A Commercial MEES exemption is not permanent. If you’ve registered an exemption under the Minimum Energy Efficiency Standards (MEES), it will typically last 5 years (except temporary exemptions).

When that exemption expires, you cannot simply continue letting the property below EPC E without action.

Here’s what happens next.


1. The Property Must Be Reassessed

Once the exemption period ends:

  • The property must be reviewed again

  • A new EPC may be required

  • Improvements must be reconsidered

Energy costs, technology, and regulations may have changed over the 5-year period. Measures that were previously “not cost-effective” may now qualify.

If your certificate is due for renewal, book early:
https://epcrate.co.uk/booking/


2. You Must Improve the Property — If Now Viable

If improvements are now:

  • Technically possible

  • Cost-effective within 7-year payback

  • Not restricted by planning consent

You will be required to implement them to reach E or above.

Failing to do so could make the property unlawfully lettable.


3. You May Register a New Exemption (If Still Eligible)

If conditions haven’t changed and improvements are still:

  • Not cost-effective

  • Blocked by third-party consent

  • Causing devaluation

  • Technically impossible

You may register a new exemption, but fresh evidence is required.

Exemptions do not auto-renew — they must be reapplied for and supported with updated documentation.


4. What If You Do Nothing?

If the exemption expires and:

  • The property remains below EPC E

  • No new exemption is registered

  • The property continues to be let

You risk enforcement action.

Under rules set by the UK Government, penalties can include:

  • Financial fines (based on rateable value)

  • Public listing of the breach

  • Reputational damage

  • Potential loss of rental income

Check current compliance status:
https://epcrate.co.uk/pricing/


5. Has the Minimum Rating Changed?

Future regulatory tightening is possible. If minimum standards increase (for example to EPC C in later years), your property may need further upgrades regardless of previous exemptions.

Planning early avoids sudden compliance pressure.


Timeline Example

Year 1: Exemption registered (property rated F)
Year 5: Exemption expires
After expiry:

  • Reassess EPC

  • Re-evaluate improvements

  • Upgrade property OR

  • Register new exemption

You cannot rely on the old exemption beyond its expiry date.


Best Practice for Landlords

✔ Track exemption expiry dates carefully
✔ Begin reassessment at least 6 months before expiry
✔ Budget for potential improvements
✔ Keep documentation organised
✔ Seek professional EPC guidance

Consult certified assessors:
https://epcrate.co.uk/services-epc-assessors-london/

Meet our company:
https://epcrate.co.uk/about-us-epc-company-london/


Final Answer

When a Commercial MEES exemption expires:

  • The protection ends

  • The property must be reassessed

  • Improvements may become mandatory

  • A new exemption must be registered if still eligible

Ignoring expiry can result in fines and unlawful letting.

Office: 150–160 City Road, London, EC1V 2NX
Phone: 020 3488 4142
Email: info@epcrate.co.uk