Energy Performance Certificates (EPCs) are often misunderstood. Many property owners assume an EPC shows how efficient their home actually is — or how much energy it uses in real life.
In reality, an EPC is a standardised model, not a performance report. It measures certain technical features very precisely — and completely ignores other real-world factors.
Understanding what an EPC does and does not measure helps you interpret your rating correctly, avoid wrong assumptions, and make smarter upgrade decisions.
What an EPC Really Measures
An EPC is based on the SAP (Standard Assessment Procedure) for domestic buildings. It uses fixed assumptions so every property can be compared fairly.
1. The building fabric (how well heat is retained)
The EPC measures:
Wall type and insulation (solid, cavity, insulated or not)
Roof / loft insulation thickness
Floor construction
Window type (single, double, triple glazing)
This determines heat loss — the biggest factor in your EPC rating.
2. Heating and hot water systems
The EPC assesses:
Boiler or heating system type and efficiency
Age and fuel type (gas, oil, electric, heat pump, etc.)
Hot water cylinder insulation
Presence of smart or programmable controls
Modern, efficient systems score significantly higher.
3. Fixed lighting efficiency
The EPC checks:
Percentage of low-energy lighting (LEDs)
Lighting type in fixed fittings
This has a smaller impact but still contributes to the overall score.
4. Renewable and low-carbon technologies
The EPC includes:
Solar PV panels
Solar thermal hot water
Heat pumps
Biomass systems
These improve your rating even if you personally don’t use much energy.
5. Property size and layout
The EPC model uses:
Total floor area
Number of storeys
Room count
Construction age
This affects energy demand calculations and scoring thresholds.
What an EPC Completely Ignores
This is where most confusion comes from 👇
1. How much energy you personally use
Your EPC does not measure:
Your actual gas or electricity bills
Whether you heat only one room or the whole house
Whether you are energy-conscious or wasteful
Two identical homes with identical EPCs can have wildly different bills.
2. Number of occupants
A home with 1 person and a home with 6 people will get the same EPC if the buildings are identical — even though energy use will be very different.
3. Lifestyle and behaviour
The EPC ignores:
How often you use heating
Shower length or frequency
Appliance usage (tumble dryers, gaming PCs, etc.)
Working from home energy usage
It assumes an average, standardised household.
4. Energy tariffs or suppliers
Your EPC does not consider:
Whether you’re on a cheap or expensive tariff
Whether your electricity is green or fossil-based
Smart meters or time-of-use pricing
5. Temporary or portable improvements
The EPC ignores:
Portable heaters
Plug-in air conditioners
Draft excluders not permanently installed
Temporary insulation solutions
Only fixed, permanent features count.
Why This Matters
Many homeowners panic when:
Their EPC is low even though their bills are low
Their EPC is high even though their bills are high
This is not a contradiction — it’s because EPCs measure building potential efficiency, not real-world consumption.
When This Causes Problems
Misunderstanding EPCs can lead to:
Unnecessary upgrades
Wrong investment decisions
Disputes with buyers or tenants
Confusion about compliance
That’s why professional interpretation matters — not just the number on the certificate.
If you want help understanding your EPC properly or checking whether it reflects your property accurately, EPCrate’s accredited assessors can help:
👉 EPC Assessors London: https://epcrate.co.uk/services-epc-assessors-london/
👉 Book an Assessment: https://epcrate.co.uk/booking/
Final Thoughts
An EPC is a technical, standardised model of your property — not a report card on how you live.
It measures:
Fabric efficiency
Heating and hot water systems
Permanent energy features
It ignores:
Human behaviour
Energy bills
Lifestyle
Tariffs
Understanding this distinction protects you from making costly assumptions and helps you use your EPC as the tool it was designed to be — a building efficiency benchmark, not a personal energy judgement.
You can contact EPCrate to review or challenge your EPC if you suspect errors: Contact Us – EPC Services London.
📍 Address: 150–160 City Road, London, EC1V 2NX
📞 Phone: 020 3488 4142
📧 Email: info@epcrate.co.uk