Energies
EPC Rating Explained — What It Means for Your Home
What EPC ratings mean, how they are calculated, how to improve your rating, and why it matters for selling, renting, and energy costs. UK guide.
An Energy Performance Certificate (EPC) rates how energy efficient your home is. It affects your energy bills, your property’s value, and whether you can legally rent it out.
The EPC Rating Scale
| Rating |
Band |
Colour |
Description |
| 92–100 |
A |
Dark green |
Extremely efficient — typically new builds with heat pumps |
| 81–91 |
B |
Green |
Very efficient — well-insulated, modern heating |
| 69–80 |
C |
Yellow-green |
Good — above average efficiency |
| 55–68 |
D |
Yellow |
Average — most UK homes fall here |
| 39–54 |
E |
Orange |
Below average — older properties with some upgrades |
| 21–38 |
F |
Dark orange |
Poor — limited insulation, older heating |
| 1–20 |
G |
Red |
Very poor — uninsulated, inefficient throughout |
The average UK home is rated D (score around 60–68).
What an EPC Certificate Shows
| Section |
What it tells you |
| Current energy efficiency rating |
A to G band with numerical score |
| Potential energy efficiency rating |
What you could achieve with recommended improvements |
| Estimated energy costs per year |
Lighting, heating, and hot water costs broken down |
| Recommended improvements |
Specific upgrades with estimated savings and costs |
| Environmental impact rating |
CO2 emissions rating (A to G) |
| Property details |
Floor area, construction type, heating system |
When You Need an EPC
| Situation |
EPC required? |
| Selling a property |
Yes — must be available to buyers before marketing |
| Renting out a property |
Yes — must be minimum E rating (England and Wales) |
| Building a new property |
Yes — based on design specifications |
| Living in your own home (not selling/letting) |
No |
| Listed building exemptions |
May be exempt if improvements would unacceptably alter the building |
| Scotland |
Uses a separate Energy Performance Certificate system |
Minimum EPC for Landlords
| Requirement |
Details |
| Current minimum |
E rating (England and Wales since April 2020) |
| Applies to |
All new and existing tenancies (private rented sector) |
| Penalty for non-compliance |
Up to £5,000 per property |
| Proposed future minimum |
C rating — delayed, no confirmed date yet |
| Exemptions |
Where improvements would cost more than the cap (currently £3,500 inc. VAT), listed buildings, certain consent issues |
How the Rating Is Calculated
The assessor examines:
| Factor |
Impact on rating |
| Wall insulation |
High — cavity wall or solid wall insulation makes a major difference |
| Loft insulation |
High — 270mm recommended depth |
| Double or triple glazing |
Medium |
| Boiler efficiency and age |
High — modern condensing boilers score much better |
| Heating controls |
Medium — programmable thermostat, TRVs |
| Hot water system |
Medium — cylinder insulation, solar thermal |
| Renewable energy |
High — solar panels, heat pumps significantly improve ratings |
| Draught proofing |
Low to medium |
| Floor insulation |
Medium |
| Lighting |
Low — LED bulbs help marginally |
What Is NOT Considered
| Not assessed |
Notes |
| Smart meters |
Do not affect your EPC rating |
| Appliances |
Fridges, ovens, etc. are excluded |
| Electric car charging |
Not part of the assessment |
| Property condition |
Damp, structural issues are outside scope |
| Actual energy usage |
The rating is based on the property, not how you use it |
How to Improve Your EPC Rating
| Improvement |
Typical cost |
Rating improvement |
Payback time |
| Loft insulation (0 to 270mm) |
£300–£600 |
5–10 points |
2–3 years |
| Cavity wall insulation |
£500–£1,500 |
5–15 points |
3–5 years |
| Upgrade boiler to condensing |
£2,000–£4,000 |
5–15 points |
8–12 years |
| LED lighting throughout |
£50–£200 |
1–3 points |
Under 1 year |
| Double glazing |
£4,000–£8,000 |
3–8 points |
15–20 years |
| Solar panels (4kW) |
£5,000–£8,000 |
5–15 points |
10–15 years |
| Air source heat pump |
£10,000–£18,000 |
10–20 points |
12–18 years |
| Hot water cylinder insulation |
£20–£50 |
1–3 points |
Under 1 year |
| Draught proofing |
£100–£300 |
1–3 points |
1–2 years |
The cheapest and most effective starting point is usually loft insulation, cavity wall insulation, and draught proofing.
Does EPC Rating Affect Property Value?
| Rating |
Impact on value |
| A or B |
Can add 5–15% compared to G-rated equivalent |
| C |
Increasingly expected by buyers — avoids future upgrade costs |
| D |
Average — no premium or penalty |
| E or below |
May reduce value, especially for buy-to-let investors who need minimum E |
| F or G |
Significant negative impact — buyers factor in upgrade costs |
Research from the Department for Energy Security suggests that improving from G to E can add several thousand pounds to a property’s value.
How to Get an EPC
| Step |
Details |
| Find an assessor |
Search the EPC Register or use an accredited energy assessor |
| Book an appointment |
Assessment typically takes 45–60 minutes on site |
| Assessment |
Assessor inspects walls, loft, windows, heating, hot water |
| Certificate issued |
Uploaded to the national EPC Register, usually within a few days |
| Cost |
£60 to £120 typically |
| Validity |
10 years |
How to Find Your Existing EPC
You can check your current EPC for free at gov.uk/find-energy-certificate. Enter your postcode to see if you already have a valid certificate.
EPC in Scotland
| Feature |
England and Wales |
Scotland |
| Certificate name |
EPC |
EPC (plus Energy Report for sales) |
| Minimum for rentals |
E |
E (from April 2022) |
| Home Report |
Not required |
Required for sales (includes EPC) |
| Register |
England and Wales EPC Register |
Scottish EPC Register |
Common EPC Mistakes
| Mistake |
Why it matters |
| Not showing proof of insulation |
If the assessor cannot see cavity fill or loft insulation, they assume the worst |
| Not having boiler service record |
Some assessors may default to lower efficiency |
| Loft hatch inaccessible |
Cannot verify loft insulation → lower assumed rating |
| Recent improvements not documented |
Keep receipts and FENSA/HETAS certificates for windows, heating etc. |
Tip: Before your assessment, gather documents showing any improvements — insulation certificates, boiler installation records, FENSA certificates for windows.
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