Recently bought property with EPC rating D?

Recently bought property with EPC rating D?

11:17 AM, 5th April 2023, About A year ago 36

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Hello, Last year I bought a property with an EPC rating of D. This is the only property I have. Now all the news about upgrading a property to a minimum of EPC rating of C is making me think what action should I take to do this?

When I look at our EPC certificate, it mentions the recommended actions to improve rating to B but not C.

The actions appearing are:
1) Floor insulation
2) Solar water heating
3) Solar photovoltaic panels

The certificate says that carrying out the above changes will improve the rating from D to B.

Do any readers from Property118 have any suggestions on what I should do to achieve an EPC rating of C?

Thank you,

Abdus


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Comments

Abdus Subhan

12:15 PM, 9th April 2023, About A year ago

Thanks a lot everyone for your feedback and the ideas. Much appreciated.
Previous people in my property done assessment in 2021. After comparing it with other neighbours, the main difference is in loft insulation. They have 300mm insulation whereas I have 200mm.
Looks like probably I need to invest on insulation but not sure if software change in few months time and make this change not enough to achieve rating C.
I also wanted to clarify that this new EPC minimum rating condition is only for rented properties?
E.g., if a family living in a property whose EPC rating is D and not renting out. Do they still need to bring it to rating C by 2028 or they can keep it till how long they want?

Thanks

Kevin Tallentire

14:00 PM, 15th May 2023, About A year ago

Reply to the comment left by N. T at 05/04/2023 - 22:14
Hi NT,

I was wondering if you could give me some advice on getting my property to EPC C from D ? I have the EPC report I could share with you if you could provide your email address ?

Many Thanks,
Kev.

N. T

15:36 PM, 15th May 2023, About A year ago

GlanACC

20:27 PM, 15th May 2023, About A year ago

I wouldn't do anything at the moment until the bill has been given royal assent (likely to be 12 months from now) as the bill may change. Spending any money now is unlikely to be be allowed against the 'improvement cap' which is mooted to be around £10,000. The only thing I have done so far is top up the loft insulation which was quite cheap, this in itself didn't move any of my properties out of band D and E

student landlord

18:35 PM, 16th May 2023, About A year ago

Reply to the comment left by Qr code at 06/04/2023 - 22:46
Again this depends on the assessor. One of my properties just missed Cand went into D despite having double and secondary glazing, triple the recommended depth of loft insulation, low energy lightbulbs throughout. I was happy to replace my 20-year-old boiler with a brand-new one and asked the assessor what difference it would make and he said “absolutely none” A gas boiler is a gas boiler regardless of age. So that would’ve been nearly £3000 down the pan. I will of course replace it when it needs it but not before simply to try to achieve a C grade

Richard Phillips

18:39 PM, 16th May 2023, About A year ago

Reply to the comment left by York student landlord at 16/05/2023 - 18:35
Assuming that the 20 year old boiler was a non-condensing one? Or at least less efficient than a new one, then a new boiler SHOULD make a difference. Obviuosly I don't know what you had but if you can look at https://www.ncm-pcdb.org.uk/sap/pcdbsearch.jsp?pid=26 then you can see the efficiency of each boiler make and model.
The assessor in question may just be ticking the gas boiler option rather than spending time looking the boiler up (which is a function of all the RdSAP software.

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