Every UK business owner keeps a close eye on rent, payroll, and energy. Water, on the other hand, tends to sit quietly in the background, paid by direct debit and rarely questioned. Since the non-household water market deregulated in April 2017, every business, charity, and public sector organisation in England has been free to choose its own water retailer. Despite this, research from Ofwat and the Consumer Council for Water suggests that the majority of eligible businesses have never switched supplier or even renegotiated their existing deal. That inertia can quietly cost a growing company thousands of pounds a year.
For founders and finance leads who treat overhead as a controllable lever rather than a fixed cost, water deserves the same scrutiny as broadband, electricity, or card processing fees.
The hidden cost most businesses ignore
Water bills look small on a line-by-line basis, which is exactly why they slip past most cost reviews. Multiply that line by twelve months, then by every site a business operates, and the picture changes. Hospitality venues, manufacturers, gyms, salons, care homes, and food producers can all see five-figure annual water spend without realising how much of it is recoverable.
The savings rarely come from using less water alone. They come from three places that most owners do not audit:
The retailer margin built into a default deal that has rolled over for years. Billing errors, including incorrect meter readings, wrong tariff bands, and surface water drainage charges applied to sites that do not drain to public sewers. Trade effluent and wastewater allowances that do not match the way the business actually operates.
A proper review reads the last twelve months of bills, checks the meter setup, and tests the market against current wholesale rates.
Why comparing the market matters more than haggling
Most business owners assume their incumbent supplier will offer a better rate if asked. In practice, retailers price competitively when they know a customer is genuinely shopping. Going to market through a specialist business utility broker such as Utility Bidder gives owners access to quotes from multiple licensed water retailers in a single conversation, rather than ringing each one individually. Brokers also handle the switching paperwork, the meter validation, and the cancellation of any rolled-over contract, which removes the admin barrier that keeps most businesses stuck where they are.
For multi-site operators, consolidation is often the bigger win. Bringing every premises onto a single contract with one retailer simplifies reconciliation, gives finance teams one invoice format to work with, and usually unlocks a better unit rate.
A simple review process any owner can run this quarter
Pull the last twelve months of water bills for every site. Note the current retailer, the contract end date, and the unit rate per cubic metre. Check whether surface water drainage is being charged and whether it should be. Confirm the meter reading on each bill is an actual read rather than an estimate. Request comparison quotes from the wider market before the renewal window closes.
Even businesses that decide to stay with their existing retailer almost always end up on a sharper rate once the incumbent knows the contract has been tested.
Final thought
Water is rarely the largest line on a UK business’s expense report, but it is one of the easiest to optimise once attention is paid to it. For owners who already negotiate hard on energy, card fees, and software subscriptions, running the same playbook on the water contract is a quiet, low-risk way to claw back margin every year.
Frequently asked questions
Can any UK business switch its water supplier? Yes. Since April 2017, all non-household water customers in England have been able to choose their retailer. Scotland has had a competitive non-household market since 2008. Wales is more restricted, with switching available to businesses using more than fifty megalitres per year.
Will switching water supplier interrupt the supply? No. The physical water still comes through the same regional wholesaler’s pipes. Only the retailer, which handles billing, meter reading, and customer service, changes.
How long does a business water switch take? Most switches complete within four to six weeks once the new contract is signed. The new retailer manages the transfer with the old one in the background.
How much can a business realistically save? Savings vary by site, sector, and usage. Low-volume offices may save a modest percentage, while water-intensive sites such as launderettes, breweries, and food producers can see far larger reductions, particularly when billing errors are corrected at the same time.
Do brokers charge the business directly? Reputable business utility brokers are typically paid a commission by the retailer when a contract is signed, not by the customer. The quote presented to the business should already reflect the final rate, with broker fees disclosed transparently.
What happens at the end of a business water contract? If no action is taken, most contracts roll over onto a default or out-of-contract rate, which is almost always higher than the original deal. Owners should diary the contract end date and begin reviewing the market at least sixty days before it.
