Cavity wall insulation
Cavity wall insulation is a fantastic way to significantly reduce the amount of energy you need to heat your home. The average house could reduce heating costs by 15%. In fact, between 2002 and 2005 around 800,000 households installed cavity wall insulation. It is estimated that these households will collectively be saving 650,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide a year, enough to fill the new Wembley Stadium 83 times...every year!
Watch our video guide to cavity wall insulation.
In most houses built after the 1920s, the external walls are made of two layers with a small air gap or 'cavity' between them. If your home has unfilled cavity walls, a considerable slice of your energy bills will be spent heating the air outside. If you don't have cavity walls find out about the insulation options available for solid walls.
Typical brick formation for cavity walls
How cavity wall insulation works
Filling the gap between the two walls of a house with an insulating material massively decreases the amount of heat which escapes through the walls. It will help create a more even temperature in your home, help prevent condensation on the walls and ceilings and can also reduce the amount of heat building up inside your home during summer hot spells.
The savings
Around a third of all the heat lost in an un-insulated home is lost through the walls. If you have cavity walls, insulating them will make a great difference, and it could save you around £160 a year on your fuel bills.
The following table gives approximate costs, savings and paybacks for cavity wall insulation.
The Government, energy suppliers and local authorities all provide grants or offers to help you implement energy saving measures in your home. For more information or to search for energy saving grants and offers, please click here.
|
Measure |
Annual saving per year (£) |
Installed cost £ |
Installed payback |
CO 2 saving per year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cavity wall insulation | Around £160 | Around £250 | Around 2 years | Around 800kg |
The installed cost includes the subsidy available from the major energy suppliers under the Carbon Emissions Reduction Target (CERT); the typical unsubsidised installed cost is around £500
How the savings add up
If all the houses in the UK with unfilled cavity walls had them filled, the energy saved could heat a staggering one million homes each year.
Cavity wall insulation can pay for itself in around 2 years
How it is installed
Cavity wall insulation is quick, clean and relatively inexpensive to install. It's injected into the cavity from the outside taking between two and three hours in a three bedroom semi-detached house. It will usually cost around £250 (when subsidised under the Carbon Emissions Reduction Target) and with the savings you make on your heating bills, it can pay for itself in around two years.
See how cavity wall insulation is installed
Find out if you are entitled to a grant or offer to help you pay for the installation
What to do next
If you have other questions about cavity wall insulation why not visit our FAQ section. If you still have other questions why not call your local Energy Saving Trust advice centre on 0800 512 012 for free, impartial advice on saving energy in your home.
Find a registered installer by visiting the Cavity Insulation Guarantee Agency (CIGA) website or the National Insulation Association (NIA) website
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