
Event
2025 Insurathon: Pitch to win £50,000 of investment and pro bono UK legal advice
The Insurathon is a Norton Rose Fulbright event which fosters technological advancements and innovation in the insurance sector, now in its eighth year.
Global | Publication | November 2017
The government has introduced a new requirement that both commercial and domestic rented property must achieve a minimum energy efficiency standard (MEES).
The required standard is an “E” Energy Efficiency Certificate (EPC) rating or higher. An EPC is a certificate containing information about the energy efficiency of a building and must usually be obtained when a building is constructed, sold, rented out or modified in a particular way. EPC energy ratings are on a scale of A-G with A being the most energy efficient.
With some exceptions, a property that does not achieve an E or higher rating is a “sub-standard” property and must not be let until the landlord carries out “relevant” energy efficiency improvements to bring the property to the required standard. Limited exemptions are available but must be registered in a central public register.
As to timing, a landlord cannot grant a new lease or tenancy of sub-standard premises on or after April 1, 2018. Properties that are already let have a little longer to comply: April 1, 2020 in the case of domestic property and April 1, 2023 in the case of commercial premises.
For further information please contact Sian Skerratt-Williams or your usual contact at Norton Rose Fulbright.
Event
The Insurathon is a Norton Rose Fulbright event which fosters technological advancements and innovation in the insurance sector, now in its eighth year.
Subscribe and stay up to date with the latest legal news, information and events . . .
© Norton Rose Fulbright LLP 2025