| This is the owners responsible to have an EPC instructed and produced within 28days after initial marketing has commenced. Ashtons can arrange for an Energy Accessor to visit the property at your convenience. |
An EPC is valid for 10 years but must not be more than 3 years old when you place your home on the market. You can market your home immediately once you have commissioned a valid Energy Performance Certificate.
If you use an existing EPC, less than 3 years old, it will remain valid for as long as your home is continuously marketed. But if you temporarily pull your home off the market for more than 28 days, you will need to replace it if it's more than 3 years old when you resume marketing.
A new EPC supercedes an older one. |
An EPC is a certificate that contains information about the energy efficiency of a building which will be produced by a qualified assessor who will give the building an asset rating on a scale from A to G (similar to those currently used for white goods). An EPC must be produced whenever a building is constructed, sold or leased.
The assessor will consider the impact of such factors as lighting, insulation, heating, air quality and carbon dioxide emissions. The EPC must be accompanied by a recommendation report (containing recommendations for the improvement of the energy performance of the building to which the certificate relates and is issued by the energy assessor who issued the EPC). There will be (at least initially) no legal obligation to comply with the recommendations contained in the report. |
If you are have previously been on the market and paid for a EPC all you need to do is send it to your Ashtons Agent and they will check it on your behalf to see if it is still valid and we are able to use it.
If you are currently on the market, no problems! Just send it to your Ashtons agent and we will be able to continuously market the property at no extra cost! |
The certificate is important because nearly 50 per cent of the UK's energy consumption and carbon emissions arise from the way our buildings are lit, heated and used. Even comparatively minor changes in energy performance and the way we use each building will have a significant effect in reducing energy consumption. |