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costs 20 January 2026 · 5 min read

How Much Does a Heat Pump Cost in Bristol? (2026 Prices)

Detailed breakdown of heat pump costs in Bristol for 2026. By property type, brand, and including the £7,500 BUS grant. Transparent pricing from local installers.

“How much does a heat pump cost?” is the first question every Bristol homeowner asks — and rightly so. Unfortunately, most answers online are vague national averages that don’t reflect Bristol’s specific housing stock or local pricing.

This guide gives you real Bristol prices for 2026, broken down by property type, brand, and what’s included. All costs shown are before and after the £7,500 Boiler Upgrade Scheme (BUS) grant.

Quick Answer: Bristol Heat Pump Costs 2026

Property TypeSystem SizeBefore GrantAfter £7,500 Grant
Flat / 1-2 bed terrace5–6 kW£8,000–£10,000£500–£2,500
3-bed semi-detached7–10 kW£10,000–£12,000£2,500–£4,500
3-bed terrace (Victorian)8–10 kW£10,000–£13,000£2,500–£5,500
4-bed detached10–12 kW£12,000–£14,000£4,500–£6,500
5+ bed large house12–16 kW£14,000–£18,000£6,500–£10,500

These are all-inclusive prices covering the heat pump unit, hot water cylinder, installation labour, MCS certification, and the grant application.

What’s Included in These Prices?

A proper heat pump quote should include everything — no surprises. Here’s what our Bristol prices cover:

  1. Heat pump unit — the outdoor unit and any indoor components
  2. Hot water cylinder — typically 170–250 litres, well-insulated
  3. Installation labour — 2–5 days depending on complexity
  4. Pipework — connecting the heat pump to your existing radiator system
  5. Electrical work — dedicated circuit, consumer unit upgrade if needed
  6. Controls — weather compensation controller, room thermostat
  7. MCS certification — required for the BUS grant
  8. BUS grant application — we handle all Ofgem paperwork
  9. Commissioning — system tested, balanced, and handed over
  10. Warranty registration — 5–10 years depending on brand

What Might Cost Extra?

Some properties need additional work beyond a standard installation:

Additional WorkTypical Cost
Radiator upgrades (3–5 radiators)£1,500–£3,000
Full radiator replacement (whole house)£3,000–£5,000
Microbore pipework replacement£1,000–£2,500
Internal wall insulation (per room)£1,500–£2,500
Electrical consumer unit upgrade£300–£500
Planning application (conservation area)Free (we include this)
Scaffolding (if needed)£500–£1,000

We identify all additional costs during the free survey so your quote is complete — no hidden extras.

Cost by Brand

Different heat pump brands come at different price points. Here’s what you can expect in Bristol:

Budget-Friendly

  • Grant Aerona3 — £7,500–£9,000 (before grant). Solid UK brand, good warranty.
  • Samsung EHS — £8,000–£10,000. Excellent quiet models, great for terraces.
  • Mitsubishi Ecodan — £9,000–£12,000. The UK’s best-selling heat pump. Proven reliability.
  • Daikin Altherma 3 — £9,500–£12,500. Japanese engineering, excellent cold-weather performance.
  • Worcester Bosch Compress 5800i — £9,000–£11,500. Compact, quiet, trusted brand.

Premium

  • Vaillant aroTHERM Plus — £10,000–£14,000. 75°C flow temp, R290 refrigerant. Best for period homes.
  • NIBE F2120 — £11,000–£15,000. Swedish premium, whisper-quiet, top efficiency.

Cost by Bristol Area

Bristol’s diverse housing stock means costs vary by area:

Lower Cost Areas (cavity walls, simpler homes)

  • Henleaze, Knowle, Fishponds, Horfield, Kingswood — 1930s semis with cavity walls. Typically £10,000–£12,000 before grant.

Mid-Range Areas

  • Bishopston, Redland, Bedminster, Totterdown — Mix of Victorian terraces and semis. Typically £10,000–£14,000 before grant.

Higher Cost Areas (period homes, conservation areas)

  • Clifton, Cotham, Montpelier — Georgian/Victorian, conservation areas, larger properties. Typically £12,000–£18,000 before grant.

The £7,500 BUS Grant

The Boiler Upgrade Scheme (BUS) provides a £7,500 grant for air source heat pump installations. Key facts:

  • Available to all homeowners (owner-occupiers and landlords)
  • Existing buildings only (not new-build)
  • Must be MCS-certified installation (we are MCS certified)
  • Applied for after survey, before installation
  • Deducted from your invoice — you never pay the full price
  • We handle the entire application — Ofgem typically approves within 3–5 working days

Finance Options

If you’d rather spread the cost:

  • 0% finance available on selected installations (subject to status)
  • Green home finance from specialist lenders
  • Local authority schemes — Bristol City Council occasionally offers additional grants

How to Get an Accurate Quote

Online estimates are a starting point, but every property is different. The only way to get an accurate price is a free home survey where we:

  1. Measure your property and calculate heat loss room-by-room
  2. Assess your existing radiators and pipework
  3. Check for conservation area or planning requirements
  4. Recommend the right heat pump brand and size
  5. Provide a detailed, itemised quote with the grant deducted

Our surveys are free, take about an hour, and there’s absolutely no obligation.

Is a Heat Pump Worth the Cost?

The simple maths for a typical 3-bed Bristol semi:

  • Cost after grant: ~£3,500
  • Annual saving vs gas: ~£350–£500
  • Payback period: 7–10 years
  • System lifespan: 20–25 years
  • Total lifetime saving: £3,500–£9,000 after payback
  • Property value increase: ~£11,000 (Rightmove estimate)

So yes — for most Bristol homeowners, a heat pump is a genuinely good financial decision, even before you consider the environmental benefits.

Ready to Switch to a Heat Pump?

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