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Rightmove: Rental EPCs must be improved with government help

A huge survey involving analysis of over 14,000 properties suggests an urgent need for the next government to help private rental sector properties become greener. 

Rightmove, which conducted the research, says at least 18m homes have an EPC rating of D or below. This takes into account both homes that have an EPC, and those that have never had one because they haven’t been sold or rented out since EPCs were introduced. 

It equates to 55% of all UK housing stock.  

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Rightmove’s Energy Bills Tracker shows that the difference in bills between homes with higher and lower energy efficiency ratings can be significant.  

The analysis of government data shows that the average energy bill of a three-bedroom house with an EPC rating of F is £4,431 per year, compared with £1,669 for the same sized house with an EPC rating of C – that’s a difference of £2,762. 

Rightmove says green improvements, if suitable for the home, could include window upgrades, roof or floor insulation, installing solar panels or moving from a gas boiler to a heat pump. 

EPC Rating

Average annual energy bill for three bed house

A

£508

B

£1,039

C

£1,669

D

£2,340

E

£3,292

F

£4,431

G

£5,674

A new Rightmove study of 14,091 properties, conducted in May, shows that the biggest motivator for someone to make green changes to their home is if it could reduce their energy bills. 

The study also found that 87% of renters and 83% of home-owners believe more action should be taken to help people make their homes greener.  

Rightmove says whichever party wins the election to prioritise making green home incentives available to as many homes as possible, as soon as possible, to help the millions of homes that need to be improved. 

Tim Bannister, Rightmove’s property expert, says: “While it’s a start to see some green support proposed in the party manifestos, there’s a big job to be done to address the widescale issue that at least 18 million UK homes need to be improved. 

“Many home-owners and landlords need urgent access to schemes that enable them to make these improvements, which could help with huge savings on energy bills. Each home requires different improvements and the upfront costs are a huge barrier to change. Without more help, many home-owners and tenants will continue to live in high-carbon emitting homes with high energy costs.” 

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    What has it got to do with Rightmove? 🤔

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    I'm a chartered surveyor and both a commercial and domestic landlord.
    Before doing a refurb of a house or flat I get a DRAFT predicted EPC prepared by a local energy assessor. I aim to get BOTH the 'Running Cost' EPC to Grade C and also the 'CO2 Pollution' EPC to Grade C. A lot of people do not realise that domestic EPCs have two separate Grades on the certificate - one measuring Running Cost and one measuring CO2 Pollution.

    It doesn't take much to put 2 x layers of new Rockwool in a home's loft (one at right angles to the other), get a local plasterer to fit a sheet of 5cm thick Celotex on the inside of external facing walls and cash-in the generous £7,500 Government grant (yes FREE MONEY) to install an efficient high-temperature electric heat pump from Octopus Energy. I've had an Octopus Cosy 6 heat pump installed in a rental house I own in Bracknell. The old gas boiler came out and the new heat pump went in. It powers up the existing radiators and its working extremely well.
    Oh and if you want to put a stop to running condensation on windows, damp and mould, get a handyman to install a Nuaire PIV ventilation unit. Clothes then actually dry when they come out of the washing machine and towels dry after a bath - all year round.
    It's common sense.

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    Surely as a chartered surveyor, you would do your own assessment prior to any work being carried out?

     
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    The EPC isn't worth the paper it is written on, a flat I was renting 2 years ago hardly scraped a grade G 3 years ago, and then strangely when it went up for sale it had jumped to a grade C, without any work being carried out. The selling agent is an extremely well known London agent who just happens to do EPCs in house and also inventories, not that they advertise those facts, I am sure their involvement had nothing to do with the improved grade.

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    Gibbo = Troll who suffers from logorrhea

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    Well done, Colin. I had to look that one up, but it is SO accurate. As they say, "Every day is a day at school".

     
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