Air source heat pump installers in Derby
MCS-certified installers serving Derby homeowners. Free written quotes, full Boiler Upgrade Scheme application support (up to £7,500), and no high-pressure follow-ups.
Free, no-obligation
Check my £7,500 grant eligibility
Step 1 of 5
~60 seconds
What kind of property is it?
Government-backed process
- Ofgem-Recognised BUS Process
- Government-Backed (gov.uk)
- MCS-Certified Installers Only
- Full Application Handled For You
- GDPR-Compliant, Encrypted Submission
- Direct Liaison With Ofgem on Your Behalf
Grant amounts and eligibility criteria are set by Ofgem and may change. BUSGrant.co.uk is an independent guide, not a government body.
Derby & heat pumps
What Derby homeowners should know
Derby (population 258K) sits in East Midlands, England. The most common housing stock here is semi-detached, terraced, detached — typical EPC rating of D and average annual gas usage around 12,800 kWh. This profile is well-suited to air source heat pumps with modest preparation.
Grant scheme: Boiler Upgrade Scheme. England homeowners can claim up to £7,500. Paid to your installer at install time. Owner-occupied or private-rented homes in England & Wales with a valid EPC and no outstanding insulation recommendations. Most reputable Derby installers handle the application end-to-end and deduct the grant from the invoice — you never see the cash.
The difference between a smooth £9,000 install and a stressful £14,000 retrofit in Derby usually comes down to two things: radiator sizing and pipework. Get a proper MCS heat-loss survey done first; cheaper installers often skip this step and end up fitting an oversized unit that short-cycles and underperforms.
Is your home ready?
6 signs an air source heat pump fits your home
Modern heat pumps suit far more UK homes than older models did. A short MCS survey confirms the fit — no commitment to install.
Old gas/oil/LPG boiler
Replacing a 12+ year old boiler is the natural switch point. The £7,500 grant changes the maths — heat pump may cost less than a like-for-like boiler swap.
Reasonable insulation
EPC C or D, loft insulated, cavity walls filled if applicable. Doesn't need to be perfect — modern heat pumps handle EPC D fine.
Outdoor space at side or rear
Need ~1 m² for the outdoor unit, ideally not facing the front of the house. Permitted development covers most installs without planning permission.
Off mains gas
Oil, LPG and electric heating run far more expensively than gas. Heat pump payback in these homes can be 4–7 years vs 10–14 years for gas swaps.
Listed building / conservation area
Possible, but you'll likely need planning consent. Allow extra time and budget for a sympathetic install — siting and acoustic enclosures matter.
Microbore pipework / single-pane
Heat pumps run cooler water through radiators than boilers. Microbore pipework, very small radiators, or single-glazed windows may need attention first.
Not sure?An MCS-certified installer's heat loss survey takes ~60 minutes and tells you whether the fit is straightforward, needs a few upgrades first, or isn't the right choice. Most surveys are free and there's no obligation.
BUS scheme — by the numbers
What the Boiler Upgrade Scheme has paid out
Ofgem-administered, paid directly to your MCS-certified installer at the time of install. No application fee, no upfront cost, no claim-back paperwork.
maximum grant per air source heat pump installation
total scheme budget through to March 2028
BUS vouchers issued by Ofgem since launch (2022)
typical voucher-to-install window once approved
How it works
Three steps to a clear answer
No obligation, no pushy follow-ups, no fees from us — ever.
Eligibility check
Owner-occupier or private landlord, property in England or Wales, valid EPC, no outstanding loft or cavity insulation recommendations on the EPC. Most homes qualify — we check yours in 60 seconds.
Match with MCS installer
The grant must go through an Ofgem-approved, MCS-certified installer. We connect you with one (or up to three for comparison) who handles the full BUS application on your behalf.
Grant deducted from quote
The £7,500 is paid by Ofgem directly to your installer, who deducts it from the price you pay. No application fee, no upfront grant payment from you, no complex paperwork.
Common questions
Air source heat pump FAQs
Installed costs typically run £8,000 to £14,000 before grant for a normal home. Detached or larger properties can reach £16,000. After the £7,500 BUS grant in England & Wales, most homeowners pay £500–£8,500. Scotland's Home Energy Scotland scheme offers up to £15,000 in combined grant + interest-free loan, often making the heat pump cheaper than a like-for-like boiler replacement.
Verify any installer's MCS certification at mcscertified.com.
Nearby coverage
Also serving nearby England towns
Ready to take a look?
Heat pump options for Derby homeowners
The £7,500 BUS grant runs to 2028 — there's no rush, but waiting another year on an old gas, oil or LPG boiler costs you running-cost savings every month. A free survey tells you whether the fit is straightforward, with zero commitment.
Educational content — not a substitute for an MCS-certified survey.
Authoritative sources cited
- GOV.UK — Apply for the Boiler Upgrade Scheme ↗The authoritative source for grant amounts, eligibility, and process. Always cross-check before relying on third-party summaries.
- Ofgem — BUS scheme administration ↗Ofgem administers the scheme and publishes monthly voucher-issued statistics.
- MCS Certified Installer Database ↗Official MCS register — only MCS-certified installers can apply for BUS vouchers.
- Department for Energy Security & Net Zero ↗UK government department setting the scheme's policy framework and budget.
Statistics and figures on this site are derived from these sources unless otherwise stated. Errors? We correct promptly — see our corrections policy.
Continue your research
More UK heat pump resources
Sister sites we operate, each focused on a different decision step.