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Sizing guide

What size air source heat pump do I need?

Last updated: June 2026

In short

The size of air source heat pump you need is set by your home's heat loss, measured in kilowatts (kW). Most UK homes need a heat pump between 5 kW and 12 kW, with a typical three-bedroom semi around 6 to 8 kW. Only a room-by-room heat loss survey gives the accurate figure for your home.

Heat pump sizing in plain terms

Sizing a heat pump means matching its output to how much heat your home loses on a cold day, and that loss is measured in kilowatts. Think of it as filling a leaky bucket: the faster your home loses heat through walls, windows, the roof and draughts, the bigger the heat pump needs to be to keep the water level steady. A well-insulated modern home loses heat slowly and needs a smaller, cheaper unit, while a draughty solid-wall Victorian house loses it quickly and needs more output. This is different from how boilers are often sized, where installers tend to fit something oversized for fast hot water. Heat pumps work best matched closely to the actual heat loss, so they run long and steady at a low temperature rather than blasting on and off. Getting that match right is the whole game.

Why a heat loss survey matters

A proper heat loss survey is the only reliable way to size a heat pump, and no online calculator or rule of thumb can replace it. The survey is done in person, room by room, measuring each external wall, window and door, recording insulation levels and noting how draughty the property is. From those measurements the installer calculates your home's total heat loss at the local winter design temperature, then sizes the heat pump to match. Calculators that ask only for floor area or bedroom count miss the things that matter most, such as whether your walls are solid or cavity, how good the glazing is, and how the house is laid out. Two homes the same size can have very different heat losses. Treat any online figure as a rough starting point, then insist on a survey before you accept a quote. An installer who sizes without surveying is guessing with your money.

Oversizing and undersizing pitfalls

Getting the size wrong in either direction costs you. An oversized heat pump is a common and expensive mistake: it costs more to buy, and because it produces more heat than the home can absorb, it short-cycles, switching on and off repeatedly, which wears the unit and drags down efficiency, so your bills rise. An undersized heat pump has the opposite problem. It cannot keep up on the coldest days, leaving the home cool and forcing any backup electric heater to kick in, which is expensive. The sweet spot is a unit sized accurately to your surveyed heat loss, which runs steadily through the day at a low flow temperature and a high SCOP. This is precisely why a careful survey and comparing several installers' designs pays off: it is the difference between a heat pump that quietly saves you money and one that disappoints.

  • Oversized: higher upfront cost, short-cycling, lower efficiency.
  • Undersized: cold on peak days, reliance on costly backup heating.
  • Right-sized: steady running, high SCOP, lower bills.

How heat pump sizing works

Sizing a heat pump means matching its kilowatt (kW) output to your home's peak heat loss, the rate it loses heat on the coldest expected day. In the Bedford area, installers design to an outdoor temperature of around minus 3 to minus 4 degrees. The heat pump must cover both space heating and hot water at that point, so the figure has to account for the worst the local winter throws at the house, not an average day. Get the kW figure right and the system runs efficiently, holding the home steady at a low flow temperature; guess it and you pay for it in comfort or bills. That is why the kW number on your quote is the single most important line. It is set by a calculation of how your specific property loses heat, not by floor area or a rule of thumb.

What changes the size you need

Several features of your home pull the right size up or down. A surveyor weighs all of them together rather than reading off any single one.

  • Insulation level in the loft, walls and floors.
  • Total floor area and ceiling heights.
  • The amount and type of glazing.
  • The age of the property and how the walls are built.
  • The temperature you want rooms kept at.
  • Hot water demand and how many people live there.

Change any one of these and the kW figure moves, which is why two homes that look alike from the street can need very different heat pumps. The survey is what ties all these factors into a single, reliable number.

Sizing for hot water too

A heat pump also heats your hot water cylinder, so sizing accounts for that as well as space heating. A typical family needs a cylinder of around 180 to 250 litres, sized to the number of bathrooms and occupants. The system reheats the cylinder through the day rather than firing up on demand like a combi boiler, and it runs a periodic cycle to bring the water up to temperature and keep it safe. All of this a good survey factors into the kW figure, so the heat pump can cover a hot bath and the heating on the same cold morning without running short. Get the cylinder too small and you run out of hot water; too large and you waste energy keeping spare water warm. The survey balances the cylinder size against your household's real demand, then sets the heat pump output to suit both jobs together.

Can insulation reduce the size you need?

Yes, and it is often the smartest money you can spend. Because a heat pump is sized to your home's heat loss, cutting that loss before you install means a smaller, cheaper unit and lower running costs for the life of the system. This fabric-first approach prioritises loft insulation, draught-proofing, cavity wall insulation where you have a cavity, and better glazing where it is due for replacement. Each measure shrinks the kW figure the surveyor arrives at. On an older solid-wall home the difference can be a whole size band, which can save thousands on the install and noticeably trim your bills. A good installer will flag any quick insulation wins during the survey, and some grant routes such as ECO4 and the Warm Homes Local Grant can fund insulation alongside the heat pump for eligible households.

Rough sizing by property type

These indicative ranges give a feel for the heat pump size different homes need. They are a starting point only. Your actual size depends on insulation, glazing and layout, which is why a heat loss survey is essential.

Property typeApprox floor areaIndicative heat pump size
Flat or small mid-terrace50 to 70 sq m4 to 6 kW
2 to 3 bed terrace or semi (well insulated)70 to 100 sq m5 to 8 kW
3 to 4 bed semi or detached100 to 150 sq m8 to 11 kW
Large or solid-wall detached150 to 220 sq m11 to 16 kW

A typical three-bedroom Bedfordshire semi usually lands around 6 to 8 kW once insulation is reasonable. Solid-wall and off-gas village homes often need more. Always confirm with a survey before buying.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

What size air source heat pump do I need?
Heat pump size is set by your home's heat loss, measured in kW. Most UK homes need between 5 kW and 12 kW, but only a proper room-by-room heat loss survey gives an accurate figure for your property.
Can I use an online heat pump size calculator?
An online calculator gives a rough idea, but it cannot replace a heat loss survey. Correct sizing depends on insulation, glazing and layout that a calculator cannot fully capture, so treat any online figure as indicative only.
What happens if a heat pump is the wrong size?
An oversized heat pump short-cycles and costs more to run, while an undersized one struggles to keep the home warm on the coldest days. Accurate, survey-based sizing avoids both problems.
What size heat pump do I need for a 3-bed house?
Many three-bedroom homes need a heat pump of around 6 to 9 kW, but the exact size depends on insulation, glazing and construction. Only a room-by-room heat loss survey gives the correct figure for your home.
Can a heat pump be too big?
Yes. An oversized heat pump short-cycles, switching on and off too often, which wastes electricity and wears the unit. Correct sizing from a heat loss survey avoids both oversizing and undersizing.
Does floor area alone decide heat pump size?
No. Floor area is only one factor. Heat loss, which depends on insulation, glazing, construction and target temperature, decides the size. Two homes of the same area can need very different heat pumps.

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