The Payback Period Question
The payback period for a heat pump is the time it takes for the energy bill savings to repay the net installation cost. In the UK, this typically ranges from 7–15 years depending on your current heating system, energy tariffs, home insulation, and how much grant funding you receive.
Simple Payback Calculation
Net installation cost ÷ Annual savings = Payback period in years
Example: Heat pump installed for £8,000 net (after £7,500 BUS grant from £15,500 gross). Annual running cost savings vs oil heating: £600/year. Payback period: 8,000 ÷ 600 = 13.3 years.
Savings vs Different Fuel Types
- Replacing oil heating: Savings of £400–£800/year. Fastest payback.
- Replacing LPG: Savings of £500–£1,000/year. Very strong case.
- Replacing electric storage heaters: Savings of £200–£600/year. Good case.
- Replacing gas: Savings of £0–£300/year. Marginal at current prices.
Non-Financial Benefits
A purely financial analysis misses several important benefits: zero carbon emissions (significant environmental value), improved home comfort (more consistent temperatures), EPC rating improvement (increases property value), and insulation against future gas price spikes.
Long-Term Financial Outlook
The economics of heat pumps improve as the electricity-to-gas price ratio returns to its historical average (typically 3:1 rather than the current 4:1). On this basis, heat pump savings vs gas could increase by £200–£400/year in future years, significantly shortening the payback period.
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