There's a new government scheme starting in 2026 that could save you £250 a year on your energy bill. The catch? You need to live within 500 metres of a brand new electricity pylon.

It's called "Pounds for Pylons", and on the surface, it sounds like a win-win: communities hosting vital grid infrastructure get compensated, and the UK accelerates its path to clean energy. But here's what the headlines don't tell you: every electricity customer in the country is paying for those discounts through higher charges on their bill.

What is "Pounds for Pylons"?

The scheme, announced by the government in March 2025, offers households living within 500 metres of new or upgraded electricity infrastructure:

The scheme only applies to new pylons and power lines. If you already live near existing ones, you won't qualify - this is designed to overcome opposition to new infrastructure projects.

Why does this scheme exist? The UK needs to double its electricity network by 2030 to connect all the new wind farms, solar plants, and nuclear stations being built. But local communities have been blocking new pylons for years. The government hopes that offering cash will help get these projects moving faster.

Here's the bit they don't advertise...

Those £250 discounts have to come from somewhere. And that "somewhere" is every electricity customer's bill.

Buried in your energy bill is something called a "network charge" - this pays for the pylons, cables, and substations that carry electricity around the country. When the government adds new costs (like pylon discounts), they get added to these network charges, which get added to your bill.

📊 Who pays vs who benefits

The scheme benefits about 100,000 households while 30 million pay for it

30m
Households paying for it
99.7%
vs
~100k
Households get £250/year
0.3%

Here's how the money flows:

In plain English: The £250 discount for households near new pylons is funded by adding a few pounds to everyone else's energy bills. Most of us pay a little more so a small number of people pay less.

The bigger picture: network charges are exploding

The "Pounds for Pylons" scheme itself costs about £1.5 billion over its lifetime. Spread across 30 million households, that's roughly £5-10 per year each.

That sounds manageable. But it's being added on top of a massive increase in network charges that was already coming:

📈 Network charges are nearly tripling

Total UK network charges (what all electricity customers pay together)

£3.8bn
Network charges
2025/26
£6.0bn
Network charges
2026/27
£11.8bn
Projected
2030/31

That's right: network charges are set to nearly triple by 2031. This means your standing charge (the daily fee just to be connected) is about to jump significantly.

Why the spike? The UK is investing billions to upgrade its electricity network - reinforcing aging infrastructure, connecting offshore wind farms, building new cables from Scotland to England, and expanding capacity for electric cars and heat pumps. All necessary for reaching net zero, but customers are footing the bill.

What this means for your bill

Let's break it down:

💷 What's inside your standing charge (2026/27)

The daily fee you pay just to be connected to the grid

So while a small number of households save £250/year, everyone else is paying an extra £20/year in standing charges - mostly driven by the grid expansion, with a small slice for pylon discounts.

The political trick: This is classic policy design - give visible benefits to a small group (£250 discount), and spread the costs invisibly across millions of bills. Most people won't connect their rising standing charge to the pylon discount scheme because it's buried in complex charges. But it's there.

See how much your standing charge is rising

Network charges vary by region - typically adding £40-£93/year to your standing charge. Use this calculator to see the expected impact for your area:

🧮 Standing Charge Calculator

Network charges hit your standing charge (the fixed daily fee on your bill) - not your usage. Select your region to see the expected impact:

Your current standing charge: £42.00
Expected increase (April 2026): +£20.00
New standing charge: £62.00
Network portion now: ~£51/year
Network portion after April 2026: ~£85/year

Note: Network charges vary by location - southern areas pay more because they're further from where most electricity is generated (Scotland/offshore wind). Final figures will be confirmed on 31 January 2026.

What happens next?

If you're not living near new pylons (which is about 99.7% of households), here's what to expect:

31 January 2026
Final network charges published (confirming exact standing charge increases)
April 2026
New charges take effect - standing charges jump across the board
2026-2031
Continued increases as grid investment ramps up
By 2031
Standing charges could rise from £42/year to over £100/year

The pylon discount is a tiny fraction of this - maybe £5-10 of it. The bigger story is that network charges are going up dramatically for everyone, whether or not you're near a pylon.

📉 Your standing charge: 2024-2031 projection

Average household electricity standing charge (£/year)

Is this a bad thing?

Not necessarily. The UK genuinely needs to upgrade its electricity network to hit climate targets, connect renewables, and keep the lights on. Someone has to pay for it.

The pylon discount scheme also makes sense: it helps overcome local opposition that has delayed critical projects for years. If £250 discounts help get pylons built faster, that might actually save money in the long run.

But here's what matters: transparency.

The issue isn't whether the scheme is good or bad - it's whether you understand what's happening. When the government says "£250 off for homes near pylons," it sounds like free money. But it's actually a cost shift: everyone pays more so a few people pay less. That's a political choice, and you deserve to know about it.

The bottom line

When you see your standing charge spike in April 2026, now you know why. Some of it is funding the massive grid expansion the UK needs. A small slice is funding discounts for people near new pylons. But all of it comes from customers like you.

"Pounds for Pylons" isn't inherently bad - it's a tool to speed up infrastructure. But the framing matters. It's not a "free" discount; it's a cost shift from all customers to a select few. And as your bills rise, you deserve to know where the money's going.

Final thought: Grid investment is necessary, but the lack of transparency around who pays is a problem. Most people won't connect their rising standing charge to schemes like this because it's buried in jargon. Our goal at SwitchPilot is to make this stuff visible - so you can understand your bill, compare tariffs fairly, and make informed choices.