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Committee

Local Government, Housing and Planning Committee 11 November 2025

11 Nov 2025 · S6 · Local Government, Housing and Planning Committee
Item of business
Subordinate Legislation
Energy Performance of Buildings (Scotland) Regulations 2025 [Draft]

Good morning. I am pleased to join the committee today to speak to the draft Energy Performance of Buildings (Scotland) Regulations 2025, which will legislate to reform energy performance certificates.

The EPC system has formed a long-standing part of Scotland’s property market since 2008 and of retained European Union law across the United Kingdom. However, the Scottish Government has heard concerns from stakeholders such as the Climate Change Committee and consumer groups such as Which? that EPCs need to change and be of higher quality. I want them to be accurate, up to date and relevant, and to give consumers the information that they need on the journey to net zero and warmer, more energy-efficient homes.

We have consulted extensively over the past four years on EPC reform. Users have been at the centre of that, helping to design a new EPC that I believe is now fit for purpose. I will be glad to share that design with the committee after our session.

The draft regulations that I have introduced do three things. First, they retain the well-established and well-understood parts of the existing EPC system, namely the existing trigger points for when an EPC is required, the standardised assessment that is carried out by suitably skilled and accredited assessors and a public register of certificates.

Secondly, they introduce the new reforms that we believe are necessary: a redesigned certificate that has been shaped by user feedback; new ratings and a new property report to ensure that consumers have clear information on current and potential fabric performance, heating systems and costs; a reduced validity period from 10 to five years to ensure that consumers have more up-to-date information; and strengthened quality assurance for EPC assessors to safeguard consumers.

Finally, they protect the property market during the transition. By introducing the regulations a year before they come into force and including a further one-year transition period, we are supporting the market to adjust to the new regime. That will be underpinned by a clear communications and engagement campaign. Consumers will also benefit from an interactive interface for a more dynamic EPC and through the heat and energy efficiency technical suitability assessment.

That is what today’s reform regulations will do, but I should be clear that they do not mandate property owners to meet an energy efficiency standard. We have consulted separately on those matters, but decisions have yet to be taken.

By introducing the reformed EPC and the new rating systems as a first step, we are providing a foundation for our wider heat in buildings programme, giving certainty to all sectors on how we will measure energy performance and any future standards that might be linked to that. My officials and I will be glad to discuss that with the committee.

In the same item of business

The Convener Green
The next item is an evidence session on the draft Energy Performance of Buildings (Scotland) Regulations 2025. We are joined by Màiri McAllan MSP, the Cabine...
The Cabinet Secretary for Housing (Màiri McAllan) SNP
Good morning. I am pleased to join the committee today to speak to the draft Energy Performance of Buildings (Scotland) Regulations 2025, which will legislat...
The Convener Green
I will open up the questions by asking about EPC metrics and the assessment methodology. When you joined us in a previous evidence-taking session, you talked...
Màiri McAllan SNP
The home energy model is a foundational part of the proposed changes. I will point to a few things in answering your question. First, UK and Scottish officia...
The Convener Green
What are those agreed timelines?
Màiri McAllan SNP
Ross Loveridge will keep me right on this. Is it to go live on the 31st October next year?
Ross Loveridge (Scottish Government)
Yes. We are working to the same timetable, convener, because, as the cabinet secretary said, the UK Government is planning to make similar reforms in England...
The Convener Green
The next theme is the reduction in EPC validity periods, which Meghan Gallacher will cover.
Meghan Gallacher (Central Scotland) (Con) Con
The Scottish Association of Landlords is in favour of retaining the 10-year period, arguing that increased regulation incurs costs, which can then be passed ...
Màiri McAllan SNP
I will give my view on that, and then I will let my team come in with anything else that they would like to add. First, the whole thrust of our proposed chan...
Meghan Gallacher Con
That is helpful. Convener, I do not have any further questions on that.
The Convener Green
It is interesting that the majority of people have one property, but others have more than that. Do you have the data on that?
Màiri McAllan SNP
Yes. In my scribbled handwritten notes it says that, in June 2024, 76 per cent of all registrations were for one property. I will check the source of that an...
The Convener Green
That would be great—thank you very much. The possibility of going back to a 10-year validity period once people reach an EPC C rating is interesting. The ot...
Evelyn Tweed (Stirling) (SNP) SNP
Cabinet secretary, will you outline what the Government’s plans are for the training and availability of assessors to undertake the proposed new assessments?...
Màiri McAllan SNP
My colleague Ross Loveridge has already mentioned that the assessment and the pool of assessors is a UK-wide matter, so it is another part of the process on ...
Ross Loveridge
I am happy to do that. The market has been through previous changes—EPCs have been updated over time—so the assessor market is used to dealing with changes t...
Evelyn Tweed SNP
When might the training start, given that it is not too long before the regulations come into force?
Màiri McAllan SNP
I think that it has already started, to a great extent, has it not?
Ross Loveridge
Yes, it has. We are already discussing that with organisations. Versions of the home energy model are now available for approved organisations and assessor o...
Patrick Mason (Scottish Government)
As the cabinet secretary set out, the role of the assessor will not be significantly different. They will be doing much the same job, but they will need to b...
The Convener Green
Could you give us an indication of your plans for updating the auditing and assurance requirements?
Màiri McAllan SNP
Forgive me, convener, but I might turn straight to Ross Loveridge to answer that. We had a conversation about it this morning and he explained it to me very ...
Ross Loveridge
We have known for a long time—indeed, such matters were raised when the committee discussed EPCs back in January—that there have been long-standing concerns ...
The Convener Green
Will you say a little more about smart auditing, Ross? That sounds interesting.
Ross Loveridge
Patrick Mason can explain this as well. We have a system that flags errors. For example, if an assessor submitted or lodged multiple certificates—a number th...
Patrick Mason
That is exactly right. In essence, our approach involves risk-based auditing. It looks at an unlikely set of circumstances, puts rules in place around it and...
Màiri McAllan SNP
The other side of the auditing process involves the carrying out of local authorities’ enforcement obligations. Again, we are conscious of monitoring that. W...
The Convener Green
Alexander, you had questions in that area. Do you want to pursue those?
Alexander Stewart (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Con) Con
Yes, thank you, convener. Thank you, cabinet secretary, for that insight. As you have identified, the problem is that, under the existing regulations, some c...