Octopus Energy
Octopus Energy Group is a British multinational energy technology company founded in 2016 by Greg Jackson and headquartered in London, United Kingdom.[1][2] The company supplies electricity and natural gas, emphasizing renewable sources and smart grid integration, to over 10 million customer accounts across 18 countries including the UK, US, Australia, Germany, and Japan.[3][1] Its core operations revolve around proprietary platforms like Kraken, a cloud-based system that manages energy distribution, demand response, and billing for 50 million accounts globally, enabling flexible tariffs and grid optimization.[1] The firm has experienced explosive growth, attaining a valuation of $8 billion by 2023 through investments exceeding $800 million and strategic expansions, including the 2021 government-backed acquisition of the failed supplier Bulb, which added millions of customers but drew rival accusations of unfair state aid that Octopus later repaid.[1][4] By early 2025, Octopus overtook British Gas to become the UK's largest household energy supplier, capturing 24% market share with 7.3 million domestic customers.[5][6] This ascent stems from tech-driven efficiencies, low-cost tariffs during the energy crisis—investing over £150 million—and a focus on customer rewards for off-peak usage, though it has sparked disputes with incumbents over power market reforms and competitive practices.[3][7][8] In September 2025, Octopus spun off Kraken Technologies as an independent entity to accelerate international licensing and innovation, targeting 100 million accounts by 2027 amid speculation of a potential IPO valuing the IP at up to $15 billion.[9][10] While praised for pioneering affordable green energy transitions and employing over 3,000 staff, the company has encountered customer service complaints and competitive friction, reflecting challenges in scaling amid volatile markets.[3][11]
Founding and Early History
Origins and Launch (2015-2017)
Octopus Energy was founded in December 2015 by British entrepreneur Greg Jackson, a serial tech founder who identified inefficiencies in the UK energy retail sector, including opaque pricing and poor customer service from established suppliers. Jackson's vision centered on using proprietary technology to streamline operations, reduce costs, and accelerate the adoption of renewable energy sources, thereby making green power more accessible and affordable for consumers. The company was established as a subsidiary backed by Octopus Investments, part of the Octopus Group, which provided initial funding and strategic support drawn from its experience in renewable energy investments.[12][13][14] The firm launched its retail energy supply operations in 2016, entering the UK market as a small challenger brand amid a landscape dominated by the "Big Six" incumbents—British Gas, EDF Energy, E.ON, npower, ScottishPower, and SSE. Initial offerings focused on fixed-rate tariffs backed by 100% renewable electricity, targeting households seeking alternatives to standard variable tariffs that often locked customers into higher prices. Octopus Energy differentiated itself through a digital-first model, emphasizing app-based account management and responsive support, which contrasted with the legacy systems of larger competitors. Early customer acquisition relied on word-of-mouth and targeted marketing, with the company starting from a modest base without the scale advantages of established players.[2][15][16] In 2017, Octopus Energy introduced its first major product innovation: a "transparent" tariff that provided daily updates on wholesale gas and electricity prices, allowing customers greater visibility into market fluctuations and enabling more informed switching decisions. This move addressed widespread complaints about hidden margins in energy billing, as evidenced by regulatory scrutiny on profit pass-through rates during the period. The tariff's design reflected Jackson's emphasis on data-driven efficiency, using algorithms to automate pricing adjustments and minimize administrative overhead. Despite regulatory requirements for new entrants, such as Ofgem licensing and capital adequacy rules, the company navigated initial setup without major publicized setbacks, laying groundwork for technology platforms like the later Kraken system. By the end of 2017, Octopus had secured a niche foothold, though specific customer numbers remained small compared to market leaders.[17][18][19]Initial Growth and Challenges (2018-2020)
In the financial year 2018/19, Octopus Energy experienced rapid expansion, growing its UK customer base from 199,000 to 691,000 accounts, a 3.5-fold increase, while revenue rose from £129 million to £460 million.[20] This growth was supported by investments in technology and customer acquisition strategies, including the development of its proprietary Kraken platform for efficient billing and energy management. By January 2020, the company had reached 1.4 million customers, reflecting strong market penetration amid competition from established "Big Six" suppliers.[20] The following year, FY19/20, saw further acceleration, with household customers doubling to 1.4 million (2.3 million accounts total), driven by acquisitions such as Affect Energy and ENGIE's UK residential supply business in 2019, which added thousands of customers and expanded market share to approximately 6%.[21] Gross margins improved significantly from 0.8% to 5.4%, with gross profit rising from £3.5 million to £55 million, though the company continued to report operating losses due to high upfront investments in scaling operations and technology.[22] Funding from parent Octopus Group, managing £8.6 billion in assets, underpinned this phase, enabling resilience in a volatile retail market.[20] Challenges during this period included thin initial profit margins and elevated customer acquisition costs, which strained finances as the company prioritized growth over short-term profitability in a sector facing regulatory pressures.[23] The introduction of the UK's energy price cap in January 2019 limited pricing flexibility, compressing margins for agile suppliers like Octopus that relied on dynamic tariffs. Additionally, the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 disrupted operations, with sharply reduced demand creating balancing difficulties for the grid and testing supply chain logistics, though Octopus offset some impacts through its renewable-focused offerings and tech efficiencies.[24] Despite these hurdles, the firm's tech-driven model allowed it to gain net 767,000 customers while many competitors struggled with legacy systems.[22]Expansion and Operations
Energy Supply and Retail
Octopus Energy operates a retail energy supply business focused on delivering electricity and gas to domestic and commercial customers, with the United Kingdom as its primary market. The company procures wholesale energy and distributes it through a range of tariffs designed for flexibility and cost efficiency, emphasizing technology-driven customer interactions over traditional supplier models. As of January 2025, Octopus serves 7.3 million UK households, achieving a 24% market share and surpassing competitors like British Gas to become the nation's largest energy retailer by customer accounts.[5][25] The retail arm sources electricity primarily from renewable generation assets, including wind, solar, and hydroelectric facilities, while marketing its supply as 100% green through mechanisms such as Renewable Energy Guarantees of Origin (REGO) certificates to match customer usage with certified renewable output.[26][27] Gas supply incorporates limited biomethane injection into the grid and carbon offsetting, though the majority derives from conventional sources certified as sustainable. This approach aligns with the company's investment in renewables via its generation subsidiary, enabling direct offtake agreements that stabilize supply costs amid wholesale volatility. Retail operations extend to over 8 million global customers as of fiscal year 2024, with non-UK expansion tripling to 1.2 million accounts, though UK volumes dominate at nearly 7 million.[28][29] Customer acquisition relies on competitive pricing and service innovations, including no-exit-fee tariffs and rapid switching processes, contributing to net gains of approximately 1 million UK customers in 2024 alone. The model prioritizes direct debit payments and app-based management, reducing administrative overheads compared to legacy suppliers. Ofgem data confirms Octopus as the leading electricity retailer and second-largest for gas in the domestic segment, with six major firms holding 91% of the market.[30][6]Tariffs, Pricing, and Customer Base
Octopus Energy provides a variety of tariffs designed to cater to different customer needs, including fixed-rate plans that lock in unit rates and standing charges for periods typically lasting 12 months, variable-rate options tied to the energy price cap, and innovative smart tariffs that incorporate time-of-use pricing or wholesale market signals. Fixed tariffs, such as the Octopus 12M Fixed, offer stability against fluctuations, with recent examples showing electricity unit rates around 25p/kWh and gas around 7p/kWh (including VAT and Direct Debit discounts), often without exit fees to encourage flexibility.[31][32] Variable tariffs, like the standard Flexible tariff, adjust in line with Ofgem's price cap, which rose to an average annual bill of £1,755 for typical dual-fuel households from October 1, 2025.[33][34] Smart tariffs form a core of Octopus's offerings, emphasizing efficiency and renewables integration. The Agile tariff sets half-hourly electricity rates based on wholesale prices, published daily after 4pm, with a £1/kWh cap to mitigate spikes and historical lows reaching 0p/kWh during high renewable output periods.[35][36] The Tracker tariff follows the price cap more closely on a daily basis, while Octopus Go provides discounted overnight rates (as low as 7.5p/kWh) for electric vehicle owners with smart charging. These tariffs require smart meters, which Octopus has deployed to over 90% of its UK customers, enabling real-time usage data and incentives like free off-peak power. Pricing strategy prioritizes competitiveness, with Octopus maintaining standing charges below the price cap minimum—e.g., the lowest standard variable rates as of October 2025—and overall bills lower than major incumbents through efficient operations and scale.[31][33] The company's customer base has expanded rapidly, reaching 7.3 million UK households by January 2025, surpassing British Gas to become the largest domestic energy supplier with approximately 24% market share in both electricity and gas.[5][37] This growth, adding millions of accounts including via acquisitions like Bulb's 1.5 million customers in 2022, reflects appeal among price-sensitive and tech-savvy users, with one new customer joining every 30 seconds at peak. Retention is supported by high customer satisfaction scores and features like transparent billing, though some fixed tariffs have seen mid-contract adjustments tied to wholesale volatility, prompting occasional complaints about predictability. Internationally, the base stands at around 1.7 million, but UK operations dominate retail supply.[29][38]Brands and Market Presence
Octopus Energy operates primarily under its core retail brand, delivering electricity and gas supply to residential and business customers. Following the UK government's directed acquisition of the collapsed supplier Bulb in November 2022, which added approximately 1.7 million customers, and the 2023 purchase of Shell Energy Retail's UK and German operations, involving the migration of 1.3 million UK customers completed by April 2024, these accounts were integrated into the Octopus Energy brand rather than maintained as separate entities.[39] This consolidation has positioned Octopus Energy as the United Kingdom's largest household electricity supplier, serving over 7.5 million British customers and holding a 23.7% market share as of 2024.[39] Internationally, Octopus Energy maintains its unified branding across multiple markets, supplying energy in countries including Germany, France, Italy, Spain, the United States (primarily Texas), Australia, Japan, and New Zealand. By 2025, the company reported operations serving around 10 million customers globally across at least 12 countries, with expansions supported by its Kraken technology platform licensed to local partners.[2] In Germany, Octopus aimed for 1 million customers by the end of 2025, leveraging acquisitions like Shell's operations to build scale.[40] The brand emphasizes renewable-focused tariffs and innovative products, such as smart tariffs and EV charging integration, consistent with its UK model, though adapted to local regulations and grids.[41]Renewable Energy Generation and Investments
Octopus Energy Generation, the renewable development and investment division of Octopus Energy Group, oversees more than 4.4 GW of renewable energy capacity, sufficient to power approximately 2.6 million homes annually, with assets under management exceeding £6.8 billion as of December 2024.[42] The portfolio spans wind, solar, battery storage, and green hydrogen projects across multiple countries, including the UK, France, Finland, Sweden, Spain, Ireland, Portugal, and the United States.[43][42] In offshore and onshore wind, Octopus Energy Generation has committed over $2 billion in the past two years to accelerate deployment, while developing capacity to supply electricity to 500,000 homes across the UK, France, Finland, and Sweden; notable projects include one of the world's largest onshore turbines in Sweden, operational since 2024 and powering 40,000 homes yearly.[44][43] In green hydrogen, a £3 billion partnership with RES, announced in 2025, targets production facilities to decarbonize heavy industry and transport by the end of the decade.[42] Solar investments have expanded rapidly, with backing for over 100 projects in Ireland and Portugal announced on October 27, 2023; acquisition of 252 MW of solar and battery storage pipelines on September 26, 2024; entry into the US market via solar farms in Ohio and Pennsylvania on September 30, 2024; and a 600 MW solar-plus-storage commitment in Spain on September 6, 2025, capable of supplying 2.3 million households.[45][46][47][48] The division plans to deploy an additional £2 billion in such projects by 2030.[46] To broaden access, Octopus launched the CG Octopus Energy Sustainable Growth Fund I on May 13, 2025, offering exposure to over 50 wind, solar, and battery assets in 15 countries, alongside the Octopus Collective platform, which enables investments in UK community wind and solar from £25 with targeted returns.[49][50] These initiatives support operational assets in construction and ready phases, sourced on behalf of institutional and retail investors.[51]Infrastructure and EV Services
Octopus Energy invests in physical and digital infrastructure to facilitate renewable energy integration and grid stability, including battery storage and distributed energy resources. Through its Generation arm, the company manages funds targeting platforms for energy transition infrastructure such as storage, grid upgrades, and low-carbon transport electrification.[52] In 2023, Octopus Renewables Infrastructure Trust (ORIT), affiliated with the group, announced a conditional acquisition of a 50% stake in a ready-to-build battery storage project in Bedfordshire, UK, as part of efforts to diversify renewable assets across Europe and Australia.[53] These investments support operational assets exceeding £1 billion in value by May 2025, emphasizing diversification to mitigate risks in renewable generation.[54] The company has pursued battery storage to address intermittency in renewables and grid balancing. In February 2025, Octopus Energy US partnered with Habitat Energy to optimize a 50MW/100MWh battery energy storage system (BESS) in the ERCOT market, enabling revenue through market arbitrage and ancillary services.[55] Additionally, tolling agreements cover 789MW of battery projects, providing contractual income while contributing to UK grid flexibility.[56] Octopus advocates for accelerated grid connections, proposing a five-point plan in 2025 to process 5.7GW of queued renewables by prioritizing flexible technologies like storage over rigid generation.[57] In EV services, Octopus provides home and public charging solutions integrated with smart tariffs. The Intelligent Octopus Go tariff, launched for UK customers, automates off-peak charging via app-controlled scheduling, offering up to 30% discounts on energy rates during low-demand periods to align with grid needs.[58] Public charging is facilitated through the Electroverse platform, which by 2025 aggregates access to over 1.2 million chargers across Europe, enabling seamless payments via a single app or card and partnerships like with Ford's BlueOval Charge Network.[59] [60] Octopus extends EV infrastructure via vehicle-to-grid (V2G) capabilities, exemplified by the Powerloop project, which utilizes EV batteries as decentralized storage to stabilize the grid without dedicated large-scale installations.[61] By July 2025, the company's Kraken platform managed over 2GW of domestic flexible assets, including EVs, home batteries, and heat pumps, forming virtual power plants that respond to real-time grid signals for demand management.[62] These services extend internationally, with bundled EV leasing, charging, and home energy offerings launched in Germany in September 2025, incorporating Electroverse for broad network access.[63]International Expansion
Octopus Energy initiated its international expansion in 2020, primarily through strategic partnerships, acquisitions, and licensing of its Kraken technology platform to facilitate entry into deregulated and regulated energy markets. The company's approach emphasized exporting its customer-centric model and software capabilities to regions with potential for renewable integration and competitive retail disruption, supported by a $800 million funding round in December 2023 aimed at accelerating global clean energy growth.[64] By September 2025, Octopus operated retail businesses in multiple countries, powering homes for millions of customers outside the UK, while Kraken managed over 50 million accounts worldwide through client utilities.[65] In North America, Octopus entered the US market on September 29, 2020, by acquiring Silicon Valley-based Evolve Energy Services, enabling retail electricity supply in Texas under the Octopus brand.[66] This foothold in Houston expanded to renewables investments, with the company's first US solar and wind projects announced on June 18, 2024, targeting $2 billion in deployments by leveraging European operational expertise in distributed energy.[67][68] European expansion focused on retail and generation, with operations in Germany, France, Italy, and Spain by 2022, where Octopus began supplying green energy to households.[2] Retail customer bases grew to 2.8 million across these markets by September 2025, bolstered by supply agreements such as the May 2025 deal with Uniper for power and gas trading in Germany, Italy, and Spain.[65][69] In Germany, further penetration included a October 2025 joint venture with Energiequelle for business energy cost reduction via renewables.[70] In the Asia-Pacific region, Octopus partnered with Australia's Origin Energy on April 30, 2020, granting Origin a 20% stake and rights to deploy Kraken, which facilitated migration of one million Energy Queensland accounts by July 2024.[71][72] In Japan, a December 23, 2020, agreement with Tokyo Gas enabled household electricity supply under the Octopus brand, marking the company's Asian retail debut.[73] New Zealand operations commenced around 2020, with retail service to approximately 5,000 customers by 2023, headquartered in Wellington to tap local tech talent.[74] Additional forays included 20 solar farms in South Korea announced April 17, 2025, expanding generation assets.[75] The Kraken platform underpinned much of this growth, licensed to international partners like Tokyo Gas and Plentitude (in France and Greece), handling diverse regulatory environments before its spin-off as a standalone entity on September 18, 2025.[76][77] This technological export model allowed Octopus to scale without full ownership in every market, serving over 7.2 million global customers across 18 countries by 2025.[1]Technology and Software
Kraken Platform Development
The Kraken platform originated as an in-house technology system developed by the Octopus Energy Group to support its energy retail launch in 2016, addressing limitations of legacy utility software such as high maintenance costs and slow adaptation to regulatory changes.[78] Founded by Greg Jackson, the platform was engineered from the ground up using advanced data processing, machine learning, and AI to enable real-time customer management, billing, and dynamic pricing, processing billions of data points daily to facilitate agile operations in a transitioning energy market.[79] This foundational design prioritized modularity and scalability, allowing Octopus Energy to introduce innovative tariffs and services rapidly—reducing development times from years to days—while integrating distributed energy resources like smart meters and EV chargers.[80] Early development focused on core functionalities including customer relationship management (CRM), meter data handling, and field operations, with initial deployment enabling Octopus to serve its growing UK customer base efficiently and achieve a reported 40% reduction in cost-to-serve compared to traditional systems.[80] By 2019, as demand for the technology grew beyond internal use, Kraken evolved into a licensable platform under Kraken Technologies, formalizing its expansion to third-party utilities and incorporating features for flexibility markets, such as demand response and grid optimization.[81] Key enhancements included AI-driven predictive analytics for energy forecasting and automated compliance with varying international regulations, supporting migrations of large-scale customer bases; for instance, in 2021, it facilitated the transfer of approximately five million EDF Energy accounts in the UK.[77] Subsequent iterations emphasized global scalability and integration with renewables, with milestones including the 2023 licensing deal with U.S. energy manager Tenaska Power Services for North American operations and expansions into water and telecom sectors.[82] By 2025, Kraken powered over 70 million accounts across 30 countries, handling 15 billion daily data interactions and quadrupling its committed annual revenue to $500 million in three years through over 40 major utility migrations.[79] On September 18, 2025, Octopus announced the spin-off of Kraken Technologies as an independent entity, appointing Tim Wan as CEO to accelerate R&D in AI and infrastructure management, reflecting its maturation from a bespoke tool to a standalone operating system for utilities worldwide.[83] This separation, projected to value the platform at up to $15 billion, underscores its proven architecture in enabling rapid innovation amid the shift to decentralized energy systems.[84]Applications in Energy Management
The Kraken platform applies advanced machine learning and data processing to optimize energy supply chains, enabling utilities to automate demand-side management and integrate renewables with consumer devices in real time.[80] It processes billions of data points daily to balance supply and demand, connecting smart meters, EV chargers, heat pumps, and batteries for granular control over distributed energy resources.[85] This facilitates grid stability by dynamically shifting loads away from peak periods, reducing reliance on fossil fuel peaker plants and lowering system costs.[78] In demand response applications, Kraken powers tools like Octopus Energy's Saving Sessions, an intelligent system that aggregates customer flexibility—such as pausing non-essential appliances—to provide grid services during high-demand events.[78] Launched as part of Octopus's operations, this has enabled participation in wholesale markets, where aggregated responses deliver balancing services equivalent to large-scale generation assets.[86] By July 2025, Kraken-supported virtual power plants (VPPs) managed 2 GW of domestic assets, automatically scheduling EV charging and heating to flatten peaks and support renewable intermittency without manual intervention.[62] Kraken's integration with device ecosystems extends to storage and generation, as seen in its June 2024 compatibility with Tesla Powerwall, allowing automated discharge during high-price periods under tariffs like Intelligent Octopus Flux.[87] For utilities adopting the platform, it unifies management of diverse assets, optimizing heat pump operations by predicting usage patterns and aligning them with low-carbon grid signals, thereby enhancing overall efficiency and emissions reductions.[85] These capabilities, scaled to over 70 million accounts globally by September 2025, position Kraken as a tool for transitioning legacy grids to decentralized, responsive systems.[79]Financial Performance
Revenue Growth and Profitability
Octopus Energy Group has experienced rapid revenue expansion since its founding in 2017, scaling from modest operations to a multinational entity with revenues exceeding £12 billion by fiscal year 2023 (ending April 30, 2023).[28] This growth was fueled by aggressive customer acquisition in the UK, the 2022 acquisition of collapsed supplier Bulb, and international market entries, with revenues tripling from approximately £4 billion in the prior period to £12.54 billion in FY23.[88][28] However, revenues stabilized at £12.43 billion in FY24, reflecting a slight 1% decline amid falling wholesale energy prices offset by a 2.79 million customer increase to 7.95 million total accounts.[29][28] Prior to FY23, the company reported consistent losses, including a £161 million net loss in the fiscal year ending April 2022, attributed to absorbing wholesale cost spikes during the energy crisis rather than fully passing them to customers, alongside investments in technology and expansion.[89] Pre-tax losses reached £165.7 million in 2022 on £4.2 billion turnover, highlighting the capital-intensive nature of scaling retail supply amid volatile markets.[90] Profitability emerged in FY23 with a net profit of £203 million (1.6% margin), marking the first full year of positive earnings, driven by higher-margin Kraken software licensing and services revenue, which grew 68% to £90 million, and efficiencies from proprietary technology.[28][29] In FY24, net profit fell to £83 million (0.7% margin), with pre-tax profit dropping 73% to £77.6 million, pressured by £74 million in absorbed costs to maintain customer bills below the UK price cap, rising administrative expenses (up to £1.22 billion from £746 million), and expansion-related outlays including a 77% workforce increase to 8,500 employees.[29][91][28] Despite the dip, underlying EBITDA held at £290 million, supported by gross margin improvement to 9% from higher-value activities like tripling non-UK customers to 1.2 million and expanding Kraken to 51 million accounts globally.[28] This trajectory underscores a shift from loss-making growth phase to modest profitability, vulnerable to commodity price fluctuations and regulatory environments, with net assets bolstering to £1.7 billion via £628 million in equity funding.[29]Funding, Valuation, and Investments
Octopus Energy Group has raised substantial capital through multiple private funding rounds since its founding in 2015, primarily from institutional investors focused on climate and technology. As of 2025, the company has secured approximately $3.65 billion in total funding, enabling rapid scaling of its operations and technology platform.[92] Key early backing came from Octopus Investments, the venture arm of its parent Octopus Group, which provided initial seed capital to launch the retail energy supply business. Major funding accelerated in 2020 with rounds totaling around $577 million from investors including Generation Investment Management, valuing the company as a unicorn for the first time. In December 2023, Octopus completed a Series F round raising $800 million, co-led by CPP Investments with a £300 million commitment, which increased its valuation to about $8 billion.[93] This was followed in June 2024 by additional investments from new backers such as Tokyo Marine and existing shareholders, pushing the post-money valuation to $9 billion—a 15% uplift from the prior round—and supporting international growth.[94]| Funding Round | Date | Amount Raised | Lead Investors | Valuation (Post-Money) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Series F | December 2023 | $800 million | CPP Investments, others | ~$8 billion[93] |
| Follow-on | June 2024 | Undisclosed (part of $550 million total with prior commitments) | Tokyo Marine, existing shareholders | $9 billion[94][95] |