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Arrival secures £500,000 to untangle Britain’s broken utilities market for renters

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April 15, 2026
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Arrival secures £500,000 to untangle Britain’s broken utilities market for renters
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A London-based fintech determined to drag Britain’s notoriously opaque utilities market into the twenty-first century has closed a £500,000 pre-seed round led by Fuel Ventures, one of the UK’s most active early-stage investors.

Arrival, founded by Harry Hanlon, pitches itself as a one-stop shop for the grimly familiar ritual of moving house. Rather than forcing tenants to juggle separate contracts for electricity, gas, water, broadband, council tax, the TV licence and rent, the platform bundles the lot into a single onboarding flow that, the company claims, takes under three minutes to complete. Independent research cited by the business suggests the average renter currently burns close to half a working day wrestling with the same task.

The proposition lands at a pointed moment for Britain’s private rented sector. There are roughly 4.6 million privately rented households in England alone, and churn is high, meaning the administrative headache repeats itself on an industrial scale every year. Hanlon argues that the incumbent energy and telecoms giants have quietly profited from the chaos, parking movers on default tariffs that can cost them thousands of pounds more than necessary over the course of a tenancy.

Arrival’s consumer-facing product promises to guarantee the cheapest tariff available on each utility and charges a flat £12.99 management fee, a deliberately transparent pricing model designed to contrast with the byzantine billing structures renters have come to expect. On the business-to-business side, the company says it saves letting agents and build-to-rent operators an average of 90 minutes of administrative time per property and offers a managed rent collection service it claims is up to four times cheaper than rival platforms such as OpenRent.

The wider prize is considerable. Rent arrears are estimated to cost UK landlords more than £470 million a year, a figure that has steadily crept upwards as cost-of-living pressures have squeezed household budgets. By consolidating payments and sitting closer to the tenant’s financial plumbing, Arrival is betting it can materially reduce the risk of missed rent for landlords while taking some of the sting out of moving day for renters.

The fresh capital will be used to accelerate growth in the fast-expanding build-to-rent sector, where institutional landlords are increasingly hungry for technology partners that can streamline operations at scale. The hire of Clare Johnson, previously a director at property management group Centrick, is intended to spearhead that push. The founders have set themselves the bullish target of reaching one million units under management by the end of the year.

Hanlon said the current system for managing household utilities was “fundamentally broken and exploitative”, adding that tenants were wasting critical time each month and frequently paying well over the odds simply because default tariffs went unchallenged. He described the funding as crucial to scaling the platform and cementing partnerships in the build-to-rent space.

Mark Pearson, founder of Fuel Ventures, said Arrival was tackling “a clear and costly inefficiency” within the private rental sector and praised the team’s early traction and understanding of both tenant and operator pain points.

For a market long accused of punishing inertia, Arrival’s pitch is disarmingly simple: make switching and setting up the default, not the exception. Whether the platform can convert that promise into the sort of scale its backers are banking on will depend on how quickly it can wire itself into Britain’s rapidly professionalising rental stock, and whether the big six energy suppliers prove willing, or able, to adapt.

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Arrival secures £500,000 to untangle Britain’s broken utilities market for renters

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