Insulation Cost Calculator UK
Estimate your loft, cavity wall, solid wall, floor & roof insulation installation costs instantly. Includes energy savings projections, EPC improvement guidance, payback period, and UK grant eligibility checks. Updated for 2024-2025 pricing.
π Home Insulation Cost Estimator
Select your property type and insulation requirements below. The calculator estimates material costs, labour, total installation cost, annual energy savings, COβ reduction, and payback period based on current UK market rates.
Default based on property type. Adjust for your specific measurements.
π Your Estimate
Adjust the inputs and click Calculate to see your personalised insulation cost estimate.
π Insulation Cost Formula Understanding the engineering pricing model
Total Cost = Materials + Labour + Preparation + Finishing
Materials β The insulation product itself (mineral wool, PIR boards, EPS beads, spray foam, etc.). Priced per mΒ² based on lambda value and required thickness to meet UK Building Regulations Part L U-value targets.
Labour β Installation labour at Β£180-Β£320 per day for qualified insulation installers. Includes setup, application, and cleanup. PAS 2035-compliant installers may charge 10-20% more.
Preparation β Surface cleaning, removing old insulation, treating damp or mould, applying vapour barriers, installing battens or framing, and ensuring thermal envelope continuity.
Finishing β Plastering over internal insulation, rendering for external wall insulation, loft boarding, vapour control layers, and decorative finishes. Scaffolding costs for external work are included here.
π¬ Heat Loss Reduction Formula The building physics behind insulation savings
Heat Loss = U Γ A Γ ΞT
(Watts = W/mΒ²K Γ mΒ² Γ Kelvin)
U (U-value) β Thermal transmittance in W/mΒ²K. The rate of heat transfer through a building element. Lower U-values = better insulation. UK Building Regulations Part L targets: walls 0.18-0.30, roofs 0.11-0.16, floors 0.13-0.22 W/mΒ²K.
A (Area) β The surface area of the insulated element in square metres (mΒ²). Larger areas lose more heat, making insulation impact proportional to area covered.
ΞT (Delta T) β The temperature difference between inside and outside in Kelvin (or Β°C). Typical UK winter design condition: 21Β°C inside, -3Β°C outside = ΞT of 24K.
π What Affects Insulation Costs? Key variables in UK insulation pricing
- Insulation type & material β Mineral wool is cheapest; PIR, phenolic, and spray foam cost more but achieve better U-values at thinner depths.
- Property age & construction β Pre-1920s solid wall properties need more expensive EWI/IWI. Post-1920s cavity walls are cheaper to insulate.
- Access complexity β Loft hatches, cramped crawl spaces, high scaffolding for EWI all increase labour costs.
- Material thickness β Deeper insulation = more material cost but better thermal performance. Loft insulation at 270mm is the UK standard.
- Labour rates β Vary by region: London & South East Β£250-Β£350/day; North of England Β£180-Β£260/day; Scotland Β£200-Β£280/day.
- Retrofit conditions β Existing damp, thermal bridging, or asbestos removal add preparation costs.
- Moisture control β Vapour barriers, breathable membranes, and ventilation upgrades may be needed to prevent condensation risks.
- PAS 2035 compliance β Retrofit projects under ECO4/GBIS require a retrofit coordinator, adding Β£300-Β£800 to project costs.
π Loft Insulation Costs Mineral wool, PIR boards & attic insulation pricing
Loft insulation is the most cost-effective home insulation upgrade in the UK. With up to 25% of home heat lost through an uninsulated roof, installing 270mm of mineral wool loft insulation typically pays back within 1-2 years.
| Loft Insulation Type | Material Cost/mΒ² | Installed Cost/mΒ² | Typical U-value Achieved | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mineral Wool Roll (270mm) | Β£5 β Β£8 | Β£15 β Β£25 | 0.13 β 0.16 W/mΒ²K | Standard lofts, easy access |
| PIR Rigid Board (100mm) | Β£12 β Β£22 | Β£30 β Β£50 | 0.15 β 0.18 W/mΒ²K | Loft conversions, boarded lofts |
| Blown Cellulose (270mm) | Β£8 β Β£14 | Β£20 β Β£35 | 0.12 β 0.15 W/mΒ²K | Irregular loft spaces |
| Sheep Wool (270mm) | Β£15 β Β£25 | Β£28 β Β£45 | 0.14 β 0.17 W/mΒ²K | Eco-friendly, breathable |
π§± Cavity Wall & Solid Wall Insulation External, internal & cavity insulation compared
Walls account for approximately 35% of total heat loss in a typical UK home. Cavity wall insulation is relatively affordable; solid wall insulation (EWI or IWI) is more expensive but essential for pre-1920s properties.
| Wall Insulation Type | Installed Cost/mΒ² | Typical Semi-Detached Cost | U-value Before β After | Payback Period |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cavity β Mineral Wool Injection | Β£8 β Β£13 | Β£1,000 β Β£2,200 | 1.6 β 0.35 W/mΒ²K | 3-5 years |
| Cavity β EPS Bead Injection | Β£10 β Β£18 | Β£1,300 β Β£2,800 | 1.6 β 0.28 W/mΒ²K | 3-5 years |
| External Wall Insulation (EWI) | Β£80 β Β£150 | Β£8,000 β Β£15,000 | 2.1 β 0.25 W/mΒ²K | 15-25 years |
| Internal Wall Insulation (IWI) | Β£50 β Β£100 | Β£5,000 β Β£10,000 | 2.1 β 0.30 W/mΒ²K | 10-18 years |
Worked Example β Cavity Wall Semi-Detached
A 1930s semi-detached home with 85mΒ² of unfilled cavity wall area. Installing EPS bead cavity insulation at Β£14/mΒ² = Β£1,190. Annual heating saving: Β£310. Payback: 3.8 years. EPC improvement: Band D β Band C.
Worked Example β Solid Wall EWI Detached
A Victorian detached home with 140mΒ² of solid wall area. EWI at Β£110/mΒ² installed = Β£15,400. Annual saving: Β£620. Payback: 24.8 years (through energy alone). Including property value uplift of 5-8%, the effective payback is much shorter.
πͺ΅ Floor & Roof Insulation Suspended floors, concrete slabs, pitched & flat roofs
Floor Insulation
Suspended Timber Floors: Insulate between joists using mineral wool or PIR boards. Cost: Β£25-Β£45/mΒ² installed. Requires lifting floorboards. U-value target: 0.18-0.22 W/mΒ²K.
Solid Concrete Floors: Insulation placed above or below the slab. Above-slab PIR insulation with chipboard overlay costs Β£35-Β£60/mΒ². Requires door trimming and skirting adjustments.
Underfloor Insulation (Crawl Space): Netting-supported mineral wool or rigid boards fixed from below. Cost: Β£20-Β£40/mΒ². Avoids internal disruption.
Roof Insulation
Pitched Roof (Cold Loft): Insulation at ceiling level β mineral wool 270mm. Cost: Β£15-Β£25/mΒ².
Pitched Roof (Warm Roof): Insulation between/over rafters using PIR boards. Cost: Β£30-Β£55/mΒ². Essential for loft conversions.
Flat Roof: PIR insulation above deck (warm roof) or between joists (cold roof). Cost: Β£40-Β£70/mΒ². Warm roof construction preferred to avoid interstitial condensation.
π¦ Insulation Materials Comparison Thermal performance, cost & sustainability
| Material | Lambda (W/mK) | Typical R-value per 100mm | Cost/mΒ² (material) | Embodied Carbon | Best Application |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mineral Wool (Glass) | 0.032 β 0.040 | 2.5 β 3.1 | Β£3 β Β£7 | Low-Medium | Lofts, cavity walls, timber frames |
| Mineral Wool (Rock) | 0.034 β 0.040 | 2.5 β 2.9 | Β£4 β Β£8 | Medium | Party walls, fire resistance |
| PIR Rigid Board | 0.022 β 0.028 | 3.6 β 4.5 | Β£10 β Β£22 | High | Flat roofs, floors, wall lining |
| Phenolic Board | 0.018 β 0.021 | 4.8 β 5.5 | Β£15 β Β£30 | High | Space-constrained areas |
| EPS (Expanded Polystyrene) | 0.032 β 0.038 | 2.6 β 3.1 | Β£5 β Β£10 | Medium | EWI, cavity beads, floor slabs |
| Cellulose (Recycled) | 0.038 β 0.040 | 2.5 β 2.6 | Β£8 β Β£14 | Very Low | Lofts, timber frame infill |
| Sheep Wool | 0.038 β 0.042 | 2.4 β 2.6 | Β£15 β Β£25 | Negative (biogenic) | Eco builds, breathable systems |
| Spray Foam (Closed Cell) | 0.022 β 0.028 | 3.6 β 4.5 | Β£20 β Β£40 | Very High | Roof undersides, irregular spaces |
Lambda (Ξ») = thermal conductivity. Lower values = better insulation. R-value = thickness Γ· lambda. U-value β 1 Γ· total R-value of the building element. Source: manufacturer data sheets & BRE conventions.
U-value Performance Comparison (Lower = Better Insulation)
π° Energy Savings & EPC Improvements Reducing heating bills & improving your rating
Typical Annual Savings (Semi-Detached Home)
| Insulation Measure | Annual Saving | COβ Reduction |
|---|---|---|
| Loft (0β270mm) | Β£240 β Β£375 | 620 β 950 kg |
| Cavity Wall | Β£280 β Β£525 | 700 β 1,300 kg |
| Solid Wall (EWI) | Β£350 β Β£700 | 900 β 1,750 kg |
| Floor Insulation | Β£100 β Β£200 | 250 β 500 kg |
| Combined (Loft + Cavity) | Β£480 β Β£900 | 1,200 β 2,250 kg |
EPC Band Improvements
Insulation upgrades are among the most effective EPC improvement measures. A typical band D property can achieve:
- Loft insulation alone: +8-15 SAP points (DβC)
- Cavity wall insulation: +10-18 SAP points (DβC)
- Combined loft + cavity: +18-30 SAP points (DβB)
- Solid wall EWI: +15-25 SAP points (EβD or DβC)
π§ Condensation & Ventilation Moisture control, vapour barriers & mould prevention
Insulating a building changes its hygrothermal behaviour. Reducing heat loss can inadvertently increase condensation risk if dew point moves within the building fabric. Proper ventilation and vapour control are essential.
Key Principles
- Vapour barriers on the warm side of insulation prevent moist indoor air from reaching cold surfaces.
- Breathable membranes on the cold side allow any trapped moisture to escape outward.
- Ventilation gaps (50mm minimum) in cold loft roofs prevent stagnant moist air.
- Mechanical ventilation (MEV, MVHR) may be needed after extensive airtightness improvements.
Common Mistakes
- Blocking eaves ventilation with loft insulation.
- Using impermeable insulation on old solid walls without a hygrothermal assessment.
- Installing IWI without addressing thermal bridges at floor and window junctions.
- Neglecting extract ventilation in kitchens and bathrooms post-retrofit.
ποΈ Government Grants & Funding ECO4, Great British Insulation Scheme & more
ECO4 Scheme
The Energy Company Obligation provides fully-funded insulation for low-income households, those on qualifying benefits (Universal Credit, Pension Credit, etc.), and homes with low EPC ratings (bands D-G). Covers loft, cavity wall, and solid wall insulation.
Eligibility: Means-tested benefits OR household income below Β£31,000 AND EPC D or below.
Great British Insulation Scheme
Launched in 2023, GBIS offers subsidised insulation for homes in Council Tax bands A-D with EPC ratings D or below. Single-measure upgrades (e.g., loft insulation only) are common under this scheme.
Eligibility: Council Tax bands A-D, EPC D-G. Not dependent on benefits status.
Local Authority & HUG
The Home Upgrade Grant (HUG) targets off-gas-grid homes with low EPC ratings. Many local authorities also run their own retrofit schemes. Check your council's website for local energy efficiency funding.
Eligibility: Varies by local authority. Typically off-gas-grid, low EPC, and low-income households.
π’ Residential vs Commercial Insulation Domestic homes, offices, schools & warehouses
Residential (Domestic)
Focus on thermal comfort, EPC ratings, and heating bill reduction. Common measures: loft insulation, cavity wall insulation, floor insulation. Governed by UK Building Regulations Part L (domestic). Typical project values: Β£500-Β£15,000.
Commercial Buildings
Focus on energy performance certificates (EPC C or above by 2027), operational carbon reduction, and occupant comfort. Common measures: flat roof insulation, warehouse thermal lining, office suspended ceiling insulation, HVAC duct insulation. Governed by Part L (non-domestic) and MEES regulations. Project values: Β£5,000-Β£200,000+.
| Commercial Application | Typical Insulation Solution | Cost/mΒ² Installed | Key Consideration |
|---|---|---|---|
| Office suspended ceiling | Mineral wool ceiling tiles + loft roll | Β£18 β Β£35 | Acoustic performance + fire rating |
| Warehouse roof | Spray foam or PIR composite panels | Β£25 β Β£55 | Condensation risk in unheated spaces |
| School classroom | IWI with plasterboard finish | Β£55 β Β£95 | Minimise disruption during term time |
| Hotel external walls | EWI with render finish | Β£90 β Β£160 | Aesthetic continuity, planning permission |
| Retail unit flat roof | PIR warm roof overlay | Β£45 β Β£75 | Structural loading, drainage |
π Environmental Impact & Sustainability Carbon reduction, embodied carbon & net zero
Insulation is a cornerstone of low-carbon building retrofit. By reducing operational energy demand, insulation directly cuts carbon emissions. However, the embodied carbon of insulation materials should also be considered for a holistic sustainability assessment.
Low Embodied Carbon Options
- Cellulose (recycled newspaper) β Very low embodied carbon, often carbon-neutral or negative.
- Sheep wool β Renewable, biogenic carbon storage, fully biodegradable.
- Hemp insulation β Fast-growing crop, carbon-sequestering, breathable.
- Wood fibre boards β Natural, breathable, good for solid wall retrofits.
High Performance / Higher Carbon
- PIR/Phenolic boards β High embodied carbon but excellent U-values per mm, reducing material volume.
- Spray foam β Very high embodied carbon; use only where other solutions are impractical.
- XPS (Extruded Polystyrene) β High carbon, but durable for below-ground applications.
Net Zero Pathway: The Future Homes Standard (2025) mandates that new homes produce 75-80% less carbon than current standards. For existing homes, deep retrofit with insulation, heat pumps, and renewable energy is the pathway to net zero operational carbon. The UK Green Building Council recommends a fabric-first approach β maximising insulation and airtightness before adding low-carbon heating systems.
π Detailed Worked Examples Real-world UK insulation cost scenarios
Example 1: Loft Insulation β Semi-Detached
Property: 1930s semi-detached, 65mΒ² loft, currently 50mm old insulation.
Solution: Top-up with 220mm mineral wool to achieve 270mm total. Materials: Β£390 (65mΒ² Γ Β£6). Labour: Β£520 (2 days). Prep (clearance, ventilation trays): Β£200. Total: Β£1,110.
Annual saving: Β£310. Payback: 3.6 years. EPC: DβC.
Example 2: Cavity Wall β Terraced House
Property: 1970s mid-terrace, 55mΒ² wall area, unfilled cavities.
Solution: Mineral wool cavity injection. Materials: Β£440 (55mΒ² Γ Β£8). Labour & drilling: Β£660. Making good: Β£150. Total: Β£1,250.
Annual saving: Β£275. Payback: 4.5 years. EPC: DβC.
Example 3: EWI β Detached Victorian
Property: 1890s detached, 140mΒ² solid wall, no insulation.
Solution: 100mm EPS EWI with silicone render. Materials: Β£7,000. Labour & scaffolding: Β£7,700. Finishing & making good: Β£1,700. Total: Β£16,400.
Annual saving: Β£640. Payback: 25.6 years. EPC: EβC.
Example 4: Floor Insulation β Bungalow
Property: 1960s bungalow, 80mΒ² suspended timber floor.
Solution: 100mm mineral wool between joists, breathable membrane. Materials: Β£640. Labour (lift boards, install, relay): Β£1,600. Total: Β£2,240.
Annual saving: Β£175. Payback: 12.8 years. EPC: DβC.
β Frequently Asked Questions UK insulation expert answers
Insulation costs vary widely by type: loft insulation (mineral wool) costs Β£15-Β£25/mΒ² installed; cavity wall insulation Β£8-Β£18/mΒ²; external wall insulation Β£80-Β£150/mΒ²; internal wall insulation Β£50-Β£100/mΒ²; floor insulation Β£25-Β£60/mΒ²; roof insulation Β£25-Β£70/mΒ². For a typical UK semi-detached home, comprehensive insulation (loft + cavity walls) costs Β£2,500-Β£5,000 total.
The best insulation depends on your property. For lofts, mineral wool at 270mm is the cost-effective standard. For cavity walls, EPS beads offer excellent performance. For solid walls, external wall insulation provides the best thermal envelope. PIR boards are ideal where space is limited due to their superior lambda value. Consult a PAS 2035 retrofit assessor for a tailored recommendation.
The Energy Saving Trust reports loft insulation saves Β£200-Β£375/year, cavity wall insulation saves Β£280-Β£525/year, and solid wall insulation saves Β£350-Β£700/year for typical UK homes. Combined loft and cavity wall insulation can save Β£480-Β£900 annually. Savings depend on property size, heating fuel, and existing insulation levels.
A U-value (thermal transmittance) measures heat transfer through a building element in W/mΒ²K. Lower U-values indicate better insulation. UK Building Regulations Part L sets maximum U-values: walls 0.18-0.30, roofs 0.11-0.16, floors 0.13-0.22 W/mΒ²K. Achieving these targets is essential for Building Regulations compliance, EPC improvements, and reducing energy bills.
Yes, cavity wall insulation is one of the most cost-effective home improvements, with a typical payback of 3-5 years. It costs Β£1,000-Β£2,800 for a typical UK home and saves Β£280-Β£525 annually. It also improves EPC ratings, enhances comfort, and reduces carbon emissions. Ensure your property is suitable β homes built between 1920-1990 with unfilled cavities wider than 50mm are ideal candidates.
Loft insulation: 1-2 days. Cavity wall insulation: 1 day. External wall insulation: 5-15 days depending on property size. Internal wall insulation: 3-7 days per room. Floor insulation: 2-5 days. Spray foam roof insulation: 1-2 days. Complex retrofit projects with multiple measures may take 2-6 weeks.
Current UK insulation grants include: ECO4 (fully-funded for qualifying low-income households), the Great British Insulation Scheme (subsidised for Council Tax bands A-D with EPC D-G), the Home Upgrade Grant (off-gas-grid homes), and various local authority schemes. Check GOV.UK or contact your energy supplier for eligibility. All funded work must be carried out by PAS 2030:2019 certified installers.
Yes, insulation is among the most impactful EPC improvement measures. Loft insulation alone can raise an EPC by 1-2 bands. Cavity wall insulation adds 10-18 SAP points. Combined loft and cavity wall insulation can move a property from band D to band B. Higher EPC ratings increase property value, improve mortgage options, and may qualify you for green finance products.
Properly installed insulation raises internal surface temperatures, reducing the risk of surface condensation and mould growth. However, insulation must be paired with adequate ventilation and, where necessary, vapour barriers to manage moisture. Incorrectly installed insulation (e.g., blocking ventilation paths or creating thermal bridges) can increase condensation risk. Always follow BS 5250 guidance on condensation control.
UK Building Regulations recommend 270mm (27cm) of mineral wool loft insulation. This achieves a U-value of approximately 0.13-0.16 W/mΒ²K, meeting Part L requirements. If you have older, thinner insulation (e.g., 50-100mm), you can top it up to reach 270mm. Do not compress insulation as this reduces its thermal resistance β use loft legs if boarding over insulation.
EWI costs Β£80-Β£150/mΒ² installed, making it the most expensive insulation type. A typical semi-detached home costs Β£8,000-Β£15,000. However, EWI also improves weatherproofing, protects the building fabric, eliminates thermal bridging, and can transform the property's appearance. When considering property value uplift (5-8% typical) and comfort improvements, the effective return on investment is much better than the raw energy payback of 15-25 years suggests.
Thermal bridging (or cold bridging) occurs where a conductive material creates a path for heat to bypass insulation. Common thermal bridges include: wall-floor junctions, window reveals, steel lintels, and balcony connections. Thermal bridges increase heat loss and create cold spots where condensation and mould can form. Proper insulation detailing, continuous insulation, and thermal break materials minimise bridging effects.
Spray foam insulation offers excellent airtightness and high R-values per mm, making it useful for irregular spaces and roof undersides. However, it has high embodied carbon, is difficult to remove, and can cause mortgage lending issues if applied to roof timbers (some lenders refuse properties with spray foam roofs). Costs are Β£25-Β£50/mΒ² installed. It's best used selectively where other insulation types are impractical, not as a universal solution.
In order of ROI: 1) Loft insulation (payback 1-3 years), 2) Cavity wall insulation (payback 3-5 years), 3) Draught-proofing and pipe insulation (payback <1 year), 4) Floor insulation (payback 8-15 years), 5) Internal wall insulation (payback 10-18 years), 6) External wall insulation (payback 15-25 years). Combining measures with grant funding significantly improves ROI.
A fabric-first approach is most effective: 1) Insulate the loft to 270mm, 2) Fill cavity walls or insulate solid walls, 3) Insulate floors, 4) Upgrade to double or triple glazing, 5) Seal draughts around doors, windows, and service penetrations, 6) Install a controlled ventilation system (MEV or MVHR) to maintain air quality. Always address moisture and ventilation alongside insulation upgrades.
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