Home Energy Efficiency UK 2026 — Grants, Upgrades and Savings Guide

Double Glazing Costs & Savings UK — 2026 Price Guide

How much double glazing costs in the UK, potential energy savings, available grants, and how to choose the right windows for your home.

If you are planning insulation, heating upgrades, and grant-backed home improvements together, use the Energy Efficiency Hub as your main route map.

Replacing old windows with double glazing is one of the most common home improvements. Here’s what it costs, what you’ll save, and what to watch out for.

Average Double Glazing Costs

By Property Type

PropertyNumber of windows (typical)Cost range (uPVC)
1-bed flat3–5£1,200–£3,000
2-bed terraced6–8£2,500–£5,000
3-bed semi8–12£4,000–£7,500
4-bed detached12–18£6,500–£12,000
5-bed detached15–25£8,000–£18,000

By Window Type

Window typePrice per window (supply + fit)
Casement (standard)£300–£600
Tilt and turn£350–£700
Sash (sliding)£600–£1,200
Bay window (3-panel)£1,000–£2,500
Bow window£1,200–£3,000
French doors£800–£1,500
Patio doors (sliding)£900–£2,000

By Frame Material

MaterialCost comparisonProsCons
uPVCCheapest (baseline)Low maintenance, good insulation, 20+ year lifespanCan look plasticky, fewer colour options traditionally
Aluminium20–40% more than uPVCSlimmer frames, modern look, very durable, recyclableLess insulating (needs thermal break), more expensive
Timber40–80% more than uPVCTraditional look, excellent insulation, paintableNeeds regular maintenance, prone to rot if neglected
Composite (timber/aluminium)50–100% more than uPVCTimber inside, aluminium outside — low maintenance + natural lookMost expensive option

Energy Ratings

RatingPerformanceEnergy saving
A++Best availableMaximum savings
A+ExcellentVery high savings
AVery good (minimum recommended)High savings
BGoodModerate savings
CMinimum Building Regulations standardLower savings

Always choose A-rated or better — the difference in price is small but the savings over 20+ years are significant.

Energy Savings

Replacement scenarioEstimated annual saving (3-bed semi)
Single glazing → A-rated double£195–£235/year
Old double glazing → A-rated double£50–£100/year
Single glazing → triple glazing£235–£280/year
Old double glazing → triple glazing£80–£140/year

Source: Energy Saving Trust estimates

Payback Period

ScenarioTotal costAnnual savingPayback period
Replacing single glazing (3-bed semi)£5,000~£215~23 years
Replacing old double glazing£5,000~£75~67 years

Note: Payback is based purely on energy savings. Double glazing also adds property value (typically £5,000–£10,000+), reduces noise, improves security, and makes your home more comfortable — these non-financial benefits often justify the investment.

Double Glazing vs Triple Glazing

FeatureDouble glazingTriple glazing
Panes23
U-value (lower = better)1.0–1.40.6–0.8
CostBaseline20–40% more
Annual saving over single~£215~£255
WeightStandardHeavier — may need stronger frames
Noise reductionGoodExcellent
Best forMost homesNew builds, passive houses, very cold areas, noise-sensitive locations

Grants and Financial Help

SchemeWhat it coversWho qualifies
Great British Insulation SchemeInsulation (NOT usually windows)Certain council tax bands and income criteria
ECO4Insulation and heating (NOT usually windows)Low income, benefits, fuel poverty
Local council grantsSome councils offer window grantsCheck with your council
Home Energy ScotlandGrants for energy efficiency improvementsScotland residents
Nest (Wales)Energy efficiency advice and grantsWales residents on low income
Green Deal (residual)Pay over time via energy bill savingsStill available for some measures
VAT reduction0% VAT on some energy-saving materialsMust meet specific criteria

Note: Most government schemes focus on insulation and heating, not replacement windows. However, if you’re receiving other funded improvements, windows may sometimes be included as part of a whole-house approach.

How to Choose an Installer

CheckDetail
FENSA or CERTASS registeredEssential — they self-certify Building Regulations compliance
Get 3+ quotesNever accept the first quote
No high-pressure salesReputable installers don’t pressure you
Check reviewsTrustpilot, Google Reviews, Checkatrade, Which? Trusted Traders
Written guaranteeAt least 10 years on frames, 5 years on glass units
Insurance-backed guaranteeProtects you if the installer goes bust
Full written quoteAll costs itemised — no hidden extras
Survey before quotingThey should measure and inspect, not quote over the phone
DepositNo more than 25% — pay the balance on completion

Common Problems to Avoid

ProblemHow to avoid it
Condensation between panesIndicates seal failure — should be covered by guarantee
DraughtsPoor installation — insist on proper sealing and check on first cold day
MistingSeal failure — claim under guarantee
Difficult to open/closeAdjustment needed — contact installer
Colour fading (uPVC)Choose quality foiled frames with UV protection
Paying too muchAlways get 3+ quotes and never sign on the day

Sources

  1. Ofgem — Energy consumers
  2. Citizens Advice — Energy