What Does Your BER Rating Actually Mean for Your Energy Bills?
Everyone knows an A is better than a G. But how much better? In real euros, the gap between a well-insulated A-rated home and a draughty D1 is roughly €1,600 per year. Here's what every BER rating costs to run.
Annual Energy Cost by BER Rating
These figures are based on a typical 3-bed semi-detached house using SEAI data and current energy prices (electricity at 41c/kWh, gas at 10c/kWh as of early 2026):
| BER Rating | kWh/m²/year | Est. Annual Cost | Monthly Cost | vs A-Rated |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A1 | ≤25 | €450–€550 | €38–€46 | — |
| A2 | 26–50 | €550–€700 | €46–€58 | +€100–€150 |
| A3 | 51–75 | €700–€900 | €58–€75 | +€250–€350 |
| B1 | 76–100 | €900–€1,100 | €75–€92 | +€450–€550 |
| B2 | 101–125 | €1,100–€1,350 | €92–€113 | +€650–€800 |
| B3 | 126–150 | €1,350–€1,550 | €113–€129 | +€900–€1,000 |
| C1 | 151–175 | €1,550–€1,800 | €129–€150 | +€1,100–€1,250 |
| C2 | 176–200 | €1,800–€2,000 | €150–€167 | +€1,350–€1,450 |
| C3 | 201–225 | €2,000–€2,200 | €167–€183 | +€1,550–€1,650 |
| D1 | 226–260 | €2,200–€2,500 | €183–€208 | +€1,750–€1,950 |
| D2 | 261–300 | €2,500–€2,900 | €208–€242 | +€2,050–€2,350 |
| E–G | 301–450+ | €2,900–€4,500+ | €242–€375+ | +€2,450–€3,950+ |
What This Means for Buyers
When you're comparing two properties — a B2-rated house at €340,000 and a D1-rated house at €320,000 — the D1 looks €20,000 cheaper. But over 10 years, the D1 costs roughly €11,000–€14,000 more in energy bills. Over 25 years (a typical mortgage term), the gap is €27,500–€35,000. Suddenly that €20k "saving" on the purchase price evaporates entirely.
Add to that: A-rated and B-rated homes qualify for green mortgage discounts — typically 0.2–0.5% lower interest rates. On a €300,000 mortgage over 30 years, even a 0.3% rate reduction saves about €15,000 in total interest. Read our guide to green mortgages in Ireland for every lender's rates.
What This Means for Landlords
A BER cert is legally required for all rental properties. But beyond compliance, the rating directly affects your bottom line:
- Tenant demand: Energy-efficient homes attract tenants faster and command higher rents
- Void periods: D and E-rated properties sit empty longer, especially in winter
- Running costs: If you're paying any share of utility costs, BER directly hits your profit
- Green mortgages: BTL products with BER-linked rates are emerging
- Tax deductions: BER assessment fees and energy upgrade costs can be tax-deductible for landlords
Use our Landlord Tax Calculator to see how BER assessment costs factor into your deductions.
What This Means for Sellers
Research from multiple markets shows that higher-BER properties sell for a premium. International data suggests:
- Moving from D to B adds roughly 5–10% to sale price
- A-rated homes sell for 10–15% more than D-rated equivalents
- Properties with poor ratings (E–G) can sit on the market 30–50% longer
For a €400,000 property, a two-grade BER improvement could mean €20,000–€40,000 more at sale. Our Renovation ROI Calculator can help you model whether an energy upgrade before selling is worth it.
How to Improve Your BER
The fastest way to improve your rating depends on your current situation, but the upgrades with the best return are typically: attic insulation (cheapest, biggest impact per euro), cavity wall insulation (if applicable), heat pump replacement, and solar PV panels. Each of these qualifies for SEAI grants.
For detailed cost breakdowns, grant amounts, and step-by-step planning for every energy upgrade, see our dedicated resource at HomeEnergyGuide.ie — including the SEAI Grant Calculator.
Your BER is the starting point for any improvement plan, grant application, or sale listing.