£8,000 to £15,000. That's the price tag for external wall insulation on a typical semi, and it stops most people in their tracks. But here's the number that matters more: ECO4 can fund the entire job if you qualify. Fully funded. No contribution from you. For a measure that saves around £590 a year on heating bills according to the Energy Saving Trust, the grant route changes the maths completely.
External wall insulation is the big one. It's the most expensive single measure you can fit to a house, but it's also the most effective for solid-walled properties. If your home was built before the 1930s, it almost certainly has solid walls, and those walls are leaking heat at roughly twice the rate of an uninsulated cavity wall.
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The cost isn't about the insulation material. Rigid foam boards or mineral wool slabs cost a few hundred pounds. What drives the price is everything else.
Scaffolding goes up around the entire house. Insulation boards (typically 80mm to 100mm of expanded polystyrene, phenolic foam or mineral wool) are mechanically fixed to the external walls with adhesive and plastic anchors. A reinforcing mesh is embedded in a base coat of render. Then a decorative finish coat goes on top, either textured render, through-coloured silicone render or a brick-slip system that mimics traditional brickwork.
Every window sill, door frame, fascia board, downpipe and meter box needs extending or adapting to accommodate the extra 100mm to 120mm of wall thickness. That detailing work is fiddly and time-consuming. It's where the labour cost sits.
Property Type
Typical Cost
Annual Saving
Payback (without grant)
Mid-terrace
£5,000 to £9,000
£310
16 to 29 years
Semi-detached
£8,000 to £15,000
£590
14 to 25 years
Detached
£12,000 to £22,000
£870
14 to 25 years
Costs from the Energy Saving Trust and current installer quotes. The wide ranges reflect differences in property size, number of storeys, complexity of detailing and regional labour rates.
Without a grant, the payback period is long. That's the honest truth. External wall insulation is not a quick financial win like cavity wall insulation, which pays for itself in under two years. But with grant funding covering most or all of the cost, the equation flips entirely.
What Grants Cover External Wall Insulation?
Three schemes can help, and two of them can cover the full cost.
ECO4 is the primary route. If you're receiving qualifying benefits (Universal Credit, Pension Credit, Child Tax Credit, Income Support, JSA or ESA) and your home has an EPC rating of D or below, your energy supplier could fund the entire installation, per GOV.UK. External wall insulation is one of the highest-impact measures under ECO4 because it delivers the biggest SAP point improvement, often 20 to 40 points in a single measure. Energy suppliers get more credit towards their ECO4 targets for high-impact work, so they're motivated to fund it.
ECO4 runs until December 2026.
Warm Homes: Local Grant covers external wall insulation for households with income under £36,000 and an EPC of D or below, delivered through local councils, per GOV.UK. Some councils prioritise solid wall insulation because it makes the biggest difference to the hardest-to-treat homes in their area.
GBIS (Great British Insulation Scheme) can also fund external wall insulation for homes in council tax bands A to D. The eligibility is broader than ECO4 because it's not income-tested, but availability depends on your energy supplier.
Use our eligibility checker to see which schemes apply to your property. Two minutes. You'll know exactly where you stand.
What Does It Look Like?
This is a genuine concern. External wall insulation changes the appearance of your house, and not everyone wants that.
The most common finish is a rendered surface, either smooth or textured, in a colour of your choice. Modern silicone renders are self-cleaning and come in hundreds of colours. The result looks clean and contemporary, similar to a new-build. If your house is currently exposed brick, it won't look like exposed brick afterwards.
Brick-slip systems offer an alternative. Thin brick tiles are applied over the insulation to replicate the original brickwork. They're more expensive (add £2,000 to £5,000 to the total) but preserve a traditional appearance. From the street, it's hard to tell the difference from real brick.
If only one house in a terrace gets external wall insulation, it will look different from its neighbours. Some people mind this. Others don't. In streets where multiple properties are treated (common with ECO4 area-based schemes), the visual impact is less noticeable.
For listed buildings and properties in conservation areas, external wall insulation usually requires planning permission and may not be permitted at all. Historic England recommends internal wall insulation as the preferred approach for heritage properties, because it doesn't alter the external appearance.
How Long Does It Take?
Two to four weeks for a typical semi-detached house. Larger or more complex properties can take longer.
Week one: scaffolding erected, preparation work (removing obstructions, extending window sills and meter boxes). Week two: insulation boards fixed to walls. Week three: mesh and base coat applied. Week four: decorative finish coat, scaffolding down, final snagging.
You stay in the house throughout. The work is entirely external. There's some noise from drilling (the mechanical fixings) and the scaffolding can feel intrusive, but there's no internal disruption. No redecorating, no furniture moving, no dust inside.
Weather matters. Render can't be applied in freezing temperatures or heavy rain, so winter installations sometimes take longer with weather delays. Spring and autumn are the most popular installation seasons.
Internal vs External: Which Is Better?
This is the question every solid-wall homeowner faces, and the answer depends on your property, your budget and what you're willing to live with.
External is more effective per pound spent in SAP terms. Based on BRE data, external wall insulation delivers roughly 0.8 to 1.2 SAP points per £1,000 of cost (at full price). Internal wall insulation delivers roughly 1.0 to 1.5 SAP points per £1,000. The gap narrows because internal is cheaper, but external gives you a bigger total improvement and doesn't eat into your room sizes.
Our view: if you can get grant funding for external, take it. The performance is better, there's no space loss, and you don't have to redecorate every room. If you're paying out of pocket and the budget is tight, internal is the pragmatic choice. If your property is listed or in a conservation area, internal is likely your only option.
What About Condensation Risk?
External wall insulation actually reduces condensation risk when installed correctly. By keeping the wall structure warm, the dew point moves outward, away from the internal surfaces where condensation typically forms.
The key phrase is "installed correctly." The insulation must be continuous with no gaps, especially around window reveals and at junctions with the roof and ground floor. Thermal bridges at these points can create cold spots where condensation forms. A competent installer will detail these junctions carefully.
Ventilation still matters. If your home is draughty and you seal the walls with insulation, you're reducing uncontrolled ventilation. That's good for energy efficiency but can increase humidity if you don't have adequate controlled ventilation (trickle vents, extractor fans in kitchens and bathrooms). Your installer should assess ventilation as part of the survey.
Open the eligibility checker. Two minutes. You'll see which grants apply to your solid-walled home and whether external wall insulation could be fully funded.
Does external wall insulation need planning permission?
For most houses, no. External wall insulation falls under permitted development rights in England and Wales, provided it doesn't project more than a certain distance from the original wall. But if your property is listed, in a conservation area, or in a national park, you'll almost certainly need planning permission. Check with your local planning authority before committing. Some councils have specific policies on external insulation in conservation areas.
How long does external wall insulation last?
The insulation material itself lasts indefinitely. The render finish has a lifespan of 25 to 30 years before it might need recoating, depending on exposure and the type of render used. Silicone renders tend to last longer than acrylic ones. Most systems come with a 25-year guarantee covering both the insulation and the finish.
Can you insulate just one wall externally?
Technically yes, and it's sometimes done on the most exposed wall (usually the one facing prevailing weather). But insulating a single wall creates a thermal bridge at the junction with the uninsulated walls, which can cause condensation at the corners internally. For the best performance and to avoid damp risks, insulating all external walls is recommended.
Will external wall insulation make my house warmer in summer?
Yes, slightly. The insulation works both ways, keeping heat in during winter and slowing heat gain in summer. Solid-walled houses that overheat in south-facing rooms may notice a small improvement. But the primary benefit is winter heat retention. If summer overheating is your main concern, shading and ventilation are more effective than wall insulation.
Can I get external wall insulation on a pebble-dashed house?
Yes. The insulation boards are fixed directly over the existing pebble-dash surface. There's no need to remove it first, which saves time and cost. The new render finish replaces the pebble-dash appearance. Many homeowners see this as a visual upgrade as well as a thermal one.