Energies
Hydrogen-Ready Boilers Explained — Are They Worth Waiting For?
What are hydrogen-ready boilers, how do they work, should you buy one now, and what's the future of hydrogen heating in the UK?
Hydrogen-ready boilers have been marketed as a drop-in solution for the UK’s heating transition — keep your gas boiler infrastructure but switch the fuel. But with government policy shifting towards heat pumps, is hydrogen heating actually going to happen?
What Is a Hydrogen-Ready Boiler?
| Feature |
Detail |
| How it works now |
Runs on natural gas — identical to a standard gas boiler |
| Future conversion |
Can be converted to run on 100% hydrogen |
| Conversion process |
Swap a few internal components (burner, valve, flue sensor) |
| Conversion time |
Estimated a few hours by an engineer |
| Conversion cost |
Estimated £100–£500 (but uncertain — hydrogen network doesn’t exist yet) |
| Cost vs standard boiler |
Roughly the same (no significant premium) |
| Manufacturers |
Worcester Bosch, Baxi, Vaillant, Viessmann, Ideal |
The Hydrogen Heating Plan
The original vision was:
| Step |
Detail |
| 1 |
Hydrogen-ready boilers installed in millions of homes |
| 2 |
Hydrogen production scaled up (electrolysis from renewable energy) |
| 3 |
Gas grid gradually converted from natural gas to hydrogen |
| 4 |
Boilers converted to hydrogen at relatively low cost |
| 5 |
Homes heated by low-carbon hydrogen instead of fossil gas |
What’s Actually Happened
| Event |
Detail |
| Hydrogen village trial (Whitby, Redcar) |
Cancelled — insufficient community support |
| Government hydrogen strategy |
Focused more on industrial hydrogen use |
| Heat pump targets |
600,000 heat pump installations per year by 2028 |
| BUS grant |
£7,500 towards heat pumps — no equivalent for hydrogen boilers |
| Future Homes Standard 2025 |
New builds must have low-carbon heating (heat pumps, not hydrogen) |
| 2026 decision |
Government to decide hydrogen’s role in home heating |
Should You Buy a Hydrogen-Ready Boiler?
If You Need a New Boiler Now
| Situation |
Recommendation |
| Old boiler broken, need replacement now |
Hydrogen-ready boiler is fine — same cost as standard |
| Can afford a heat pump (with grant) |
Heat pump is the better long-term bet |
| Renting / can’t install a heat pump |
Hydrogen-ready boiler makes sense |
| Planning to move within 5 years |
Standard or hydrogen-ready boiler — don’t over-invest |
If You’re Planning Ahead
| Strategy |
Why |
| Install a heat pump if possible |
Proven technology, grants available, certain future |
| Don’t delay a broken boiler for hydrogen |
Hydrogen network may never come to domestic properties |
| Hydrogen-ready costs nothing extra |
Choose it over a standard boiler if buying gas anyway |
Hydrogen vs Heat Pumps
| Feature |
Hydrogen boiler |
Heat pump (air source) |
| Technology readiness |
Not yet available (no hydrogen network) |
Available now |
| Government support |
Uncertain |
£7,500 BUS grant |
| Running cost estimate |
Uncertain (hydrogen likely expensive) |
£700–£1,400/year (proven) |
| Efficiency |
~85% (similar to gas) |
250–350% (COP 2.5–3.5) |
| Carbon reduction |
Depends on how hydrogen is produced |
Significant (especially with renewable electricity) |
| Disruption to install |
Minimal (if already on gas) |
Moderate (external unit, possibly new radiators) |
| Infrastructure needed |
Entire gas grid conversion |
Electricity grid (already exists) |
| Home modifications |
Minimal |
May need larger radiators or underfloor heating |
| Certainty of happening |
Low for domestic use |
High — government-backed |
The Efficiency Problem
| Heating system |
Efficiency |
Energy to produce 1kWh of heat |
| Heat pump |
300%+ (COP 3.0+) |
0.33 kWh electricity |
| Gas boiler |
92% |
1.09 kWh gas |
| Hydrogen boiler |
~85% |
1.18 kWh hydrogen |
| Hydrogen production (electrolysis) |
~70% |
1.43 kWh electricity to make hydrogen |
| Net: hydrogen boiler from electricity |
~60% |
1.67 kWh electricity per 1 kWh heat |
Using electricity to make hydrogen to burn in a boiler uses roughly 5 times more electricity than using that electricity in a heat pump. This is the fundamental efficiency argument against hydrogen heating.
Timeline
| Date |
Event |
| Now |
Hydrogen-ready boilers sold (run on natural gas) |
| 2025 |
Future Homes Standard — new builds need low-carbon heating |
| 2026 |
Government decision on hydrogen for domestic heating |
| 2028 |
Target of 600,000 heat pump installations per year |
| 2035 |
Phase-out of new gas boiler installations |
| 2050 |
UK net zero target |
What the Industry Says
| Organisation |
Position |
| Climate Change Committee |
Heat pumps should be the primary solution; hydrogen for heating is “not recommended” |
| National Infrastructure Commission |
Electrification (heat pumps) preferred over hydrogen for most homes |
| Boiler manufacturers |
Promoting hydrogen-ready (but also developing heat pumps) |
| Energy networks |
Mixed — some want hydrogen to maintain gas infrastructure |
| Most independent analysis |
Hydrogen domestic heating unlikely at scale |
Costs Comparison
| System |
Install cost |
Annual running cost |
15-year total |
| Gas boiler (now) |
£2,500 – £4,000 |
£900 – £1,400 |
£16,000 – £25,000 |
| Hydrogen-ready boiler |
£2,500 – £4,000 |
Same as gas (until converted) |
Same as gas (until converted) |
| Air source heat pump |
£8,000 – £15,000 (before grant) |
£700 – £1,400 |
£18,500 – £36,000 |
| Air source heat pump |
£500 – £7,500 (after BUS grant) |
£700 – £1,400 |
£11,000 – £28,500 |
Summary
| Question |
Answer |
| Should I buy a hydrogen-ready boiler? |
Yes, if buying gas anyway — same cost |
| Should I delay getting a heat pump for hydrogen? |
No — hydrogen heating is uncertain |
| Will hydrogen replace gas in homes? |
Unlikely for most homes |
| Best long-term investment? |
Heat pump (proven, efficient, government-backed) |
| Gas boiler ban date |
2035 for new installations |
| Existing gas boilers |
Can operate and be repaired after 2035 |