Most UK homes that suit an air source heat pump fall somewhere between about 5 kW and 16 kW, but the useful answer is not simply based on bedrooms or floor area. Heat pump size depends on how quickly your home loses heat on a cold day, what indoor temperature you want, and whether your radiators or underfloor heating can deliver enough warmth at lower flow temperatures.
Use the figures below as a sensible starting point before speaking to installers. They can help you spot a quote that looks wildly over or under-sized, but the final decision should come from a room-by-room heat loss calculation, especially if you want a system eligible for the Boiler Upgrade Scheme.
Contents
- 1 Key Takeaways
- 2 Quick UK Heat Pump Size Guide
- 3 Why Heat Pump Size Is Based On Heat Loss
- 4 Factors That Can Move You Up Or Down A Size
- 5 Radiators, Flow Temperature And Cylinder Size
- 6 How To Sense-Check A Heat Pump Quote
- 7 Expert Insights From Our Heating Engineers
- 8 Frequently Asked Questions
- 9 Summing Up
Key Takeaways
- A small flat may need around 4 to 6 kW, while a larger detached home may need 10 to 16 kW or more.
- The right heat pump size is based on heat loss, not just floor area.
- Oversizing can cause short cycling, higher costs and poor efficiency.
- Undersizing can leave the home cold in winter or too reliant on backup heating.
- Radiator size, insulation, flow temperature and hot water demand all affect the final design.
Quick UK Heat Pump Size Guide
The table below is a guide for early planning. It assumes a typical UK home with some insulation, normal ceiling heights and a wet central heating system. Older, draughtier homes may need more output, while well-insulated homes may need less.

| Property Type | Typical Floor Area | Indicative Heat Pump Size | Important Caveat |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small flat or compact bungalow | 40 to 60 m² | 4 to 6 kW | Flats may have access, noise or cylinder constraints |
| Two-bed terrace | 60 to 85 m² | 5 to 8 kW | Insulation and radiator output make a big difference |
| Three-bed semi-detached | 85 to 120 m² | 7 to 10 kW | Often needs radiator checks before installation |
| Four-bed detached | 120 to 180 m² | 10 to 16 kW | Heat loss and hot water use should be assessed carefully |
| Large or poorly insulated home | 180 m² plus | 16 kW plus or cascade design | Fabric upgrades may be better than simply increasing size |
Why Heat Pump Size Is Based On Heat Loss
Heat loss is the rate at which warmth escapes through walls, roofs, floors, windows, doors, ventilation and draughts. It is measured in kilowatts. If your home loses 8 kW of heat on a cold design day, the heating system must be able to replace roughly that amount to keep rooms comfortable.
This is why two homes with the same floor area can need different heat pumps. A modern, insulated 100 m² home might need far less output than a 100 m² Victorian property with solid walls, leaky windows and an exposed location. The Energy Saving Trust installer toolkit also notes that effective heat pump output and efficiency depend on conditions such as flow temperature and outdoor temperature, not just the nameplate size.
Useful Ways To Estimate Size Before A Survey
Floor Area Rule Of Thumb
A rough early estimate is floor area multiplied by an assumed heat loss factor. A well-insulated modern home might be around 30 to 50 W/m², an average older home might be 50 to 80 W/m², and a poorly insulated home may be higher. Divide the result by 1,000 to convert watts to kilowatts.
Annual Gas Use Cross-Check
If the home currently uses gas for heating, annual consumption can provide another sense check. It is not precise because gas use includes hot water, cooking and boiler efficiency losses, but it can highlight when a proposed heat pump size looks implausible. A home using very little gas is unlikely to need an enormous unit unless its usage pattern is unusual.
Quote Comparison Check
If one installer recommends 7 kW and another recommends 14 kW for the same property, ask both for the heat loss assumptions, design flow temperature and room-by-room outputs. A large gap is not automatically wrong, but it should be explained in engineering terms.
Factors That Can Move You Up Or Down A Size
| Factor | Effect On Size | What To Check |
|---|---|---|
| Loft, wall and floor insulation | Better insulation reduces required output | Upgrade obvious fabric gaps before sizing if possible |
| Windows and doors | Poor glazing and draughts increase heat loss | Look for cold surfaces, air leakage and exposed elevations |
| Radiator output | Small radiators may need higher flow temperatures | Check whether larger radiators are needed |
| Hot water demand | Large households need suitable cylinder planning | Match cylinder size and reheat strategy to real use |
| Location and exposure | Colder, windier sites can increase heat demand | Use local design conditions rather than national averages |
Do Not Oversize A Heat Pump Just In Case
Oversizing a boiler has often been tolerated, but heat pumps reward accurate design. An oversized heat pump can cycle on and off too often, especially in milder weather. That can reduce efficiency, increase wear and make controls harder to tune.

Undersizing has the opposite problem: the home may not reach temperature during cold weather, or it may rely too heavily on immersion heaters or backup heat. The right target is not the biggest possible unit. It is a system that meets design heat loss with good modulation, sensible flow temperature and suitable emitters.
Radiators, Flow Temperature And Cylinder Size
Heat pumps work best when they can run at lower flow temperatures, often with larger radiators or underfloor heating. If existing radiators are too small, the installer may either raise the flow temperature, which can reduce efficiency, or recommend larger emitters. A good quote should explain this clearly.
Hot water also needs attention. Many heat pump systems use a hot water cylinder rather than combi-style instant hot water. A household with several showers, baths or bathrooms may need a larger cylinder or a carefully planned reheat schedule. For wider background, see our guides to air to water heat pumps and heat pump water heaters.
What To Ask Installers Before You Accept A Quote
- What is the total design heat loss in kW?
- Have you calculated heat loss room by room?
- What outdoor design temperature have you used?
- What flow temperature is the system designed around?
- Which radiators need replacing and why?
- What size hot water cylinder is included?
- How will weather compensation and controls be set up?
- Is the installation eligible for the current Boiler Upgrade Scheme rules?

How To Sense-Check A Heat Pump Quote
A strong quote should give you more than a model name and a headline kW figure. Ask for the total heat loss, room-by-room heat loss, proposed flow temperature, emitter changes, hot water cylinder size and assumptions about insulation. If the installer cannot explain why the suggested heat pump is that size, the quote is not ready to compare.
Look especially at borderline sizes. If one installer proposes 8 kW and another proposes 11 kW, the difference may come from design temperature, flow temperature, radiator assumptions or whether insulation upgrades are included. Ask each installer what would happen if you improved loft insulation, replaced a cold radiator or reduced the design flow temperature. Good design is iterative, not a single guess made from the number of bedrooms.
| Quote Detail | Good Sign | Warning Sign |
|---|---|---|
| Heat loss calculation | Room-by-room figures are supplied | Only a whole-house guess is given |
| Radiator schedule | Each weak room is identified | Radiator upgrades are vague or missing |
| Flow temperature | Installer explains efficiency trade-off | High flow temperature is assumed without discussion |
| Hot water | Cylinder size matches household use | Cylinder is treated as an afterthought |
| Controls | Weather compensation and zoning are explained | Controls are described only as “smart” |
Example: Average Three-Bed Semi
A reasonably insulated three-bed semi might be quoted at around 7 to 9 kW after a heat loss survey. If several radiators are too small, the installer may either upgrade those radiators or design around a higher flow temperature. The first option often improves efficiency; the second may reduce disruption but can increase running costs.
Example: Older Detached Home
An older detached home with exposed walls and mixed insulation might appear to need a large heat pump. Before accepting the highest size, it is worth checking whether targeted fabric improvements could reduce heat loss enough to use a smaller, quieter and more efficient system. Sometimes the best heat pump sizing decision happens before the heat pump is chosen.
Expert Insights From Our Heating Engineers
Our engineers would rather see a slightly slower, carefully designed system than a large unit chosen to reassure the homeowner. Heat pumps are at their best when the building heat loss, emitter sizes, flow temperature and controls all work together.
The strongest quotes usually include a clear heat loss figure, radiator schedule and explanation of how the system will behave in cold weather. A vague quote that says only “12 kW heat pump” without the assumptions behind it is not enough to make a confident decision.
Frequently Asked Questions
What Size Heat Pump Does A Three-Bed House Need?
Many three-bed UK homes fall somewhere around 7 to 10 kW, but that is only a planning estimate. A well-insulated semi-detached home may need less, while an older detached or draughty property may need more. The final size should come from a heat loss calculation.
Is A Bigger Heat Pump Better?
No. A bigger heat pump is not automatically better. Oversizing can cause short cycling, poorer efficiency and extra wear, particularly in mild weather. The best system is sized to the building heat loss and matched to suitable radiators, controls and hot water storage.
Can I Size A Heat Pump From My Gas Bill?
Annual gas use can be a useful cross-check, but it should not be the only sizing method. Gas use includes boiler efficiency, hot water, occupancy and behaviour. It can help challenge a quote, but a room-by-room heat loss survey is still needed.
Do I Need Bigger Radiators For A Heat Pump?
You may need larger radiators if your current ones cannot deliver enough heat at lower flow temperatures. Some homes only need a few radiator upgrades, while others need a wider emitter review. A good installer should show which rooms are affected.
Does The Boiler Upgrade Scheme Affect Heat Pump Size?
The Boiler Upgrade Scheme does not mean you choose a larger heat pump, but eligible systems must meet scheme and installation standards. Your installer should confirm suitability, grant eligibility and the design assumptions behind the proposed system.
What Happens If My Heat Pump Is Too Small?
An undersized heat pump may struggle to keep the home warm in cold weather, run for very long periods or rely on backup electric heating. Before blaming the unit, the installer should check heat loss assumptions, flow temperature, controls and radiator output.
Summing Up
Heat pump size is best thought of as a heat loss match, not a house-size guess. Use property tables only as an early guide, then insist on a proper heat loss calculation, radiator check, cylinder plan and clear explanation of flow temperature before accepting a quote.
Updated

