EPC ratings drive rental values as industry body urges realistic targets

EPC ratings drive rental values as industry body urges realistic targets

EPC target with rising rents shows energy-efficient rental homes attracting higher premiums
9:18 AM, 6th May 2026, 4 weeks ago 34
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Energy-efficient properties are attracting rental premiums, as an industry body warns that EPC targets need to remain realistic.

Data from the Mortgage Works reveals that an EPC rating is a core driver of a property value.

Propertymark warns EPC targets must be backed by proper funding as all private rented properties will need to meet EPC C targets by 2030.

More than half of PRS homes rated A-C

According to the data, more than half of private rented properties (51%) are rated A-C , up from 25% ten years ago.

The lender explains that part of the improvement is due to newly built properties, which tend to have a much higher energy efficiency rating (around 97% are rated C or above).

The data also reveals the North of England now sees the highest rental premium, with an A or B-rated property commanding a 13.3% higher monthly rent.

An A or B rated property currently attracts an 8.1% rental premium compared to a similar D rated property, up from 7% in 2024.

Targets must be realistic

Megan Eighteen, President of ARLA Propertymark (Association of Residential Letting Agents), says more support is needed to help landlords with the cost of EPC targets.

She said: “Nationwide Building Society’s latest report highlights both the progress made and the ongoing challenge of improving energy efficiency across the private rented sector.

“It’s encouraging that more than half of privately rented homes are now rated EPC A-C, which can help tenants benefit from warmer homes and lower energy bills. However, much of this progress has come from newer properties, with the biggest challenge now focused on older homes that are more complex and costly to upgrade.

“The stronger gains seen in the North reflect lower property values and more room for improvement, making it easier for some landlords to invest. But this varies across the country, and in many cases upfront costs remain a significant barrier.

“We support the ambition to raise standards, but targets must be realistic and backed by proper funding and clear guidance. Without this, there is a real risk that landlords will scale back investment or exit the market. Over time, that could reduce the number of homes available to rent, which may put further pressure on affordability for tenants.”

According to The Mortgage Works, the average costs to improve older properties, particularly those built before 1919, remain significantly higher, with the average cost to upgrade a pre-1919 property to band C around £10,700 (based on 2024 costs).

Properties built more recently tend to be more energy efficient, meaning fewer improvements are required to bring them up to C standard, with the average cost to upgrade a property constructed between 2003 and 2013, currently rated D–G, to C standard at around £2,500.


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Comments

  • Member Since October 2019 - Comments: 411

    12:11 PM, 28th May 2026, About 5 days ago

    Reply to the comment left by Reluctant Landlord at 06/05/2026 – 18:39
    Very good point. Any ideas how to avoid potential £40k fines for any mistakes?

  • Member Since May 2018 - Comments: 2117

    2:18 PM, 28th May 2026, About 5 days ago

    Reply to the comment left by LaLo at 28/05/2026 – 12:11
    The first thing that any landlord has to do by the 31st May 2026 is to make sure that he or she has sent the Renters Rights Act Information Sheet to all named tenants on the tenancy agreement.

    https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/the-renters-rights-act-information-sheet-2026

    Not doing that is a mistake. There are three days left.

  • Member Since September 2025 - Comments: 2

    2:12 PM, 30th May 2026, About 3 days ago

    Reply to the comment left by David at 06/05/2026 – 10:46
    It is a Trotskyist government. Karl Marx would take side if he were alive today. Peter Hitchins say he was a Trotskyist as a youth. He knows the signs and Starmers is a Trotskyist.

  • Member Since May 2018 - Comments: 2117

    12:02 PM, 1st June 2026, About 1 day ago

    Reply to the comment left by John Milbank at 30/05/2026 – 14:12I”m not sure about Trotskyist….Kier Starmer looks to me to be one of two of our most teflon politicians. But I’m not so sure that he cares very much about Trotskyist principles. He was happy to attack Boris Johnson whilst in power, but when he got in he was happy to accept gifts from rich labour donors claiming that there had been no influence. He was happy to let his chancellor attack pensions by taking them into the inheritance tax net when he’d already lifted his huge public sector pension out of scope of the tax net and so he just wouldn’t be affected by that.

    So when I look at Kier Starmer I might well see a hypocrite and a case of “…I’m all right Jack…and by the way, the rules that I thought should apply to Boris Johnson shouldn’t apply to me because I’m above all that.” But I’m not seeing Trotskyite behaviour. Trotsky criticised the bureaucracy and anti-democratic measures that Stalin introduced. I’m not seeing Kier Starmer doing that….I’m seeing more bureaucracy….I’m seeing teflon…nothing sticks or at least not to me.

    Somebody in Kier Starmer’s position always needs somebody else to blame when things go wrong. “…..of course I delegated that to [name of scapegoat].” I do think something that needs careful watching is the fact that the government refused to publish the results of its court impact assessment.

    Kier Starmer is a lawyer. Whoever got delegated the poisoned chalice of housing, Kier Starmer can reasonably be expected to know what the effect on the courts would be if they got something wrong in the Labour Renters Rights Act.

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