Landlords in High Green find the cheapest way to reach EPC C

Uncover what’s holding your EPC High Green back

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Find your EPC

Enter your postcode in High Green, select your High Green rental property and your current EPC is instantly pulled from the official government register.

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We reveal what’s holding you back

We analyse your High Green rental property and highlight hidden assumptions, missing data, and low-impact areas automatically.

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See exactly how to improve it

Test upgrades in real time and discover the cheapest route to EPC C for your High Green rental.

find your epc High Green

No guesswork. No unnecessary upgrades. Just a clear route to EPC compliance High Green.

Why this matters now for High Green landlords

Two changes are coming — and together, they make timing critical.

EPC Assessor High Green

The rules are getting harder

The current EPC system (RdSAP 10) is being replaced by the Home Energy Model (HEM), rolling out late 2026. The same property is likely to score lower under HEM — making EPC C harder and much more expensive to achieve. In High Green, where the average poor-rated rental property SAP scores just 68.0, that gap will be even harder to close under the new methodology.

The law arrives in 2030

From 2030, rental properties below EPC C may not be legally let - putting rental income at risk. Right now, 1 rental properties in High Green are below that threshold. That's 33.33% of all rental stock in the High Green area that could become unlettable without action.

Act now and secure your grandfather rights

Achieve EPC C under today's rules and your rating is typically valid for 10 years - meaning you lock in compliance before the methodology changes. In High Green, 1 properties are rated EPC D and are just a few points away. Many could get there through evidence alone, without major retrofit work.

Lock In Now

Get to EPC C now before it gets harder keep that rating for 10 years avoid stricter future requirements.

Most High Green landlords don’t realise the goal posts are changing before the deadline arrives.

Uncover the hidden defaults affecting your High Green EPC rating

Most EPC certificates rely on "worst-case" assumptions when information is missing - and in High Green, those hidden defaults are likely dragging ratings down across 1 High Green rental properties right now

Defaults penalise your score

When an assessor cannot verify insulation or specific heating controls, the software defaults to the lowest possible performance. In High Green, assumed floor defaults are the most common culprit - affecting properties across Sheffield and silently pulling scores below the EPC C threshold. We identify exactly where these assumptions are reducing your rating.

Evidence can help your rating

For flats typical of High Green, proving what's already there - loft insulation, glazing records, heating controls - can significantly improve your EPC score without spending anything on physical upgrades. With an average poor EPC score of 68.0 across the area, many properties are closer to EPC C than their certificate suggests.

Small fixes can = big gains

1 rental homes in High Green are rated EPC D - just a handful of points from compliance. With our real-time interactive EPC analysis, we show you exactly how upgrades or evidence submissions can move your score, with instant results before you spend a penny.

Landlord EPC High Green

We uncover the hidden defaults and turn your High Green EPC into a clear action plan

Small changes could push you to EPC C

Try our interactive demo to simulate High Green EPC ratings in real time

Estimated EPC Rating
Based on selected improvements
F
GFEDCBA
EPC C sits at ~75% of the scale

Low-cost improvements

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Higher impact upgrades (optional)

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Estimated outcome
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Find out whats holding your High Green EPC rating back

See exactly what's holding your rating back and how to reach EPC C for the lowest cost - using real data from 3 High Green rental properties.

Instant access • Used by High Green landlords & agents

EPC insights in High Green

We've analysed EPC data from 3 rental homes in High Green.

1 High Green Rental Homes May Reach EPC C Without Major Upgrades Many landlords may be able to reach EPC compliance with minor evidence-led upgrades rather than expensive retrofit work. 1 poorly rated rental homes in High Green are below EPC rating C, representing 33.33% of the latest EPC records. Most are flats in High Green, Sheffield, with an average poor EPC score of 68.0.

What this means for landlords in High Green

  • 1 High Green rental homes are rated EPC D and are just a few points from reaching EPC C.
  • 1 High Green rental homes rely on assumed defaults, which significantly reduce the EPC ratings.
  • Manual evidence may unlock Band C faster than major retrofit work.
  • Flats dominate poor ratings, so loft insulation, glazing verification, and heating controls are often the biggest wins.
Total latest records: 3
Total below EPC C: 1
Share poor (D-G): 33.33%
Distinct UPRNs: 3
Distinct poor UPRNs: 1
Avg poor EPC score: 68.0

High Green EPC rating bands

Band Property Count
C 2
D 1

Low EPC rated postcodes in High Green

Postcode Below EPC C
S35 3JA 1

Landlord EPC questions for High Green

1 rental properties in High Green are currently rated below EPC C (bands D–G), representing 33.33% of the latest EPC records in Sheffield.

From 1 October 2030, all privately rented properties in England including those in High Green must achieve a minimum EPC rating of C to be legally let. Fines of up to £30,000 per property apply for non-compliance. There is a £10,000 cost cap per property on required improvements.

Currently yes — EPC D properties in High Green can still be legally let. However from 1 October 2030 the minimum standard rises to EPC C. In High Green, 1 properties are rated EPC D and are only a few points from compliance, meaning many could reach EPC C through low-cost evidence or minor upgrades.

For flats typical of High Green, the cheapest route is usually to address assumed defaults first — 1 properties in High Green are affected by assumed floor defaults. Providing evidence of existing insulation or heating controls costs little and can improve the EPC score without physical work. Common low-cost wins include loft insulation certificates, glazing records, and heating control verification.

Most EPC certificates use worst-case assumptions when an assessor cannot verify insulation or heating controls. In High Green, assumed floor defaults are the most common cause of artificially low ratings. These assumed defaults can significantly reduce your score even if your property is well insulated. Providing evidence to the assessor — such as installer certificates or photos — can improve the rating without any physical upgrades.

Assumed defaults are worst-case values applied by EPC software when an assessor cannot verify a property's insulation, construction, or heating controls. They are one of the most common reasons EPC ratings are lower than they should be. In High Green, 1 rental properties are currently affected by assumed defaults — meaning their true performance may be better than their certificate suggests.

The Home Energy Model (HEM) is replacing the current RdSAP 10 EPC methodology from late 2026. Properties are likely to score lower under HEM, making EPC C harder and more expensive to achieve. In High Green, where the average poor-rated property scores 68.0, the gap will be harder to close under the new methodology. Landlords who achieve EPC C under today's rules will hold that rating for 10 years, protecting them from stricter future requirements.

Yes — EPC exemptions are available to landlords in High Green in specific circumstances. These include a cost cap exemption (if you have spent up to £10,000 and still cannot reach EPC C), a third-party consent exemption (where a freeholder or planning authority refuses permission), and a property devaluation exemption (if improvements would reduce the property's value by more than 5%). Exemptions must be registered on the PRS Exemptions Register and are valid for up to 10 years. Read our full EPC exemptions guide →

Based on the latest EPC records, the postcodes in High Green with the highest concentration of below-EPC-C rental properties include S35 3JA. Properties in these postcodes are statistically more likely to be affected by assumed defaults or to benefit from targeted low-cost upgrades.

The average EPC efficiency score for poorly rated rental properties in High Green is 68.0. EPC C begins at a score of 69, meaning the average below-C property in High Green needs to gain approximately 1 points to reach compliance.

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