UK inflation touches a 40-year high of 9%.

As millions of homes face increased energy costs, prices are rising at their quickest rate in 40 years.

Inflation in the United Kingdom increased to 9% in the year to April, up from 7% in March.

Last month, millions of consumers saw their energy expenses soar by an astonishing £700 per year.

The cost of living is rising due to higher gasoline and food prices caused by the Ukraine crisis, with inflation predicted to continue this year.

Citizens Advice said “the caution lights could not be blinking brighter” for the government to provide more assistance to homes than it is today, and debt charities urged anyone who is in debt to contact them.

According to the Office for National Statistics, higher electricity and gas costs accounted for over three quarters of the increase in inflation in April (ONS).

“Behind these stats are desperate stories. Dame Clare Moriarty, chief executive of Citizens Advice, described people washing in their kitchen sinks because they can’t afford a hot shower; parents skipping meals to feed their children; and disabled people who can’t afford to use crucial equipment due to rising energy bills.

Cheryl Holmes, a mother of two, said she was attempting to keep her living expenditures “as low as possible” by cutting back on food and clothing purchases and cancelling television subscriptions.

“For several years, I’ve been shutting off the lights in each room and lowering down the thermostat.

“It’s a war, and there doesn’t appear to be much more I can do.”

Last month, a higher energy price limit – the maximum price per unit that suppliers can charge consumers – went into effect, resulting in an average annual bill of £1,971 for homes using a standard amount of gas and electricity.

Households of all income levels had previously experienced equal rates of inflation, but the poorest are now being affected the hardest by rising prices since they must spend significantly more of their household budgets on gas and electricity, according to think tank the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS).

The Office for National Statistics, which reports the UK’s inflation rate, said the rising cost of raw materials for food products, transportation equipment, and other items contributed to the increase.

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