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Fuel poverty risk in Isle of Wight

SOUTH EAST · rank 132 of 296 · data 2024 (published 14 May 2026)

What proportion of households in Isle of Wight are in fuel poverty?

As of 2024 (DESNZ, published 14 May 2026), 9.7% of households in Isle of Wight were in fuel poverty (6,727 of 69,120 households) — 0.2 percentage points below the England average of 9.9%. The Gera Cold Home Risk Index for Isle of Wight is 30/100 (moderate risk; rank 132 of 296). Source: DESNZ, OGL v3.0.

Source:DESNZ Sub-regional Fuel Poverty Statistics 2026 (2024 data)·as of 2024 (published 14 May 2026)updated annual (last: )
Gera Cold Home Risk Index30 / 100Isle of Wight is moderate risk (rank 132 of 296; 100 = highest risk, 0 = lowest risk).How this index is calculated
Fuel poverty statistics for Isle of Wight — 2024 (published 14 May 2026)
MetricValueContext
Households in fuel poverty9.7%6,727
England average9.9%6,877 (equiv.)
Gera Cold Home Risk Index (GCHRI)30/100moderate risk
National rank132 of 296Higher risk half
Regional depth-of-gap weight1.05Above national avg severity

Compare with other areas

Pick any English local authority to see its GCHRI

Check cold-home risk for your area

Pick any English local authority to see its real DESNZ fuel poverty rate and Gera Cold Home Risk Index (GCHRI).

Lower riskHigher risk

GCHRI 30 / 100 — moderate risk

9.7%
Households in fuel poverty
0.2 pp below the England average
vs England average
6,727
Fuel-poor households

Isle of Wight has 9.7% of households in fuel poverty (DESNZ 2024, LILEE metric) — 0.2 pp below the England average of 9.9%. Its Gera Cold Home Risk Index of 30/100 accounts for the region's average fuel poverty severity (depth-of-gap weighting).

Full cold-home risk profile for Isle of Wight

Areas with a similar cold-home risk to Isle of Wight

Highest risk: Isles of Scilly (GCHRI 100) · Lowest risk: City of London (GCHRI 0).

Frequently asked questions

How many households in Isle of Wight are in fuel poverty?
In 2024, 6,727 households in Isle of Wight were in fuel poverty — 9.7% of the 69,120 total households. This is measured under the Low Income Low Energy Efficiency (LILEE) metric, which identifies households with energy efficiency Band D or below whose income after fuel costs falls below the poverty line. Source: DESNZ sub-regional fuel poverty statistics 2026 (2024 data), OGL v3.0.
Is fuel poverty in Isle of Wight above or below the England average?
Isle of Wight's fuel poverty rate of 9.7% is 0.2 percentage points below the England average of 9.9% (9.9%). Its Gera Cold Home Risk Index of 30/100 accounts for the regional average depth-of-gap (SOUTH EAST: depth weight 1.05 vs national). A higher depth weight means fuel-poor households face a larger average financial shortfall, not just a higher number. Source: DESNZ, OGL v3.0.
What is Isle of Wight's Gera Cold Home Risk Index?
Isle of Wight has a Gera Cold Home Risk Index of 30/100 — moderate risk, ranking 132 of 296 English local authorities (1 = highest risk). The GCHRI = normalised(% in fuel poverty × regional depth-of-gap weight). South east has a depth weight of 1.05 versus the England average of 1.00, reflecting the typical severity of fuel poverty in the region. Source: DESNZ 2024 data; Gera computation.
What help is available for households in fuel poverty in Isle of Wight?
Households in fuel poverty may be eligible for: the Warm Home Discount (electricity bill discount from suppliers), ECO4 (free insulation and heating upgrades through energy suppliers), the Great British Insulation Scheme, and Cold Weather Payments. Local authorities in South east may also offer council-funded energy-efficiency grants. GeraHome can connect you with local insulation and boiler-upgrade professionals.
What is the LILEE fuel poverty metric?
The Low Income Low Energy Efficiency (LILEE) metric replaced the previous 10% rule in 2021. A household is fuel-poor if its dwelling has energy efficiency Band D or below, and spending the modelled amount to heat it to a minimum standard would push the household's residual income below the poverty line. LILEE better targets households that would benefit most from energy-efficiency improvements and avoids the previous metric's sensitivity to fuel prices.

Cut cold-home risk in Isle of Wight

Insulation, draught-proofing, boiler servicing, and heating upgrades can lift an energy efficiency rating and remove a household from fuel poverty. GeraHome connects you with vetted local professionals.

Contains public sector information published by Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (DESNZ) and licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0. Source: DESNZ Sub-regional Fuel Poverty Statistics 2026 (2024 data) (2024 (published 14 May 2026), published 14 May 2026).