solar

EDF directs SMEs towards Contact Solar, part of the EDF family.

Services can include:

  • site assessment;
  • system design;
  • solar panel installation;
  • battery storage;
  • monitoring;
  • technical support; and
  • integration with EDF’s export tariffs.

This may appeal to a small business seeking one route for its imported electricity, solar installation and export payments.

EDF large-business solar

EDF group company SAS Energy delivers larger commercial and public-sector solar projects.

Options can include:

  • rooftop solar;
  • ground-mounted systems;
  • battery storage;
  • capital purchase;
  • Power Purchase Agreements;
  • maintenance;
  • multi-site programmes; and
  • integration with EV charging.

Under a PPA model, the provider may fund and operate the installation while the customer purchases electricity generated on site over a long contract.

Commercial solar PPAs often last 15 to 25 years, so the property rights, indexation and termination terms require careful review.

British Gas commercial solar

British Gas and Centrica Business Solutions also provide:

  • rooftop and ground-mounted solar;
  • carport installations;
  • battery storage;
  • monitoring;
  • maintenance;
  • capital and funded options;
  • export arrangements; and
  • integration with wider energy services.

British Gas says suitable commercial projects may reduce electricity costs materially, but savings depend on the site, consumption profile, installation cost and financing.

Comparing solar export rates

EDF currently has the stronger published small-business export rate.

EDF Export 12M Small Business

Eligible EDF electricity customers can receive:

FeatureEDF Export 12M
Export rate15p/kWh
Contract termOne year
Price typeFixed
Exit feeNone
Generation limitUp to 5MW, or 50kW for micro-CHP
Meter requirementSmart or half-hourly export meter

EDF also publishes:

  • 5.6p/kWh through its variable tariff for EDF electricity customers; and
  • 3p/kWh through a variable tariff available where another company supplies the imported electricity.

British Gas Smart Export Guarantee

British Gas currently publishes an 8p/kWh rate for eligible existing business electricity customers.

Separate categories apply to:

  • installations below 15kW;
  • installations above 15kW; and
  • customers whose imported electricity is supplied by another company.

Eligible technologies can normally have capacity up to 5MW, except micro-CHP, which is limited to 50kW.

Export-income comparison

Annual electricity exportedEDF at 15p/kWhBritish Gas at 8p/kWhDifference
5,000kWh£750£400£350
10,000kWh£1,500£800£700
25,000kWh£3,750£2,000£1,750
50,000kWh£7,500£4,000£3,500
100,000kWh£15,000£8,000£7,000

EDF’s fixed rate is 87.5% higher than British Gas’s published 8p supply-customer rate.

The business must still compare eligibility, meter requirements, contract length and any import-supply conditions.

Corporate Power Purchase Agreements

EDF has a substantial public proposition for Corporate Power Purchase Agreements.

A CPPA links a business with a renewable generator through a long-term commercial arrangement.

Potential benefits include:

  • renewable-electricity traceability;
  • long-term price protection;
  • support for new generation;
  • improved environmental reporting;
  • a closer relationship with a specific solar or wind project; and
  • reduced exposure to conventional wholesale markets.

EDF can provide:

  • generator selection;
  • tender management;
  • balancing and shaping;
  • sleeving into the customer’s supply contract;
  • settlement;
  • renewable certificates; and
  • management of the difference between generation and demand.

EDF has publicly described CPPAs involving organisations such as Tesco, Lloyds Banking Group and other large companies.

British Gas and Centrica can also provide renewable PPAs and funded on-site generation. A large customer should seek proposals from both groups rather than assuming that the incumbent energy supplier will provide the best PPA.

EV charging

EDF EV services

EDF provides business and public-sector charging solutions covering:

  • site assessment;
  • workplace chargers;
  • fleet-depot charging;
  • rapid chargers;
  • installation;
  • capacity assessment;
  • energy supply;
  • maintenance;
  • charge-point management; and
  • integration with solar and batteries.

EDF’s service is particularly relevant to:

  • transport fleets;
  • emergency services;
  • local authorities;
  • public car parks;
  • logistics operators; and
  • businesses needing chargers across several sites.

British Gas EV services

British Gas provides commercial and communal charging solutions, with particular emphasis on:

  • commercial landlords;
  • apartment developments;
  • shared parking;
  • property developers;
  • employee charging; and
  • managed billing.

Its Communal EV Charging Tariff can combine electricity, charging equipment and payment administration.

EDF is likely to have the stronger public proposition for larger fleet or public-sector charging projects. British Gas may be attractive for property and shared-parking applications.

Demand flexibility

EDF operates PowerShift, which helps connect and optimise flexible assets such as:

  • batteries;
  • solar installations;
  • EV chargers;
  • heat pumps; and
  • other controllable equipment.

PowerShift can help an organisation earn value by adjusting consumption or export in response to grid and wholesale-market conditions.

British Gas runs business flexibility and PeakSave programmes, allowing eligible customers to benefit from moving demand into selected periods.

These schemes can change over time and may be restricted to compatible smart meters or invited customers.

Customer service and account management

EDF

EDF small-business customers receive:

  • dedicated business energy specialists;
  • online MyAccount access;
  • telephone support;
  • electronic bills;
  • smart-meter booking;
  • meter-reading submission;
  • card and Direct Debit payment options; and
  • support with adding further premises.

A business with several properties may need to obtain its quote through the sales team rather than the standard online process.

British Gas

British Gas offers different service levels.

Standard customers can receive:

  • telephone support;
  • online account management;
  • smart-meter services;
  • renewal support;
  • metering assistance; and
  • specialist large-business account management.

British Gas Lite customers use:

  • webchat;
  • automated meter readings;
  • monthly Direct Debit; and
  • online account tools.

A company should therefore compare the service channel as well as price. A cheaper online tariff may be poor value if complex problems require frequent intervention.

Contract renewal and expiry

EDF allows small businesses to arrange a switch up to 150 days in advance.

At the end of a fixed contract, customers that do not renew may move onto variable or out-of-contract rates.

British Gas also contacts customers before expiry. A customer taking no action may move onto its Variable Price Plan.

Both suppliers’ variable and deemed rates are generally more expensive than negotiated fixed contracts.

Companies should begin reviewing options several months before the contract ends.

Contract risks to check

Business energy contracts are not protected by the household energy price cap.

Most business contracts also have no automatic 14-day cooling-off period, including agreements made by telephone.

Before accepting a contract, check:

  • start and end dates;
  • unit rates;
  • standing charges;
  • fixed and pass-through components;
  • network and policy charges;
  • meter and data fees;
  • electricity capacity costs;
  • excess-capacity charges;
  • volume-tolerance provisions;
  • early termination fees;
  • payment terms;
  • renewable or zero-carbon evidence;
  • broker commission;
  • security deposits;
  • renewal windows; and
  • post-contract rates.

EDF also discloses broker commission in its small-business contract pack where a third party arranged the agreement. The amount may be incorporated into the unit rate as a pence-per-kWh uplift.

EDF advantages and disadvantages

Advantages

  • Supplies SMEs and large organisations.
  • Small-business tariffs can be fixed for up to four years.
  • Fixed Renewable provides 100% renewable-backed electricity.
  • Zero Carbon for Business offers nuclear-backed electricity.
  • Wide choice of fixed, partly fixed and flexible large-business contracts.
  • Large users can purchase energy more than five years ahead.
  • Fixed + Peace of Mind can fix eligible energy and non-energy costs.
  • Extensive CPPA balancing, shaping and sleeving services.
  • Energy Hub provides smart-meter data to eligible SMEs.
  • Strong commercial solar and battery services.
  • Published small-business export rate of 15p/kWh.
  • Broad business and public-sector EV charging service.
  • PowerShift can optimise flexible assets.
  • Major UK zero-carbon generation portfolio.

Disadvantages

  • Negotiated prices are not published nationally.
  • Current deemed electricity and gas rates are high.
  • Supplier-wide electricity was only 18.2% renewable in 2024/25.
  • EDF’s general fuel mix contains gas and coal.
  • Renewable or nuclear-backed products must be selected explicitly.
  • Ordinary SME gas does not include a clearly defined renewable-gas proposition.
  • Large-business product choice can be complicated.
  • Fixed + Standard and other contracts can leave non-energy costs variable.
  • Flexible contracts expose businesses to market-price risk.
  • Long solar or Corporate PPA agreements require detailed legal review.

British Gas advantages and disadvantages

Advantages

  • Supplies more than 350,000 UK businesses.
  • Offers fixed, rolling, digital and flexible tariffs.
  • British Gas Lite provides a low-administration online option.
  • A dedicated 30-day Rolling Energy Plan is available.
  • Flex Advantage is designed for businesses above 1GWh.
  • Full Flex and Flex Cash Out serve major consumers above 10GWh.
  • Zero-carbon electricity is included on qualifying fixed agreements.
  • Natural Renewable Electricity is available.
  • Offers both Carbon Neutral Gas and 100% RGGO-backed Renewable Gas.
  • Supplier-wide carbon intensity is lower than EDF’s published figure.
  • Energy360 DataView provides detailed half-hourly information.
  • Commercial solar, metering, connections and EV services are available.
  • Presents a wide range of supply services under one recognisable business brand.
  • Publishes maximum microbusiness prices for greater transparency.

Disadvantages

  • Published maximum prices contain high standing charges.
  • Maximum gas standing charges are particularly expensive.
  • British Gas Lite is supported through webchat rather than telephone.
  • Standard zero-carbon electricity includes nuclear power.
  • Renewable-only electricity can involve an additional premium.
  • Supplier-wide electricity still includes some gas and coal.
  • Published solar export payments are below EDF’s fixed rate.
  • Flexible procurement can produce higher costs if market decisions are mistimed.
  • The number of products can make comparison complicated.
  • Carbon offsets do not eliminate emissions produced when gas is burned.

Which supplier is better for different companies?

Business type or requirementLikely better fitReason
Small business wanting a four-year fixEDFClearly advertises fixed SME contracts up to four years
Online-only microbusinessBritish Gas LiteDedicated digital product
Business wanting a 30-day tariffBritish GasPublished rolling option
Company seeking renewable-only electricityEDF Fixed Renewable or British Gas Natural RenewableBoth offer 100% REGO-backed products
Company seeking nuclear-backed powerEDFZero Carbon for Business is entirely nuclear-backed
Company wanting zero carbon without choosing an upgradeBritish GasIncluded on qualifying fixed contracts
Business requiring renewable gasBritish GasCarbon Neutral and Renewable Gas products
Business with rooftop solarEDFPublished 15p/kWh export rate
Small solar exporter not supplied by eitherCompare variable SEG productsEligibility and non-supply rates differ
Business using more than 1GWhCompare bothEDF has flexible contracts; British Gas has Flex Advantage
Business using more than 10GWhCompare bothBoth offer sophisticated procurement
Company seeking a CPPAEDF may have an advantageExtensive public balancing and shaping experience
Company wanting fully fixed large-business costsEDFFixed + Peace of Mind
Business needing half-hourly SME analyticsBritish GasEnergy360 DataView
Business wanting integrated market dataEDFEnergy View and market tools
EV fleet or public-sector chargingEDF may have an advantageBroader end-to-end public proposition
Commercial landlordBritish Gas may have an advantageCommunal charging and landlord services
National multi-site organisationCompare bothBoth have dedicated portfolio services

Final verdict: EDF vs British Gas

EDF and British Gas are both credible choices for UK businesses, but their strongest features address different requirements.

EDF is likely to be the better option where the company wants:

  • a fixed SME tariff lasting up to four years;
  • renewable-only or nuclear-backed electricity;
  • a high published solar export rate;
  • sophisticated large-business contract structures;
  • long-term flexible procurement;
  • CPPA balancing and shaping;
  • large-scale solar;
  • EV charging; or
  • optimisation of batteries and flexible assets.

British Gas is likely to be the stronger choice where the company wants:

  • a wider range of standard SME tariff formats;
  • British Gas Lite;
  • a 30-day rolling contract;
  • renewable or carbon-neutral gas;
  • an accessible flexible product above 1GWh;
  • Energy360 DataView;
  • commercial landlord services; or
  • one supplier for energy, metering and a complex multi-site estate.

The published pricing information does not establish a universal winner.

EDF’s figures are deemed rates for businesses without an agreed contract. British Gas’s figures are maximum fixed-contract prices for microbusiness customers. Both are generally above the most competitive individually negotiated offers.

A fair comparison should require EDF and British Gas to quote for:

  1. the same meter and postcode;
  2. identical annual consumption;
  3. the same contract start date;
  4. the same contract length;
  5. equivalent renewable or zero-carbon backing;
  6. all standing charges;
  7. capacity and metering costs;
  8. fixed and pass-through charges;
  9. early termination liability;
  10. broker commission;
  11. solar export income;
  12. renewal arrangements; and
  13. the complete expected annual cost.

For most businesses, the conclusion is:

  • choose EDF for longer SME fixes, stronger published solar export payments and sophisticated large-company procurement;
  • choose British Gas for broader tariff choice, renewable gas, digital SME service and data tools;
  • compare EDF Fixed Renewable with British Gas Natural Renewable Electricity where renewable-only credentials matter; and
  • select the supplier offering the lowest realistic total cost after every fixed and variable charge has been included.

FAQ

Is EDF cheaper than British Gas?

It depends on the individual quotation. EDF publishes deemed prices, while British Gas publishes maximum microbusiness fixed rates. Neither table represents the best tariff necessarily available to a new customer.

Do both supply small businesses?

Yes. EDF and British Gas both supply electricity and gas to SMEs. British Gas also offers its online-only British Gas Lite service.

Do both supply large businesses?

Yes. Both provide fixed, flexible and multi-site contracts for larger organisations, including half-hourly and complex commercial supplies.

Which offers longer fixed contracts?

EDF advertises small-business fixed contracts lasting up to four years. British Gas’s main product normally offers up to three years, although its maximum-price table includes certain four-year options.

Does EDF offer renewable electricity?

Yes. EDF Fixed Renewable matches each unit used by a small business with a UK REGO. Large companies can also select a renewable electricity source.

Is EDF’s standard electricity renewable?

Not necessarily. EDF’s supplier-wide mix was 18.2% renewable in 2024/25. Businesses must select a specific renewable product if they require 100% renewable backing.

Is British Gas electricity renewable?

Qualifying fixed contracts include zero-carbon electricity, which can contain renewable and nuclear generation. Renewable-only electricity is available through Natural Renewable Electricity.

Which supplier has the lower-carbon fuel mix?

British Gas’s 2024/25 supplier-wide carbon intensity was 53g/kWh, compared with EDF’s 135g/kWh. Product-level backing may differ from these overall figures.

Which supplier offers renewable gas?

British Gas has the clearer product range. It offers Carbon Neutral Gas and Renewable Gas matched entirely with UK RGGOs for qualifying customers.

Which is better for solar exports?

EDF currently pays eligible electricity customers 15p/kWh through Export 12M Small Business. British Gas publishes an 8p/kWh rate for eligible existing supply customers.

Which is better for flexible purchasing?

Both have strong services. EDF provides numerous fixed, partly fixed and flexible structures, while British Gas offers Flex Advantage, Full Flex and Flex Cash Out.

Which is better for Corporate PPAs?

EDF has a particularly extensive public track record in balancing, shaping and sleeving CPPAs. British Gas and Centrica also provide renewable generation and PPA services.

Which has better energy-monitoring tools?

British Gas Energy360 provides detailed half-hourly SME analysis. EDF Energy Hub supports smaller customers, while Energy View and market tools provide more advanced services to large users.

Which is better for electric vehicle charging?

EDF presents the broader fleet and public-sector charging proposition. British Gas may be more attractive for communal, landlord and shared-parking installations.

Joe Dawson

Author

Joe Dawson writes about UK business energy, supplier pricing and cost-saving strategies for EnergyCosts.co.uk, helping organisations compare contracts, understand tariffs and make informed decisions about commercial gas and electricity tariffs.

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