For decades, the communal boilers and district heating pipes serving Britain’s flats, student blocks and mixed-use developments sat in a regulatory blind spot. A building’s heat network was treated as a piece of plant, something for the maintenance contractor to worry about rather than the board. That era is over.
Heat networks are now formally regulated, with Ofgem appointed as the market regulator and a hard registration deadline approaching in January 2027. For the developers, landlords, managing agents and local authorities responsible for these systems, the change is significant: a heat network is no longer an engineering afterthought, it’s a regulated asset carrying real enforcement risk.
From plant room to regulated asset
A heat network, sometimes called communal or district heating, generates heat in one central location and distributes it to multiple homes or units through a network of insulated pipes. Roughly half a million UK consumers are already served this way, and government policy expects that number to grow sharply as the country moves away from individual gas boilers.
The problem the new rules are designed to fix is simple: until recently, the people receiving heat through these networks had almost none of the protections that ordinary gas and electricity customers take for granted. No independent regulator, no guaranteed standards on billing transparency, no clear route for complaints. The new heat network regulations close that gap by bringing communal and district systems under formal oversight for the first time.
Who the rules actually apply to
If you own, operate, bill for, or manage a system that supplies heat or hot water to more than one end user, the obligations are likely to sit with you. In practice that captures:
- Property developers building communal or district schemes
- Landlords and freeholders of residential and mixed-use blocks
- Managing agents running day-to-day operations
- Local authorities and housing providers
- Portfolio owners and asset managers
A common trap is assuming responsibility sits with the heating contractor. It doesn’t. The duty to register and comply falls on the organisation responsible for the network, even where the technical work is outsourced.
What Ofgem now expects
The regulations introduce a structured set of duties rather than a single box to tick. The core requirements include:
Registration with Ofgem. Operators of in-scope networks must notify and register, providing detail on the systems they run. Missing the registration window is the most immediate exposure most portfolios face.
Metering and billing transparency. Heat must be metered appropriately where it is cost-effective to do so, and bills have to be accurate, clear and defensible. This is where many existing schemes are weakest, as historic metering was often patchy and recharge calculations rarely stand up to scrutiny.
Consumer protection standards. End users gain rights around fair treatment, transparent pricing and complaint handling, mirroring protections in the wider energy market.
Cost Effectiveness Assessments. Operators may need to assess whether installing or upgrading heat metering is technically and economically viable under defined criteria.
Technical assurance. A separate Heat Network Technical Assurance Scheme is emerging to formalise design and operating standards, signalling that today’s registration duties are only the first layer of a tightening framework.
The cost of getting it wrong
Ofgem holds genuine enforcement powers under the regime. It can require corrective action, issue financial penalties and publish enforcement notices. Beyond the regulator, weak billing practices invite consumer complaints and disputes. Once a tenant or leaseholder challenges a recharge they believe is unfair, the absence of clean metering data and a documented process becomes expensive fast.
The reputational dimension matters too. For a managing agent or housing provider, a public enforcement notice or a wave of billing complaints does lasting damage to occupier trust that no amount of remedial work fully repairs.
What to do before the deadline
The organisations handling this well are treating it as a governance exercise, not a maintenance job. The sensible sequence is: establish which of your networks fall in scope, complete Ofgem registration on time, review your metering and billing against the transparency standards, and build an audit-ready paper trail you can defend if challenged.
For portfolios with several sites, or with metering and recharge arrangements that have grown up piecemeal over the years, that is more work than it first appears, and it’s where specialist support earns its keep. Consultancies that combine regulatory knowledge with practical metering and billing oversight can take a portfolio from unregistered and exposed to documented and defensible. Specialists in managing heat network compliance across commercial real estate now build this into wider portfolio governance rather than treating it in isolation.
The direction of travel is unambiguous: more oversight, formal technical standards and greater accountability to the people on the end of the pipe. With the January 2027 registration deadline now firmly in view, the cheapest time to get a heat network in order is well before the regulator comes asking. Energy and carbon specialists such as Carbonxgen are already helping property portfolios get ahead of the changes rather than scrambling to catch up with them.











































































