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Are Heat Pumps Worth It in 2026? An Honest Guide for UK Homeowners

Heat pumps are everywhere in the news right now. The government wants them in millions of homes by 2030, there's a £7,500 grant to help cover the cost, and energy companies are falling over themselves to sell you one. But is a heat pump actually worth it for your home, with your budget?

This guide gives you the honest answer — including the situations where a heat pump doesn't make sense.

How a Heat Pump Works (in 30 Seconds)

A heat pump doesn't generate heat — it moves it. An air source heat pump (the most common type in UK homes) extracts warmth from the outside air and transfers it inside to heat your home and hot water. Even when it's cold outside, there's enough ambient energy in the air for the system to work. For every 1 kWh of electricity it uses, a well-installed heat pump typically delivers 3–4 kWh of heat — making it roughly 300–400% efficient compared to a gas boiler's 90–95%.

What Does a Heat Pump Cost in 2026?

TypeInstalled CostAfter £7,500 BUS Grant
Air source heat pump£8,000–£14,000£4,500–£6,500
Ground source heat pump£18,000–£35,000£10,500–£27,500

The Boiler Upgrade Scheme (BUS) provides a £7,500 grant and has been extended until 2030. There's also 0% VAT on heat pumps until March 2027. After the grant, most homeowners pay £4,500–£6,500 out of pocket for an air source system — comparable to a premium gas boiler installation.

Important: Pricing varies hugely between installers. Differences of £3,000–£5,000 for the same property are common. Always get multiple quotes from MCS-certified installers.

Running Costs: Heat Pump vs Gas Boiler

This is where it gets nuanced. Under Ofgem's Q1 2026 price cap, electricity is roughly 24p/kWh and gas about 6p/kWh. Gas is cheaper per unit — but heat pumps are far more efficient per unit of heat delivered.

SystemEfficiencyCost Per kWh of HeatTypical Annual Bill
Modern gas boiler (A-rated)~92%~6.5p£900–£1,100
Heat pump (standard tariff)~310%~7.7p£950–£1,150
Heat pump (specialist tariff)~310%~4.8p£600–£800
Old gas boiler (15+ yrs)~75%~8p£1,200–£1,500
Oil boiler~85%~9p£1,300–£1,800

On a standard electricity tariff, a heat pump roughly matches a new gas boiler on running costs. The economic case becomes much stronger when you use a specialist heat pump tariff (like Octopus Cosy or EDF GoElectric) which can bring electricity down to around 15p/kWh, or when you're replacing an older boiler or oil/LPG system where savings of £250–£1,200 per year are realistic.

When a Heat Pump IS Worth It

When a Heat Pump Might NOT Be Worth It

Other Things to Consider

Radiators: Heat pumps run at lower flow temperatures than gas boilers. Older, undersized radiators may need upgrading (£3,000–£9,000 if all need replacing). Underfloor heating is the ideal partner for a heat pump.

Noise: Modern units run at 35–54 dB — roughly a fridge or quiet conversation. Not silent, but rarely an issue.

Installation: Takes 2–5 days, longer than a boiler swap. A proper heat loss survey beforehand is essential to correct sizing.

The Bottom Line

For most UK homeowners replacing an older heating system, a heat pump is a sound investment in 2026. The £7,500 grant, 0% VAT, specialist tariffs, and a 20-year lifespan make the economics favourable — especially if you act while incentives are available. If your gas boiler is running fine, focus on insulation now and plan for a heat pump when it reaches end of life.

Find out if a heat pump suits your home

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This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Costs and savings vary by property, location and usage. Grant availability is subject to government policy. Always get personalised quotes from MCS-certified installers.