Replacing your boiler? Compare with a heat pump first — £7,500 grant changes the maths → Learn more
Serving Coventry, West Midlands

Air source heat pump installers in Coventry

MCS-certified installers serving Coventry homeowners. Free written quotes, full Boiler Upgrade Scheme application support (up to £7,500), and no high-pressure follow-ups.

 Heat pumpNew gas boiler
Install (after grant)£500–£8,500£2,500–£4,500
Lifespan20+ years10–15 years
Annual running (semi)£900–£1,400£1,000–£1,500
Carbon (10 yrs)~3 tCO₂e~22 tCO₂e

Free, no-obligation

Compare for my home

Step 1 of 5

~60 seconds

What kind of property is it?

Editorial standards

  • Independent — No Installer Sponsorship
  • Both Sides Compared, No Pre-Decided Winner
  • Numbers Sourced From Ofgem + ESCT 2024–25 Studies
  • Filterable By Property Type & Current Heating
  • Includes BUS Grant + Real Tariff Data
  • Reviewed By An MCS-Qualified Heat Engineer

Comparison is intentionally honest — for some homes a high-efficiency boiler genuinely is the better choice. HeatPumpVsBoiler.co.uk has no commercial bias toward either option.

Coventry & heat pumps

What Coventry homeowners should know

Coventry's housing stock is dominated by post-war reconstruction (much of the city was rebuilt after 1940-41 bombing) and 1950s-1970s semi-detached estates. This works well for heat pumps: cavity walls, larger room sizes than Victorian terraces, modern pipework, ample garden space for outdoor units. Fitted prices in CV postcodes typically £8,500-£11,500 for a 6 kW system on a 3-bed semi.

The Jaguar Land Rover and automotive-supply-chain workforce concentrated around Coventry, Solihull and Warwick has driven a noticeable uptake of EV+heat-pump combinations — homeowners installing both in a single visit benefit from shared electrical-supply upgrades and a single MCS-certified installer coordinating both. Several Coventry-area installers specialise in this combined approach.

Coventry-specific consideration: the city's distinctive ring-road and post-war urban planning placed many homes very close to busy roads (CV1 inner, parts of CV3). For these properties, outdoor-unit noise from a heat pump can compound existing road noise — better to pick a quieter manufacturer (Daikin Altherma 3 H or Vaillant aroTHERM plus rather than older Mitsubishi units) and site the unit at the rear, away from the road. A demonstration of decibel readings at install time is worth requesting.

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.

Good fit

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.

Good fit

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.

Good fit

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.

Strong fit

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.

Possible — needs survey

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.

Possible — needs survey

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.

Heat pump vs gas boiler — the verdict

How they compare across 25 years

A new gas boiler typically lasts 10–15 years; a heat pump 20+. Across an average 25-year homeownership window, here is the difference for a typical UK semi-detached home.

0 tCO₂e

lifetime carbon saving over a like-for-like gas boiler swap

0.5x

boiler replacements avoided over a heat pump's 20-year lifespan

£0

estimated 25-year total cost gap (heat pump cheaper, off-gas-grid)

0x

average heat-pump efficiency vs. a 90% efficient combi boiler

How it works

Three steps to a clear answer

No obligation, no pushy follow-ups, no fees from us — ever.

1

Side-by-side comparison

We compare a heat pump vs a new gas boiler on five axes: install cost (after grants), annual running cost (price-cap and standing charges included), expected lifetime, comfort and noise, carbon footprint, and resale-value impact.

2

Filtered for your home

The right answer depends on your property. We filter for your property type, current heating, insulation level and region — comparing the options that actually apply to you, not the average UK home.

3

Clear next step

If a heat pump wins for your situation, we connect you with installers. If a new boiler is genuinely the better choice, we say so — no incentive to push a heat pump that won't suit your home.

Typical UK price ranges

What an air source heat pump costs in 2026

Most properties fall into one of three tiers. Ranges below are installed costs before the £7,500 BUS grant — after-grant figures are noted in each tier.

£8,000 – £11,000

Flat / small terrace

4–6 kW air source heat pump, 1 hot water cylinder, modest radiator upgrades. After £7,500 BUS grant: from £500.

Typical: 1–2 day install

Most common

£9,500 – £13,500

Semi-detached / mid terrace

6–10 kW heat pump, 200–250L cylinder, 4–6 radiator changes, light pipework. After grant: typically £2,000–£6,000.

Typical: 2–3 day install

£11,000 – £16,000

Detached / 4-bed+

8–14 kW heat pump, 250–300L cylinder, broader radiator upgrade, electrical works. After grant: typically £3,500–£8,500.

Typical: 3–5 day install

💷 BUS grant: up to £7,500

Paid by Ofgem directly to your installer. No upfront payment from you, no complex paperwork. Available in England & Wales until March 2028.

🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 Scotland: even more

Home Energy Scotland offers up to £7,500 cashback PLUS an optional £7,500 interest-free loan. Total funding up to £15,000 for a heat pump install.

Ranges shown are based on current MCS-certified installer quotes across the UK. Actual pricing varies by property condition, accessibility, radiator and pipework state, region and installer. Only a written quote tells you the price for your home.

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 Coventry 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

Statistics and figures on this site are derived from these sources unless otherwise stated. Errors? We correct promptly — see our corrections policy.