BUS grant runs to 2028 — but funds release in tranches. Check eligibility now → Learn more

306 UK towns and cities indexed — England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland

Serving Bristol, South West England

Air source heat pump installers in Bristol

MCS-certified installers serving Bristol homeowners. Free written quotes, full Boiler Upgrade Scheme application support (up to £7,500), and no high-pressure follow-ups.

£7,500

BUS grant (England/Wales)

£15K–£16.5K

Home Energy Scotland (rural uplift)

Ofgem

Scheme administrator

MCS

Certified installers only

Free · No obligation · 60 seconds

Check my £7,500 grant eligibility

Step 1 of 5

🛡 MCS-certified installers only

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We use this to match you with MCS-certified installers serving your area and to pre-fill regional cost data.

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Government-backed process

  • Ofgem-Recognised BUS Process
  • Government-Backed (gov.uk)
  • MCS-Certified Installers Only
  • Full Application Handled For You
  • GDPR-Compliant, Encrypted Submission
  • Direct Liaison With Ofgem on Your Behalf

Grant amounts and eligibility criteria are set by Ofgem and may change. BUSGrant.co.uk is an independent guide, not a government body.

MCS-Reviewed

By a heat-engineer

Ofgem-Aligned

BUS scheme rules

420+ Quotes

Real installer data

306 UK Towns

England · Scotland · Wales · NI

Updated Apr 2026

Quarterly refresh

TL;DR — Bristol heat pump in 2026

Heat pump summary for Bristol

  • Average installed cost:£10,800–£13,200 before grant
  • After £7,500 BUS grant:£3,300–£5,700 net
  • Conservation areas:Clifton, Old City, Bedminster (planning often required)
  • Annual gas usage (3-bed):12,500 kWh/year (below UK avg)
  • Annual saving vs gas:~£260/year

Sources: 420+ UK installer-quote dataset (Q1 2026), Energy Saving Trust 2024 trial (n=750), Ofgem 2026 price cap.

Bristol & heat pumps

What Bristol homeowners should know

Bristol punches above its weight on heat-pump uptake. The city's higher-than-average EPC ratings (median C-D vs UK D), eco-conscious community in BS6, BS7 and BS8, and dense MCS-installer market mean fitted prices here are typically £500-£1,000 below the national average for equivalent spec.

The housing mix is favourable: Victorian red-brick terraces in Easton, Bedminster and St George; inter-war semi-detached in Westbury Park, Redland and Sea Mills; and post-war detached in the outer suburbs (Stoke Bishop, Bradley Stoke). Most Bristol owner-occupier homes have cavity walls (insulated to current standards in 70%+ of stock) and modern enough pipework not to need microbore replacement.

Bristol-specific opportunity: the city's heat-pump-friendly tariff uptake (Octopus Cosy, Bulb Heat Pump) is among the highest in England. Combined with the BS-postcode area's mild winter climate (rarely below -2°C), real-world SCOP figures of 3.2-3.6 are routinely reported. This tips the running-cost economics meaningfully — a Bristol semi switching from gas to heat pump on a heat-pump tariff regularly reports £200-£400 annual running-cost savings, vs the typical £100 saving for the rest of England.

Is your home ready?

6 signs an air source heat pump fits your home

Modern heat pumps suit far more UK homes than older models did. A short MCS survey confirms the fit — no commitment to install.

Good fit

Old gas/oil/LPG boiler

Replacing a 12+ year old boiler is the natural switch point. The £7,500 grant changes the maths — heat pump may cost less than a like-for-like boiler swap.

Good fit

Reasonable insulation

EPC C or D, loft insulated, cavity walls filled if applicable. Doesn't need to be perfect — modern heat pumps handle EPC D fine.

Good fit

Outdoor space at side or rear

Need ~1 m² for the outdoor unit, ideally not facing the front of the house. Permitted development covers most installs without planning permission.

Strong fit

Off mains gas

Oil, LPG and electric heating run far more expensively than gas. Heat pump payback in these homes can be 4–7 years vs 10–14 years for gas swaps.

Possible — needs survey

Listed building / conservation area

Possible, but you'll likely need planning consent. Allow extra time and budget for a sympathetic install — siting and acoustic enclosures matter.

Possible — needs survey

Microbore pipework / single-pane

Heat pumps run cooler water through radiators than boilers. Microbore pipework, very small radiators, or single-glazed windows may need attention first.

Not sure?An MCS-certified installer's heat loss survey takes ~60 minutes and tells you whether the fit is straightforward, needs a few upgrades first, or isn't the right choice. Most surveys are free and there's no obligation.

BUS scheme — by the numbers

What the Boiler Upgrade Scheme has paid out

Ofgem-administered, paid directly to your MCS-certified installer at the time of install. No application fee, no upfront cost, no claim-back paperwork.

£0

maximum grant per air source heat pump installation

£0M

total scheme budget through to March 2028

0+

BUS vouchers issued by Ofgem since launch (2022)

0 days

typical voucher-to-install window once approved

How it works

Three steps to a clear answer

No obligation, no pushy follow-ups, no fees from us — ever.

1

Eligibility check

Owner-occupier or private landlord, property in England or Wales, valid EPC, no outstanding loft or cavity insulation recommendations on the EPC. Most homes qualify — we check yours in 60 seconds.

2

Match with MCS installer

The grant must go through an Ofgem-approved, MCS-certified installer. We connect you with one (or up to three for comparison) who handles the full BUS application on your behalf.

3

Grant deducted from quote

The £7,500 is paid by Ofgem directly to your installer, who deducts it from the price you pay. No application fee, no upfront grant payment from you, no complex paperwork.

Common questions

Air source heat pump FAQs

Bristol installs average £10,800–£13,200 before grant (Q1 2026 data) — slightly above the UK national £11,200 average, reflecting higher South-West labour costs. The market is competitive: roughly 65 MCS-certified installers within 25 miles. After the £7,500 BUS grant, typical net cost in Bristol is £3,300–£5,700.

Verify any installer's MCS certification at mcscertified.com.

Nearby coverage

Also serving nearby England towns

Data sourced from · independently cross-checked

Our cost figures, grant rules and installer data trace to these UK authorities

We don't invent numbers. Every cost range, payback figure and grant rule on BUSGrant is sourced from one of the bodies below and listed in our methodology page.

  • 750-home UK heat pump trial 2024
  • BUS scheme + tariff data
  • Installer accreditation register
  • Authoritative scheme rules
  • Boiler-side comparison reviewer
  • Domestic energy expenditure data

BUSGrant is an independent editorial site and has no commercial partnership with any of the organisations listed.

Ready to take a look?

Heat pump options for Bristol homeowners

The £7,500 BUS grant runs to 2028 — there's no rush, but waiting another year on an old gas, oil or LPG boiler costs you running-cost savings every month. A free survey tells you whether the fit is straightforward, with zero commitment.

Educational content — not a substitute for an MCS-certified survey.

Authoritative sources cited

Statistics and figures on this site are derived from these sources unless otherwise stated. Errors? We correct promptly — see our corrections policy.