Cost guide
How much does an air source heat pump cost in Bedford?
Last updated: June 2026
In short
Typical air source heat pump cost in Bedford
In Bedford, a standard air source heat pump installation costs between 9,000 and 14,000 GBP before any grant is applied, and the average sits at around 11,000 GBP. That figure covers the heat pump unit, a new hot water cylinder, the system design and heat loss survey, installation labour and commissioning. Smaller flats and well-insulated modern homes fall at the lower end, while larger detached houses and properties that need several radiators upgraded sit higher. Once the 7,500 GBP Boiler Upgrade Scheme grant is deducted by your installer, most eligible Bedford homeowners pay somewhere between 1,500 and 6,500 GBP out of pocket. These are real-world ranges for Bedford and Bedfordshire rather than headline marketing prices, and a proper survey is the only way to get an exact figure for your home.
| Property | Before grant | After BUS grant |
|---|---|---|
| 1 to 2 bed flat or small terrace | 9,000 to 10,500 GBP | 1,500 to 3,000 GBP |
| 3 bed semi or terrace | 10,000 to 12,500 GBP | 2,500 to 5,000 GBP |
| 4 bed detached | 12,000 to 16,000 GBP | 4,500 to 8,500 GBP |
| Larger or solid-wall home with radiator upgrades | 14,000 to 18,000 GBP | 6,500 to 10,500 GBP |
Figures assume a single air source heat pump replacing an existing boiler. Costs rise where extensive pipework, a second cylinder or full underfloor heating is involved.
What affects the price in Bedford homes
The single biggest driver of heat pump cost is your home's heat loss, which is how quickly it loses warmth on a cold day. Bedford's housing mix means quotes vary widely. A solid-wall Victorian terrace in Castle ward or Queens Park loses heat faster than a cavity-wall 1930s semi in Goldington, so it needs a larger heat pump and often several bigger radiators to run at the lower flow temperatures heat pumps prefer. Newer estates such as Wixams and Great Denham tend to be cheapest to convert because they are already well insulated. The main cost factors are below.
- Heat pump size (kW): a larger, leakier home needs a bigger, dearer unit.
- Radiator upgrades: some existing radiators may need replacing with larger ones to suit low flow temperatures.
- Underfloor heating vs radiators: underfloor is efficient but far more expensive to retrofit.
- Hot water cylinder: a heat pump needs a compatible cylinder, usually a new install.
- Insulation work first: loft and cavity wall insulation cut the heat pump size you need, saving money.
How the Boiler Upgrade Scheme grant cuts the cost
The Boiler Upgrade Scheme gives eligible homeowners in England and Wales a 7,500 GBP grant towards an air source heat pump. You do not claim it yourself. Your MCS-certified installer applies on your behalf and discounts the 7,500 GBP directly from your quote, so you only pay the balance. To qualify you must own the property, be replacing a fossil-fuel or electric heating system, and hold a valid EPC. The grant is a fixed amount, not a percentage, so it takes a bigger bite out of a cheaper install. On an average 11,000 GBP Bedford job it brings the net cost down to around 3,500 GBP.
Off-gas-grid uplift from 21 July 2026
From 21 July 2026, the government is increasing the grant to 9,000 GBP for off-gas-grid homes replacing an oil or LPG boiler. That is good news for Bedfordshire villages such as Cardington, Cople and Willington. See our Bedford grants guide for the full eligibility detail.
Running costs versus a gas boiler
Running cost is where homeowners get the most conflicting advice, so here is the honest version. A heat pump turns each unit of electricity into roughly 3.5 to 4 units of heat, measured as its SCOP. Electricity costs more per unit than gas, so the maths only works when the system is designed to run efficiently at low flow temperatures. A well-designed heat pump in a reasonably insulated Bedford home tends to land close to, or slightly below, the running cost of a modern gas boiler. The bigger savings appear for off-gas-grid homes: against oil or LPG, a heat pump almost always wins on running cost. A poorly designed system running too hot can cost more than gas, which is exactly why comparing several MCS installers and their flow-temperature designs matters.
For a full side-by-side breakdown at 2026 energy prices, read our heat pump vs gas boiler running costs guide.
Servicing, maintenance and lifespan costs
An air source heat pump is cheap to keep going compared with the upfront install. Most manufacturers ask for one annual service to keep the warranty valid, and that typically costs between 150 and 300 GBP a year in the Bedford area, depending on the installer and whether it is bundled into a care plan. The service covers a check of the refrigerant circuit, water pressure, flow rates, filters and electrical connections. Beyond that, a well-installed heat pump has few moving parts and rarely needs costly repairs. Expect to budget for a replacement circulation pump or expansion vessel at some point over its life. A quality air source heat pump lasts around 15 to 20 years, longer than a typical gas boiler, and the hot water cylinder often lasts the same. Factoring servicing into your running-cost comparison gives you a fairer picture than the headline install price alone.
| Item | Typical cost | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Annual service | 150 to 300 GBP | Yearly |
| Circulation pump replacement | 200 to 400 GBP | Once in 10 to 15 years |
| Expansion vessel or minor parts | 100 to 250 GBP | Occasional |
| Expected unit lifespan | n/a | 15 to 20 years |
What a Bedford heat pump quote should include
A complete air source heat pump quote in Bedford should be a fixed price built from a proper heat loss survey, not a rough estimate over the phone. At a minimum it should itemise the heat pump unit and its kW output, a compatible hot water cylinder, any radiators being upgraded, all pipework and electrical work, system commissioning, and the MCS certificate you need to claim the grant. A good quote also states the design flow temperature and the predicted SCOP, because those numbers decide your running cost. Be wary of a quote that omits the heat loss calculation or lumps everything into one figure with no breakdown. Comparing several itemised quotes side by side is the clearest way to see whether a higher price buys better design or simply a bigger margin, and it stops a cheap quote hiding skipped radiator work.
- Heat pump make, model and kW output.
- Heat loss survey figure and design flow temperature.
- Hot water cylinder size and any radiator upgrades.
- The 7,500 GBP grant shown as a clear deduction.
- Predicted SCOP and estimated annual running cost.
Is a heat pump worth it in Bedford?
For most Bedford homeowners, an air source heat pump makes sense when three things line up: a property that can be insulated to a reasonable standard, eligibility for the 7,500 GBP grant, and a current heating system that is oil, LPG or an ageing gas boiler due for replacement anyway. With the grant applied, the net cost of around 3,500 GBP on a typical install is comparable to a premium gas boiler replacement, while running costs are competitive and carbon emissions drop sharply. Off-gas-grid homes in the surrounding villages usually see the strongest financial case, especially once the 9,000 GBP uplift lands in July 2026. The smartest first step is to compare several MCS-accredited quotes so you can judge price, design quality and running-cost estimates together rather than in isolation.