EPC.Report
D
HP15 Mid Buckinghamshire
Buckinghamshire Rating D Score: 65 / 100

HP15 is around the national average for energy efficiency.

Energy efficiency in HP15 (Buckinghamshire) sits at an average score of 65 out of 100, placing it around the national average. To put this in context, the national average sits at 67. The most common rating band is D, with 6.0% of homes rated A or B and 79.3% in the C or D bands. Meanwhile, 1.6% of homes sit in the F or G bands — the least efficient categories. In practical terms, a rating of D means many homes here lose more heat than average — potentially adding £200-400 per year to energy bills compared to a C-rated home.

Most of the housing stock here consists of houses. Around 82% of properties are owner-occupied . Gas central heating is the main fuel source for 90% of homes, which is typical for urban areas across England.

There is genuine room for improvement here. If every recommended upgrade were carried out, the average score could climb from 65 to 80 — a 15-point jump that would lift the typical rating to C. That is a substantial gain, suggesting many homes are missing basic efficiency measures. If you live in HP15 and want to reduce your energy bills, start with our guide to loft insulation — it is one of the most cost-effective upgrades you can make.

EPC Rating Distribution

A
11 (0.2%)
B
256 (5.7%)
C
1,456 (32.5%)
D
2,094 (46.8%)
E
585 (13.1%)
F
62 (1.4%)
G
11 (0.2%)

Energy Efficiency Score

65
HP15 avg
67
National avg
-2 points vs national average

Potential score if all improvements made: 80 (rating C)

Recommended Improvements

Government funding may be available for some of these improvements. Check grants →

More data — property types, tenure & fuel

Property Types

601
Bungalow
3,205
House
68
Maisonette
600
Flat
1
Park home

Tenure

3,468
Owner-occupied
382
Private rented
356
Social rented

Main Fuel Types

4,025
gas
353
electric
40
oil
57
other

Frequently asked questions

What is the average EPC rating in HP15?

Homes in HP15 have an average EPC rating of D, scoring 65 out of 100 for energy efficiency. That figure comes from 4,475 certificates issued across the district.

This is broadly in line with the national average of 67 — neither particularly efficient nor particularly wasteful. A D rating typically means higher-than-necessary heating bills, especially in older properties without adequate insulation.

What percentage of homes in HP15 are rated F or G?

1.6% of homes in HP15 fall into the F or G bands — the lowest energy efficiency ratings. Nationally, the figure is 2.9%.

This is actually better than the national picture, suggesting the housing stock in HP15 is in relatively good shape — though any home rated F or G would still benefit enormously from basic upgrades. Landlords should note that F and G rated properties cannot legally be rented out under current MEES rules.

See all EPC data for Buckinghamshire →