EPC ratings in PR1: Preston
Across 120 domestic Energy Performance Certificates sampled in PR1 (Preston), the most common energy band is C and the average band is D. 70% of certificates are rated C or above — the threshold mortgage lenders and the government's energy targets focus on. This is an indicative, area-level picture of the local housing stock, not the EPC for any one property.
Preston, a Lancashire city of terraced and modern housing.
EPC band distribution in PR1
The share of domestic Energy Performance Certificates in each band (A is most efficient, G least), aggregated from 120 certificates sampled across 9 postcodes in PR1:
| Band | Certificates | Share |
|---|---|---|
| A | 0 | 0% |
| B | 2 | 1.7% |
| C | 82 | 68.3% |
| D | 33 | 27.5% |
| E | 2 | 1.7% |
| F | 1 | 0.8% |
| G | 0 | 0% |
120 certificates aggregated. The MHCLG register has no outcode-level query, so this distribution is sampled from real certificates across PR1 and is indicative of the local housing stock — not a complete census of every property.
How energy-efficient is PR1?
With an average band of D and 70% of homes at C or above,PR1 reflects its housing stock: modern flats and recent new-builds push the average up, while older period and solid-wall housing pulls it down. Energy band affects running costs, mortgage eligibility and improvement potential — use this as area context alongside the price, crime and flood picture, not in isolation.
See the EPC for one PR1 address
This page is the area picture. To see the actual EPC for one exact property — its current and potential band, running costs and recommended improvements — alongside its sold-price history, crime, flood and ground risk and a current valuation, search the address. The full breakdown is in the £24.99 Complete report.
Frequently asked questions
What is the average EPC rating in PR1?
Across 120 domestic certificates sampled in PR1 (Preston), the average energy band is D and the most common band is C. 70% of homes are rated C or above. This is an area-level average from the MHCLG EPC register, not a per-property rating — search an exact address for its own certificate.
What EPC band do most homes in PR1 have?
The most common (modal) EPC band in PR1 is C, with the full A–G breakdown in the table above. City-centre outcodes tend to skew towards band C because they hold more modern, well-insulated flats, while areas of older period housing skew lower.
How many homes in PR1 are EPC C or above?
About 70% of the 120 certificates we aggregated in PR1 are rated C or above. Band C is the level most lenders' green-mortgage products and the government's efficiency targets are pegged to, so it is a useful area benchmark.
How accurate is this EPC data for PR1?
It is official data from the MHCLG Energy Performance of Buildings register for England and Wales, published under the Open Government Licence. Because the register has no outcode-level query, this distribution is SAMPLED from real certificates across postcodes in the outcode and aggregated — it is indicative of the local housing stock, not a complete census of every property. Search an exact address on HouseCheckup to see its own EPC in the full report.
EPC ratings in nearby areas
Battersea and Clapham Junction, a busy riverside district of Victorian terraces and new-build riverside flats.
South-bank Southwark and Bermondsey, a high-density mix of warehouse conversions and modern riverside apartments.
Islington, a dense inner-north district of Georgian and Victorian housing with newer flats around the canal.
Canary Wharf and the Isle of Dogs, a high-density cluster of modern, well-insulated apartment towers.
Hampstead and Belsize Park, a low-density district of large period houses and mansion flats.
Central Reading, a Thames Valley town centre mixing terraced housing with modern town-centre apartments.
Sources
- Energy Performance of Buildings data — MHCLG (England & Wales)
- Outcode geocoding & postcode sampling — postcodes.io
Energy Performance of Buildings Data: England and Wales — MHCLG, OGL v3.0