E
EPCDeadline
28M+ properties analysed from official DLUHC data

Check your property's
EPC compliance

See your rating, deadline exposure, and improvement roadmap — free, instant, using official government data.

🏠 28M+ properties🔄 Updated monthly 100% free
0M+
Certificates analysed
0%
PRS homes below Band C
Oct 2030
Compliance deadline
£30,000
Maximum fine per property

How it works

1

Search

Enter your postcode. We check official EPC records for your property instantly.

2

View

See your rating, SAP score, fine exposure, and a personalised improvement roadmap.

3

Act

Get free quotes from up to 3 MCS-certified installers in your area.

National EPC distribution

How England & Wales properties are rated right now

A
1%
B
14%
C
33%
D
37%
E
12%
F
2%
G
1%
A–C CompliantD At riskE–G Non-compliant

Based on 28,412,617 certificates in our database

Why landlords need to act now

PENALTY

£30,000 fine exposure

Non-compliant properties face fines up to £30,000 per property after October 2030 — a sixfold increase from the previous cap.

URGENCY

The hidden 2029 deadline

The EPC methodology changes in October 2029 to the stricter Home Energy Model. Properties rated before then keep the current, more lenient standard.

SAVINGS

Cost cap opportunity

Qualifying improvements from October 2025 count towards your £10,000 cap. Start now to spread the cost over four years instead of paying everything at once.

Browse areas

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Explore EPC compliance data by local authority

Don't wait for the deadline

Properties rated under the current, more lenient EPC methodology before October 2029 keep their rating. Check yours now.

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Frequently asked questions

From 1 October 2030, all private rented properties in England and Wales must achieve an EPC rating of Band C or above. This was confirmed under the Warm Homes Plan in January 2026. Non-compliant landlords face fines of up to £30,000 per property.

Landlords must spend up to £10,000 per property attempting to reach Band C. Any qualifying energy-efficiency improvements made from 1 October 2025 count retroactively towards this cap. If you cannot reach Band C after spending £10,000, you may be eligible for an exemption.

The EPC methodology is being replaced by the Home Energy Model (HEM) from October 2029. Properties rated under the current system before this date keep their rating until it expires. The new system measures fabric performance and is expected to make Band C harder to achieve.

All property data comes from the official EPC Open Data Register maintained by DLUHC (Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities). The dataset contains over 28 million certificates for England and Wales and is updated monthly under the Open Government Licence.

Yes. Checking your property’s EPC compliance status, viewing improvement recommendations, and understanding your deadline exposure is completely free. If you choose to request quotes from installers, we connect you with up to three certified professionals at no cost to you.