Published by Verified Plumbers ยท Last reviewed: April 2026 ยท Next review: April 2027
Contents:
- Quick decision snapshot
- The question nobody answers properly
- The five variables that actually determine repair vs replace
- The honest decision matrix
- The heat exchanger conversation
- What government grants actually cover in 2026
- The London-specific cost reality
- Hard water and the replacement decision
- Questions to ask your engineer before deciding
- When to get a second opinion
- The carbon monoxide safety note
- Summary โ the repair vs replace decision in four questions
- Related guides
- Find a verified boiler engineer in your borough
- Methodology & sources
Quick decision snapshot
This table is a starting point โ not a substitute for a Gas Safe engineer’s assessment of your specific boiler.
| Situation | Likely decision |
|---|---|
| Boiler under 8 years old, single fault | Repair |
| Boiler 8โ12 years, single fault, serviced annually | Repair โ but assess |
| Boiler over 12 years, recurring faults | Replace |
| Repair cost exceeds 50% of replacement cost | Replace |
| Heat exchanger failure on boiler over 8 years | Replace |
| No service history, boiler over 10 years | Replace |
| Hard water area, no scale protection ever fitted | Assess โ likely replace sooner |
| Boiler under 8 years, heat exchanger failure | Get second opinion before deciding |
The question nobody answers properly
Most boiler guides tell you to replace if your boiler is over 10 years old. Most sales engineers tell you to replace whenever you call them out.
Neither answer is useful.
The honest answer is that the repair vs replace decision depends on five variables โ none of which is boiler age alone.
A 12-year-old boiler that has been serviced annually, has a clean heat exchanger and is running efficiently may have years of reliable service left. An 8-year-old boiler in a hard water area with no service history and a failing heat exchanger may be beyond economic repair.
This guide gives you the framework to make the decision based on your specific boiler, your specific property and the specific fault you’re dealing with โ not on a sales engineer’s incentive to sell you a new boiler.
The five variables that actually determine repair vs replace
1. Boiler age โ relative, not absolute
Age matters in context. A boiler’s expected lifespan is typically 10โ15 years with annual servicing. In London’s hard water areas without scale protection, that lifespan can be shorter โ Thames Water confirms most London postcodes sit in the hard to very hard water band.
Age alone is not a reason to replace โ but age combined with any of the other four variables below changes the calculation significantly.
2. Service history
A boiler with an unbroken annual service record โ documented in the Benchmark logbook or digital equivalent โ has had scale accumulation monitored, components checked and efficiency maintained.
A boiler with no service history is an unknown quantity regardless of age. Missing service records are a significant red flag on any boiler over 8 years old.
3. The specific fault
Some faults are straightforward and economic to repair at any boiler age. A faulty diverter valve, a failed pump, a pressure sensor โ these are component replacements that cost ยฃ150โยฃ350 fitted and restore full function.
Other faults โ particularly heat exchanger failure โ are a different conversation entirely. See the heat exchanger section below.
4. Repair cost as a proportion of replacement cost
The industry rule of thumb: if a repair costs more than 50% of what a replacement would cost, replacement is the more economical decision.
In London, a like-for-like combi replacement costs ยฃ2,800โยฃ4,500 fitted. A repair costing over ยฃ1,400โยฃ2,250 on an older boiler warrants serious consideration of replacement.
5. Running costs and efficiency
A boiler operating significantly below its rated efficiency โ through scale accumulation, wear or poor original specification โ costs more to run every day it stays in service.
The efficiency loss from an unserviced boiler in a hard water area is real and measurable over time. This ongoing cost must be factored into the repair decision, not just the one-off repair bill.
Energy Saving Trust estimates that upgrading a G-rated boiler to an A-rated boiler with full heating controls could save around ยฃ420 a year in Great Britain โ though actual savings vary by property type, with flats and semis typically saving less.
The honest decision matrix
This matrix is a publisher-created tool for illustrative purposes โ not an industry-standard assessment method. Use it as a framework, not a definitive answer. A Gas Safe engineer’s assessment of your specific boiler should always take precedence.
Score your boiler on each of the five variables below. Total score guides the decision.
| Variable | Score 1 | Score 2 | Score 3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age | Under 8 years | 8โ12 years | Over 12 years |
| Service history | Serviced annually | Occasional gaps | No record |
| Fault type | Minor component | Major component | Heat exchanger |
| Repair cost | Under 25% of replacement | 25โ50% of replacement | Over 50% of replacement |
| Hard water mitigation | Scale reducer fitted | Partial protection | No protection ever |
Score 5โ7: Repair The boiler has useful life remaining and the repair is economic.
Score 8โ11: Assess carefully Get a full engineer’s assessment before committing to either decision. Ask specifically about heat exchanger condition and current efficiency rating.
Score 12โ15: Replace The combination of age, fault severity and lack of protection makes replacement the more economical long-term decision.
The heat exchanger conversation
The heat exchanger is the single component whose failure changes the entire repair vs replace calculation โ regardless of boiler age.
The heat exchanger transfers heat from the gas flame to the central heating water. In London’s hard water areas, calcium carbonate deposits on the heat exchanger surface with every heating cycle โ contributing to limescale build-up and wear over time.
The result is reduced efficiency, increased gas consumption and accelerated component wear.
When a heat exchanger fails:
Heat exchanger replacement costs ยฃ500โยฃ1,000+ in parts and labour โ before any additional work required around it.
On a boiler over 8 years old, this repair cost approaches or exceeds the 50% threshold that makes replacement the more rational decision.
More importantly, a heat exchanger that has failed on an older boiler has almost certainly failed because of scale accumulation or wear that has also affected other components.
Replacing the heat exchanger without addressing the underlying cause โ and without fitting scale protection โ means the new heat exchanger is subject to the same conditions that destroyed the original.
The right question to ask:
Before authorising a heat exchanger replacement on any boiler over 8 years old, ask the engineer: “If you replace the heat exchanger, what is the realistic remaining lifespan of the rest of the boiler?”
A good engineer will give you an honest answer. A sales engineer will give you a quote.
See our London Hard Water Guide โ causes, costs and mitigation options for the full context on scale accumulation and boiler protection.
What government grants actually cover in 2026
The grant landscape in 2026 is more comprehensive than it was at launch โ but it is still widely misunderstood.
This section covers what the schemes actually cover, not what a sales engineer hoping to close a sale might imply they cover.
Boiler Upgrade Scheme (BUS)
The BUS provides upfront grants for replacing fossil fuel heating with low-carbon alternatives.
As of 28 April 2026, the scheme has been extended to 2030 and expanded. Current eligible technologies and grant values:
- Air-to-water (air source) heat pumps: ยฃ7,500
- Ground source heat pumps: ยฃ7,500
- Air-to-air heat pumps: ยฃ2,500 (added 28 April 2026 โ verify current availability at GOV.UK before advising any client)
- Biomass boilers: ยฃ5,000 (limited circumstances โ rural properties off the gas grid)
- Gas boiler replacement: not covered
The BUS is not means-tested โ household income is irrelevant. Heat pumps must meet a minimum SCOP of 2.8 โ confirmed in Ofgem BUS installer guidance.
The grant is applied by an MCS-certified installer as an upfront discount โ you do not pay full price and claim back. Source: GOV.UK โ Boiler Upgrade Scheme
Pre-publish: verify current BUS grant values and eligible technology list against Ofgem guidance at time of publishing โ the scheme is actively evolving.
Victorian terraces and heat pumps โ the London reality
Heat pumps work most efficiently in well-insulated properties with low-temperature heating systems.
A significant proportion of London’s housing stock is Victorian terrace โ properties with solid walls, limited insulation and original radiators sized for high-temperature systems.
Heat pumps in these properties require careful assessment and potentially significant additional investment in insulation and radiator upgrades.
The ยฃ7,500 grant makes a heat pump more affordable โ it does not make it automatically appropriate for every London property. Get a proper heat loss calculation from an MCS-certified engineer before committing.
ECO4
ECO4 is a different scheme entirely โ funded by energy companies and targeted at low-income and vulnerable households.
ECO4 eligibility is scheme-specific and depends on current Ofgem criteria โ including household income under approximately ยฃ31,000 gross or a qualifying health condition affected by living in a cold home.
Do not assume any grant applies to a gas boiler replacement without checking current eligibility at Ofgem ECO4.
The scheme runs until December 2026 โ verify the current end date before advising any client.
The sales engineer warning
Any engineer who mentions grants in their first breath โ before assessing your property, your system and your specific situation โ is selling, not advising.
A legitimate engineer assesses first and advises on grants where genuinely applicable.
Grant eligibility depends on property type, existing system, income and current scheme rules. No engineer can confirm eligibility without a proper assessment.
The London-specific cost reality
London boiler replacement costs sit above national averages for five structural reasons: ULEZ charges on non-compliant vans, controlled zone parking costs, the London Living Wage โ updated annually by the Living Wage Foundation โ London-level insurance premiums and travel time across one of the densest cities in Europe.
Typical London 2026 ranges โ actual costs vary by property type, system configuration, access and provider. Always obtain multiple written quotes.
| Work | Typical London range 2026 |
|---|---|
| Boiler repair (most common faults) | ยฃ200โยฃ350 all-in |
| Heat exchanger replacement | ยฃ500โยฃ1,000+ |
| Like-for-like combi replacement | ยฃ2,800โยฃ4,500 fitted |
| System boiler replacement | ยฃ3,000โยฃ5,000 fitted |
| Gravity-fed to combi conversion | ยฃ3,800โยฃ5,800 fitted |
| Power flush / system clean | ยฃ450โยฃ750 |
| Magnetic filter fitting | ยฃ180โยฃ280 fitted |
| Scale reducer fitting | ยฃ80โยฃ150 fitted |
See our London Plumbing Costs Guide 2026 for the full breakdown.
The five-year cost comparison โ repair vs replace
Publisher-created illustrative framework โ not an industry-standard calculation. Individual outcomes vary significantly.
| Scenario | Year 1 | Years 2โ5 | 5-year total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Repair ageing boiler (recurring faults) | ยฃ300 | ยฃ400/yr | ยฃ1,900 |
| Replace with new combi (mid-range) | ยฃ3,500 | ยฃ150/yr (service) | ยฃ4,100 |
| Replace with new combi + hard water protection | ยฃ3,800 | ยฃ130/yr | ยฃ4,320 |
The repair option looks cheaper in year one.
Over five years, a boiler generating recurring faults at ยฃ300โยฃ400 per callout approaches or exceeds the cost of replacement โ without the efficiency gains or the warranty protection that come with a new installation.
Hard water and the replacement decision
London’s hard water is a direct factor in boiler lifespan and should be part of every repair vs replace assessment in the capital.
Thames Water confirms that most London postcodes sit in the hard to very hard water band. Hard water contributes to limescale build-up and wear on the heat exchanger over time.
In properties with no scale protection โ no scale reducer on the boiler cold inlet, no magnetic filter on the central heating return โ this damage accumulates with every heating cycle.
The protection question that must be asked at every replacement
Before any new boiler is commissioned in a London property, two questions must be answered:
- Is a scale reducer or polyphosphate dosing pot fitted to the cold water inlet?
- Is a magnetic system filter fitted to the central heating return?
Many engineers now recommend a magnetic system filter as standard on replacement installations, and some manufacturers may make this part of their warranty or best-practice requirements.
Confirm the specific requirement for your chosen boiler and installer before work begins.
A scale reducer on the cold water inlet can help reduce scale build-up on the heat exchanger โ confirm the requirement for your chosen boiler before installation.
A new boiler installed without these protections in a London hard water area is a new boiler beginning the same damage cycle that shortened the life of the one it replaced.
The power flush decision
System cleaning before installation โ whether power flush or chemical flush โ is required or recommended by most manufacturers as a warranty condition.
A system with significant magnetite accumulation requires a full power flush (ยฃ450โยฃ750) before a new boiler is installed.
An engineer who installs a new boiler into a dirty system without cleaning it first is invalidating the warranty and shortening the new boiler’s life.
Confirm the exact requirement with your chosen installer before work begins.
Questions to ask your engineer before deciding
These questions separate engineers who are advising from engineers who are selling.
On the fault:
- What exactly has failed and why?
- Is this fault likely to recur, or is it a one-off component failure?
- What is the condition of the heat exchanger?
- What is the current efficiency rating of this boiler?
On repair:
- What is the all-in cost of the repair including parts and labour?
- What warranty comes with the repaired component?
- If you repair this fault, what other components are at risk in the next 12โ24 months?
On replacement:
- What is the all-in cost including removal, installation, commissioning and any system work required?
- Does the quote include a system flush?
- Does the quote include a scale reducer and magnetic filter?
- What warranty does the new boiler carry and what are the conditions?
- Will you complete the Benchmark commissioning record?
On grants:
- Have you assessed whether this property and situation qualifies for BUS or ECO4 โ and on what basis?
An engineer who cannot answer these questions clearly and specifically is an engineer who has not properly assessed your situation.
When to get a second opinion
Get a second opinion before authorising any repair or replacement where:
- The repair cost exceeds ยฃ500 on a boiler over 10 years old
- The engineer recommends replacement without clearly explaining why repair is uneconomical
- The engineer mentions grants before completing a full assessment
- The heat exchanger has failed and the boiler is between 6 and 10 years old
- The quoted replacement cost is significantly higher or lower than the typical London ranges above
A second Gas Safe engineer’s assessment costs ยฃ80โยฃ150 in London. On a decision involving ยฃ3,000โยฃ5,000 of work, that is the most cost-effective money you will spend.
The carbon monoxide safety note
Any boiler fault that raises the possibility of carbon monoxide must be treated as an immediate safety issue โ not a repair vs replace calculation.
Gas Safe Register guidance identifies the following warning signs of carbon monoxide risk:
- Yellow or orange flame instead of crisp blue
- Black or sooty marks on or around the boiler casing
- Pilot light that repeatedly goes out
- Excessive condensation on windows near the boiler
- Physical symptoms including headaches, dizziness, nausea or confusion that resolve when you leave the property
If any of these signs are present: ventilate the property immediately, do not use the boiler, and call a Gas Safe registered engineer before any other action.
Do not attempt any inspection yourself. Source: Gas Safe Register
Every home with a gas boiler should have a working carbon monoxide alarm fitted within range of the boiler. If yours does not โ fit one today, before the repair vs replace question matters.
Summary โ the repair vs replace decision in four questions
Q1: Is the heat exchanger intact? If no โ and the boiler is over 8 years old โ replace. If the boiler is under 8 years old, get a second opinion before deciding.
Q2: Does the repair cost exceed 50% of replacement cost? If yes โ replace. The economics do not support repair at this level.
Q3: Does the boiler have a clean service history and scale protection? If no โ and the boiler is over 10 years old โ replace and fit protection on the new installation.
Q4: Is there a genuine grant available for this property and situation? If yes โ factor the grant into the replacement calculation. Do not let a sales engineer’s grant claim drive the decision. Verify independently at GOV.UK and Ofgem.
If none of the four questions points clearly to replacement โ repair, service annually, fit scale protection and reassess at the next fault.
Related guides
- London Plumbing Costs Guide 2026
- London Hard Water Guide โ causes, costs and mitigation options
- London Landlord Plumbing Compliance Checklist
- New Homeowner Plumbing Guide โ ten-point check and first six months priorities
- How to Read a Plumbing Quote
Find a verified boiler engineer in your borough
- Boiler Repair London
- Boiler Installation London
- Boiler Servicing London
- Central Heating Repair London
- Emergency Plumber London
Or find your specific borough: All London Boroughs โ
Methodology & sources
This guide is compiled and reviewed annually by the Verified Plumbers editorial team. No payment is accepted from any boiler manufacturer, installer or grant scheme provider to influence the content of this guide.
Important note: The decision matrix and five-year cost comparison are publisher-created tools for illustrative purposes โ not industry-standard assessment methods. All cost ranges reflect typical London 2026 figures from the Verified Plumbers directory network. Grant figures and scheme eligibility change โ always verify against current GOV.UK and Ofgem guidance before making decisions.
Data sources:
- GOV.UK โ Boiler Upgrade Scheme
- Ofgem โ Boiler Upgrade Scheme guidance
- Ofgem โ ECO4
- Energy Saving Trust โ Heating systems
- Gas Safe Register
- Thames Water โ Hard Water
Review schedule: Reviewed annually. Next review: April 2027.
Reviewed by David, Technical Compliance Editor Verified Plumbers
This guide is based on publicly available UK legislation and official regulatory guidance. It is intended as general information and does not replace advice from a qualified professional where required.
Last reviewed: April 2026 ยท Next review: April 2027