E12000004 · England

Heat pumps across Newark and Sherwood (local authority area): 2026 grant + cost guide

By Jim FellLast updated:

TL;DR

  • BUS grant of £7,500 toward an air-source heat pump applies in Newark and Sherwood (England).
  • Median EPC band across 38,568 local properties: C.
  • 50% of homes sit at band D or below — typical retrofit candidates.
  • Top property band in Newark and Sherwood: D (36%).
  • MCS-certified installer required for a binding heat-loss quote.

What the EPC data shows for Newark and Sherwood

We’ve aggregated the current Energy Performance Certificate band for 38,568 properties in Newark and Sherwood, drawn live from the GOV.UK EPC Register. The median home in our sample sits at band C, with 36% falling into band D and 32% in band C. Around 50% of homes are at band D or below — the cohort with the most realistic retrofit upside.

EPC band distribution across 38,568 properties in Newark and Sherwood
BandPropertiesShareRetrofit context
Band A4111.1%Already exceptional; heat pump replaces fossil heat directly
Band B6,64717.2%Strong fabric; heat-pump-ready after minor checks
Band C12,24131.7%Typical retrofit candidate; small upgrades likely
Band D13,86636.0%Insulation prerequisites likely; well-suited post-upgrade
Band E4,31911.2%Insulation recommendations typically required for BUS
Band F8712.3%Significant fabric improvements before heat pump fit
Band G2130.6%Fabric-first retrofit before any heat-pump consideration
EPC band distribution across 38,568 properties in Newark and SherwoodSource: GOV.UK EPC Register. Sample collected 2026-05-14.

The typical Newark and Sherwood home

What the EPC data shows beyond the headline rating — useful context for sizing a heat-pump install.

  • Floor area: median 82 (25th–75th percentile: 63104 m²). Heat-pump sizing scales roughly with floor area — expect a 5–8 kW unit at the median.
  • Current heating cost: median £638/yr 420– £1,000 typical range). The number an installer’s running-cost saving projection sits against.
  • Mains gas connection: 85% of properties. Most homes are replacing a working gas boiler — the payback case depends heavily on tariff choice + smart scheduling.
  • Property type mix: Detached 35%, End-Terrace 10%, Mid-Terrace 14%, Semi-Detached 39%.
  • Dominant age band: England and Wales: 1950-1966 (18% of homes). Sets the fabric-first work expected before commissioning.

Does the Boiler Upgrade Scheme apply in Newark and Sherwood?

Yes. Newark and Sherwood is in England, where the Boiler Upgrade Scheme (BUS) pays £7,500 toward an air-source heat pump install. The grant is administered by Ofgem and deducted by the installer at the point of invoice — you never see the cash. To qualify, the property must be owner-occupied or privately rented, have a valid EPC issued in the last 10 years, and have no outstanding loft-or-cavity insulation recommendation on the EPC (unless an exemption is documented). In our sample of Newark and Sherwood EPCs the median rating is band C, which means most homes need to clear at least one insulation recommendation before the installer can claim the grant.

Typical install cost in Newark and Sherwood

Pre-grant install costs in Newark and Sherwood typically run £8,000 to £14,000 for a 5–10 kW air-source unit, in line with UK averages — labour rates in E12000004 sit close to the national mean. After the £7,500 BUS deduction most Newark and Sherwoodhomeowners pay £1,500 to £6,500 out of pocket. The figure within that range that applies to your property depends on three things: heat-loss sizing (set by floor area, fabric and air-tightness), radiator upgrades (most pre-2000s homes need at least one or two changed), and hot-water cylinder provision. An MCS-certified engineer issues the binding quote after a heat-loss calculation per BS EN 12831.

What this means for your home

Whether a heat pump is a good fit for your specific home in Newark and Sherwooddepends on three factors the EPC alone can’t answer: roof + outdoor space for the external unit, radiator sizing throughout the heating circuit, and your current heating fuel + tariff. Propertoasty’s free pre-survey check combines your address, an EPC pull, the Google Solar API’s roof data, and a floorplan vision analysis to produce an installer-ready report — typically takes about five minutes.

Run a free pre-survey check on your home — installer-ready report, BUS-eligibility verdict, sizing range, and a list of MCS-certified installers covering Newark and Sherwood.

How Newark and Sherwood compares

Compared with the England + Wales average band-D share of roughly 45%, Newark and Sherwood’s 36% sits below the national midpoint. Bands E and worse — typical pre-1930s homes without significant retrofit — make up 14% of the local sample, which compares to the E&W average of around 22%.

Sources

  1. GOV.UK — Boiler Upgrade Scheme — accessed May 2026
  2. Ofgem — Boiler Upgrade Scheme guidance — accessed May 2026
  3. MCS — Find an installer — accessed May 2026
  4. GOV.UK — Find an energy certificate (EPC Register) — accessed May 2026
  5. Energy Saving Trust — Air source heat pumps — accessed May 2026

EPC aggregate data contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0 (© Crown copyright and database right).