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Tenth Anniversary of EPCs Becoming Legal Requirement Approaches
This article is an external press release originally published on the Landlord News website, which has now been migrated to the Just Landlords blog.
The tenth anniversary of Energy Performance Certificates (EPCs) becoming a legal requirement is approaching.
Ahead of 1st August – ten years since EPCs came into law in England and Wales – leading energy performance measurement specialist Elmhurst Energy is issuing a timely reminder.
EPCs first came into law as part of the Home Information Pack (HIP) for domestic property sales with four or more bedrooms. Valid for a decade, they were rolled out with different milestones over the following years, for different property types and in different regions of the UK.
Elmhurst Energy is now recommending that those responsible for checking the validity of EPCs must do more than simply check an EPC exists – they must ensure that it is valid.
“Up to now, everyone assumes that an EPC is valid if it simply exists,” says Martyn Reed, the Managing Director of Elmhurst Energy. “We are clarifying that this can no longer be assumed, and an extra check is required to ensure valid EPCs are in place for property sales and lettings.”
He recommends: “We advise all people and organisations that check the validity of EPCs to firstly obtain the EPC for the property – a simple check that it exists is no longer rigorous. Secondly, check the date of certificate, normally displayed on the first page, to identify if the document is legally valid and, if it is older than ten years, then it is out of date.”
The issue date of an EPC can be obtained from the National Energy Performance Certificate Registers, of which there are three in total: one for properties in England and Wales, one for Scotland and one for Northern Ireland.
Reed continues: “We have written to the Government (DCLG) in England and Wales about the possible changes to the registers, to make it more obvious that EPCs are out of date. They have replied that they are minded not to alter anything on the registers; thus it is down to enforcement agencies to understand that even though an EPC is available from the register, this doesn’t mean it is a legally valid document.”
Elmhurst Energy’s reminder is particularly timely, as the private rental sector prepares for the introduction of new Minimum Energy Efficiency Standards (MEES), which will prohibit landlords from granting a new tenancy on homes with an EPC rating of F or G from 1st April 2018.