What to Do Before Your Gas Contract Renews

A practical checklist for reviewing gas plan renewal notices before staying, switching or negotiating.

Sancia PereiraEnergy Markets Analyst
4 July 20266 min read
Gas meter for a gas contract renewal checklist

gas contract renewal checklist is a practical comparison topic because the right answer depends on your address, meter, appliances, usage pattern and current plan. This guide focuses on Australian households and explains what to check before you switch, renew or rely on a headline rate.

Quick answer

Before your gas contract renews, compare the new supply charge, usage charge, fees, concessions and any discount expiry against your current plan and recent usage. Ask whether prices can change and whether switching creates fees, then compare current market offers before accepting renewal.

Key takeaways

  • A renewal notice is a trigger to compare, not a reason to accept automatically.
  • Check the new supply and usage charges against current bills.
  • Discounts, credits and benefit periods may change at renewal.
  • Switching may involve final bills and meter-read timing.
  • Concessions and hardship support should be confirmed before moving accounts.

Why this topic matters

Energy plans can look simple until the bill arrives. A household can see a different result because of fixed daily supply charges, time-based usage rates, controlled load, concessions, solar export credits, seasonal gas heating or a meter read that was estimated rather than actual. That is why a useful comparison starts with your own bill and then checks the official plan documents.

Energy Made Easy tells switchers to check written plan information, cooling-off rights, fees to leave, price-change terms, concessions and flexible payment options. This matters because a comparison that ignores those details can make a weak plan look attractive. The goal is not to guess the cheapest plan from one advertised number. The goal is to understand the cost structure well enough to compare like for like.

What to check first

  • Find the renewal date and new plan name.
  • Compare old and new gas rates line by line.
  • Check whether prices can change during the new period.
  • Ask about exit fees or final bill timing.
  • Compare at least a few current offers using your actual gas usage.

If the topic affects an appliance, also check whether the appliance is near replacement age. A plan decision and an appliance decision can point in different directions. For example, a household may choose a plan that suits today's gas heater, but the better long-term move could be comparing efficient electric heating before replacing that heater with another gas model.

How to compare plans

Use a recent bill as your baseline. Write down the billing period, usage, fixed charge, usage rate, tariff type and any discounts or concessions. Then compare the same assumptions across each plan. If one offer uses a different tariff structure, adjust the comparison rather than treating the headline rate as equivalent.

For electricity, that can mean separating general usage, controlled load, solar feed-in and peak or off-peak windows. For gas, that can mean separating supply charges from winter heating, hot water and cooking use. If you cannot separate those items precisely, use several bills and look for the pattern rather than relying on one unusually high or low period.

State and eligibility notes

Gas markets and available retailers differ by state and postcode, so a strong offer in one location may not be available at another address.

Eligibility can also depend on the retailer, distributor, meter type, account name, property type or concession status. Before acting, check the retailer's written plan summary, the current government or regulator page and the latest bill for your address.

Common mistakes

  • Renewing because the plan name looks familiar.
  • Comparing only the discount and not the base rates.
  • Ignoring winter usage before accepting a gas plan.
  • Forgetting to confirm concessions after switching.

A practical example

Imagine two households with the same total annual energy spend. One has high usage because of winter heating, while the other has low usage but a high fixed daily charge. The first household may benefit most from a lower usage rate or more efficient appliances. The second may benefit more from a lower supply charge or removing an unnecessary fuel connection. The same advertised discount would not solve both problems.

This is also why state averages should be treated carefully. Averages can help you sanity-check a bill, but they do not replace address-level pricing, network-zone context or your own appliance behaviour. The more unusual your home is, such as solar, a battery, controlled load, medical equipment, LPG or an embedded network, the more important those details become.

When to act

The best time to act is usually when something has changed. That could be a renewal notice, a price change, a move, a new smart meter, a new appliance, a solar installation, a concession change or a bill that no longer matches your expected usage. If nothing has changed, it can still be worth checking annually, but the comparison should be calm and evidence-led.

Before switching, keep a copy of your current bill and any written plan summary. If a retailer advertises a benefit, check whether it is built into the rates, paid as a credit, tied to direct debit, limited to a benefit period or dependent on staying with another service. Those details decide whether the offer is useful after the first headline moment has passed.

What a good answer looks like

A good answer should explain the trade-off, not just point to one rate. For some households the best option is the lowest estimated annual cost. For others it is predictable billing, better concession handling, a plan that suits solar exports, or a tariff that fits when the home actually uses energy. If an article or offer cannot show which assumptions it used, treat the result as a starting point rather than a decision.

How to use CompareUs after reading

Use this guide as a checklist, then move to the relevant CompareUs tools. Start with our gas comparison page, estimate bill impact with the gas calculator, and browse more energy guides if you are also comparing electricity or appliance choices.

Sources reviewed

CompareUs may receive a referral fee when you click or apply through some links. This does not change the price you pay. Our goal is to help Australians compare options clearly and make informed decisions.

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FAQs

Should I accept my gas renewal?

Only after comparing the new rates, fees and terms against current market offers and your usage.

Can gas prices change after renewal?

They may, depending on the plan terms. Check the written summary before accepting.

Will switching gas interrupt supply?

Retailer switching is usually administrative, but meter-read and final-bill timing can affect when the transfer completes.

What documents should I keep?

Keep the renewal notice, current bill, plan summary, fees schedule and any concession details.

Can I negotiate?

You can ask your current retailer for a better offer, especially if your bill shows a better plan may be available.