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UK non-domestic supplier profile

Squeaky / Squeaky Clean Energy business energy supplier profile

Squeaky is a UK business electricity supplier and energy platform focused on large industrial and commercial customers. Its website describes it as a next-gen I&C supplier with a cloud-native EOS platform, flexible contracts, clean-energy sourcing, and live billing/trading tools.

Last updated · Talk to our team on 0161 521 3400

Snapshot, in plain English

Is Squeaky / Squeaky Clean Energy right for your business?

Established supplier

Licensed for 10 years with accounts currently filed. Sizing detail not yet independently researched, but the Companies House profile shows an established, active licensee suitable for single-site SME and mid-market multi-site contracts. Run standard counterparty due diligence before a 3-year commitment above £250k spend.

Risk band reasoning: Active, 10 years trading, accounts current.

10 yrs tradingRisk band: Low riskLast accounts filed 2024-12-31Next accounts due 2025-12-30Status: Active
Your businessFitWhy
Single site SME FitOften competitive on single-site fixed rates.
Multi-site SME FitMost mid-market suppliers handle multi-site billing.
I&C £250k to £1m spend PossibleCheck counterparty viability over a 3-year term.
I&C above £1m spend Not suitedBelow the scale threshold for I&C tenders.
Verify on Companies House (free public record)

Quick facts

Trading nameSqueaky / Squeaky Clean Energy
Licence holder
SQE ENERGY LTD.
Parent: SQE Energy Limited (formerly Squeaky Clean Energy Limited; Companies House company no. 09812682)
SuppliesElectricity
Websitesqueaky.energy
Business phone020 3907 8446
Email / contacthello@sqe.energyContact page
Rate statusPublished OOC rates

Company data

Live data on the licence-holding companies behind Squeaky / Squeaky Clean Energy, compiled by Purely Energy's independent research team and refreshed monthly.

Independent research on Squeaky / Squeaky Clean Energyhasn't been published yet. Our monthly refresh will publish it at the next run.

Squeaky / Squeaky Clean Energy out-of-contract and deemed rates

Non-half-hourly (Profile Classes 01-08): 36p/kWh unit rate, 170p/day standing charge, effective from 20 August 2023, plus TNUoS standing charge based on TCR banding and DUoS standing charge. Half-hourly (Profile Class 00): 36p/kWh day rate (07:30-24:00), 26p/kWh night rate (00:00-07:30), 384p/day standing charge, effective from 1 July 2024, plus TNUoS standing charge based on TCR banding, DUoS standing charge, DUoS capacity charge, DUoS exceeded capacity charge. All prices exclude VAT and CCL.

Squeaky / Squeaky Clean Energy published rate page

If you are on deemed, default, rollover, variable, or Out-of-contract rates, ask for a written renewal quote and compare it against live market prices before agreeing a new contract.

Where your p/kWh actually goes

Indicative split for a UK I&C electricity bill in 2026, sourced from Cornwall Insight's non-commodity cost research. Your meter, region and contract type shift the exact mix, but the four components are always present.

  • Wholesale energy, 38%Gas or power bought on the wholesale market. The figure most coverage focuses on.
  • Non-commodity costs, 53%Network charges (DUoS, TNUoS), policy levies (RO, FiT, CfD, Capacity Market), CCL and balancing costs.
  • Supplier margin, 6%What the supplier earns. Always priced into the unit rate.
  • Broker margin, 3%What we earn for tendering and managing the contract. Shown separately on every Purely Energy quote.

Who Squeaky / Squeaky Clean Energy may suit

Best suited to larger non-domestic customers, especially industrial and commercial users seeking flexible supply arrangements, cleaner power sourcing, and more digital control over billing and trading. Not positioned as a small-business or domestic supplier.

Trading name and licence-holder notes

Companies House shows the legal entity as SQE Energy Limited, which changed name from Squeaky Clean Energy Limited on 11 Sep 2025. The website still brands the business as Squeaky / Squeaky Clean Energy. Filing history also references Squeaky Clean Energy Group Limited and Squeaky Clean Energy Holdco Limited as PSC-related entities, indicating group ownership.

Switching from Squeaky / Squeaky Clean Energy to a fixed business contract

UK businesses can switch electricity supply away from Squeaky / Squeaky Clean Energy once their fixed contract ends, or after resolving any open objection or termination-window issue. The process is the same for every supplier on the non-domestic market, but a few checks done in the right order make the transfer materially faster.

  1. 1. Find your contract end date. It's on your last renewal letter or the most recent bill from Squeaky / Squeaky Clean Energy. Most non-domestic contracts have a 1 to 6 month termination window before that date, outside of which you may auto-roll onto a new fixed term.
  2. 2. Get your MPAN ready. The 21-digit MPAN (electricity) and 6 to 10-digit MPRN (gas) uniquely identify each meter and are needed for any competing quote. Both appear on your bill.
  3. 3. Compare against the live market. Squeaky / Squeaky Clean Energy publishes its out-of-contract rates online, so the gap between those and a current fixed offer is easy to quantify. Purely Energy can run your meters against the wider UK panel and come back with the cheapest fixed offers.
  4. 4. Settle the final bill and clear any objections. Squeaky / Squeaky Clean Energy will issue a final bill within 6 weeks of supply transferring. If a balance is outstanding, they can object to the switch under industry rules, so clear it before the transfer date to avoid a hold.
  5. 5. Sign the new contract. Once the new supplier has your MPAN/MPRN and signed contract, the transfer typically completes within 4 to 8 weeks. There is no break in supply, you simply receive your first bill from the new supplier.

Need help with any of these steps? Our team handles the paperwork end-to-end as part of every quote.

Need help comparing Squeaky / Squeaky Clean Energy?

Purely Energy can check your current rates, compare renewal options across electricity suppliers, and review whether switching could reduce your business energy costs.

Get a bespoke quote

FAQs

Who supplies energy under the Squeaky / Squeaky Clean Energy brand?+

The Ofgem non-domestic licence is held by SQE ENERGY LTD., ultimately part of SQE Energy Limited (formerly Squeaky Clean Energy Limited; Companies House company no. 09812682). The trading name on your bill or contract may differ from the licence holder, which is normal and reflects how UK energy is regulated.

What is the Squeaky / Squeaky Clean Energy business contact number?+

Squeaky / Squeaky Clean Energy can be reached on 020 3907 8446 or by email at hello@sqe.energy. The official contact page is https://www.sqe.energy/contact.

Does Squeaky / Squeaky Clean Energy publish out-of-contract rates?+

Squeaky / Squeaky Clean Energy publishes deemed or out-of-contract rates online. Always check the latest version on the supplier's own page before relying on them, since rates can change at short notice.

Can I switch away from Squeaky / Squeaky Clean Energy?+

In most cases, businesses can switch electricity supply away from Squeaky / Squeaky Clean Energy at the end of a fixed-term contract or after resolving any objections, debt, termination-window, or meter-data issues. The safest route is to check your contract terms, final bill position, and renewal dates before starting a transfer.

How long does it take to switch from Squeaky / Squeaky Clean Energy?+

Once a new supplier has the meter point details (MPAN/MPRN) and a signed contract, a non-domestic switch typically completes within 4 to 8 weeks. Supply does not break: the new supplier takes over billing on the transfer date.

Is Squeaky / Squeaky Clean Energy a UK-licensed supplier?+

Yes. Squeaky / Squeaky Clean Energy is on the Ofgem non-domestic licensee register for electricity. Ofgem maintains the official register at ofgem.gov.uk.

What are out-of-contract business energy rates?+

Out-of-contract rates are the prices a business pays when no fixed-term contract is in place with its supplier. They can be materially higher than negotiated contract rates, so businesses should check their contract end date and renewal window before they expire.