Direct filing to HMRC is pending HMRC recognition. Start your bookkeeping free now — filing switches on the moment we're approved.

EPC C by property type

Getting a Mid-terrace house to EPC C

A mid-terrace loses less heat than a detached home because two of its walls are shared — often making C more reachable.

Why this type behaves the way it does

  • Two party walls reduce heat loss
  • Construction age varies widely
  • Smaller exposed wall area

Measures that typically reach C

Loft insulation

Loft insulation

Topping up loft insulation to the recommended 270mm is usually the cheapest high-impact improvement, because a quarter of a home’s heat can escape through the roof. It’s quick to install in an accessible loft, rarely needs consent, and the SAP uplift per pound spent is among the best of any measure — which is why it’s almost always the first recommendation on an EPC.

Cavity wall insulation

Cavity wall insulation

Homes built from roughly the 1920s to the 1990s usually have a gap (cavity) between two layers of external wall. Where that cavity is empty, injecting insulation through small holes in the mortar fills it in a day or so, with no internal disruption. For a typical cavity-walled semi it’s one of the most cost-effective steps to a higher band, often paired with loft insulation.

Draught proofing

Draught proofing

Sealing the gaps around doors, windows, floorboards, skirting and the loft hatch is one of the lowest-cost measures and makes a home feel noticeably warmer straight away. It’s frequently bundled with insulation work and, pound for pound, gives a useful nudge to the rating for very little outlay.

Double glazing

Double glazing

Replacing single-glazed windows with modern double (or secondary) glazing cuts heat loss and draughts and lifts both comfort and the EPC score. In conservation areas or on listed buildings, slim-profile or secondary glazing is often the route that keeps planning happy while still improving performance.

Heating controls

Heating controls

A programmer, a room thermostat and thermostatic radiator valves let the heating run only when and where it’s needed, rather than heating the whole home all the time. Adding the controls a system lacks is inexpensive, improves the EPC, and is one of the simplest ways to trim a tenant’s energy bills.

Reduced heat loss from shared walls means mid-terraces frequently reach C with fewer measures than detached or end-of-terrace homes.

Check your property’s real figures

The above is general to the construction type. Enter a postcode for the actual current band, the gap to C, and the costed measures from that property’s own EPC.

Common questions

Is it hard to get a mid-terrace house to EPC C?
Reduced heat loss from shared walls means mid-terraces frequently reach C with fewer measures than detached or end-of-terrace homes.
Which improvements does a mid-terrace house usually need?
The measures that most often appear on EPCs for this type are: Loft insulation, Cavity wall insulation, Draught proofing, Double glazing, Heating controls. The exact set — and the order that's most cost-effective — depends on the individual property, which the checker shows.
What is the deadline and the penalty?
Rented homes need to reach EPC C (or hold a valid exemption) by 1 October 2030. Letting below C without an exemption can attract a penalty of up to £30,000 per property.

Guidance is general to the construction type and indicative; the cost figures in the checker come from each property’s own EPC. EPC data: contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0.

Be ready for Making Tax Digital, the easy way.

Set up your first property in two minutes. Free forever, no card needed, cancel any time.

Join landlords across the UK getting their tax sorted.