AC Energy Efficiency: SEER and SCOP Ratings, ErP Directive Labels and What to Quote to Customers

Quick Answer: SEER (Seasonal Energy Efficiency Ratio) measures cooling efficiency and SCOP (Seasonal Coefficient of Performance) measures heating efficiency across a full season of operation. Under the UK ErP Regulations (the retained version of EU Regulation 206/2012 and Regulation 813/2013), all AC units sold in the UK must display an energy label showing their efficiency class. Minimum SEER of 3.60 and minimum SCOP of 3.40 are required for non-ducted units to reach Class A.

Summary

Energy efficiency ratings for air conditioning systems changed significantly when the EU introduced the seasonal efficiency metrics SEER and SCOP to replace the older EER (Energy Efficiency Ratio) and COP (Coefficient of Performance) point-test values. The UK retained this framework post-Brexit via the Ecodesign and Energy Labelling (Amendment) (EU Exit) Regulations. The difference matters because EER and COP were measured at a single operating point (typically at 35°C outdoor temperature), whereas SEER and SCOP integrate performance across a range of real-world operating conditions throughout the season — including part-load operation, which is where inverter-driven systems excel.

For the tradesperson on site, the practical importance of these ratings is twofold. First, you need to understand them well enough to specify products that meet regulatory requirements and deliver on the efficiency claims you make to customers. Second, you need to be able to explain them to customers in a way that connects to what they care about — their energy bills — rather than in abstract percentage ratios. A customer choosing between a budget unit at SEER 4.0 and a premium unit at SEER 6.5 is making a real financial decision, and you are best placed to help them model the difference.

Heat pump heating via a split system or VRF is now a common alternative or supplement to gas or oil boilers, particularly for commercial premises and new builds subject to Building Regulations Part L. The SCOP of modern inverter heat pump AC systems — typically 3.5 to 5.0 — makes them competitive with dedicated air source heat pumps, and the dual cooling/heating capability adds value. Understanding how to present SCOP alongside gas boiler efficiency (which is expressed as a percentage, not a ratio) is an increasingly important sales skill.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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SEER Value Approximate Efficiency Class Typical Application Notes
Below 3.60 D or below (fail minimum) Not legally marketable in UK Cannot be placed on market
3.60–4.09 A Budget residential Legal minimum for Class A
4.10–4.99 A+ Mid-range residential/commercial Good baseline choice
5.00–5.99 A++ Mid-premium split systems Most branded inverter units
6.00–7.49 A+++ Premium inverter splits Mitsubishi Zubadan, Daikin Emura etc.
7.50+ A+++ (exceptional) Best-in-class High SEER at moderate UK outdoor temps
SCOP Value Approximate Efficiency Class Equivalent Gas Boiler Efficiency Notes
3.40 A ~340% (vs gas at ~90%) Legal minimum for Class A heat mode
3.80–4.20 A+ to A++ ~380–420% Typical quality inverter unit
4.50–5.00 A+++ ~450–500% Best inverter heat pump splits
Gas condensing boiler N/A (uses ErP boiler label) ~90–94% For customer comparison context

Detailed Guidance

How SEER and SCOP Are Calculated

SEER and SCOP are not measured at a single set of conditions — they are calculated by testing the unit at multiple part-load conditions and weighting the results according to the frequency with which those conditions occur in a standard reference climate (defined in the EN 14825 test standard as an average European climate, roughly equivalent to central France).

For SEER, the calculation involves measuring the unit's performance at 100%, 75%, 50% and 25% of rated capacity, each at different outdoor temperatures (35°C, 30°C, 25°C and 20°C respectively for cooling). The results are combined using bin-hour weighting factors. An inverter unit that modulates down to 25% capacity and maintains a high COP at that level will achieve a much higher SEER than a fixed-speed unit that is simply on or off.

The implication for UK installers is important: because the UK climate is cooler than the southern European reference climate, real-world UK SEER performance is often better than the label value. The unit will be operating at part-load and in cooler outdoor conditions for most of its running hours, both of which favour inverter-driven equipment. This is a legitimate positive point to make to customers — their actual bills may be lower than even the label suggests.

SCOP is calculated similarly but for heating mode, using reference outdoor temperatures from -10°C to 15°C weighted by heating degree-hours. Three climate zones are defined: cold (Helsinki), average (Strasbourg), warm (Athens). Most UK products are rated in the average climate zone. Colder northern UK locations will see SCOP performance closer to the cold climate rating at the height of winter, though average SCOP across the full heating season will remain close to the label figure.

Reading the Energy Label

The UK energy label for AC systems (and the EU equivalent for products sold in Ireland or the EU) shows:

The annual kWh figures are the most immediately useful for customer conversations. If a unit shows 350 kWh/year cooling energy consumption and the customer pays 28p/kWh for electricity, the annual cooling cost is roughly £98/year. Compare this with a cheaper unit showing 500 kWh/year (£140/year) and the premium unit pays back its higher cost in a few years through energy savings alone.

Explaining Ratings to Customers

Most customers have no idea what SEER 6.5 means. A good approach is to translate immediately into annual running costs using a simple formula:

Annual cooling cost (£) = Cooling capacity (kW) × Annual hours of operation ÷ SEER × Electricity tariff (£/kWh)

Example: a 3.5 kW cooling capacity unit running 500 hours per year (reasonable for a southern UK office):

Annual saving: £47. Over a 10-year system life, that is £470 in energy savings from the more efficient unit. If the premium unit costs £200 more installed, the payback is around 4 years.

For heating, compare against the customer's current heating solution:

At current UK tariffs, a heat pump AC system is approximately cost-competitive with a gas boiler for heat on a per-kWh basis, and significantly cheaper than electric resistance heating (which runs at COP 1.0, costing 28p/kWh of heat).

EPC and Building Regulations Considerations

For domestic properties, the SAP energy assessment methodology used in EPCs accounts for the primary energy factor of electricity (currently around 1.5 in SAP 10.2, reflecting the carbon intensity of the grid). This means that despite a high COP, heat pumps do not always improve EPC scores as dramatically as expected when the building is already heated by natural gas. However, as the grid decarbonises further, heat pump AC systems will become increasingly favourable in EPC calculations.

For commercial buildings, the SBEM (Simplified Building Energy Model) assessment is used. This is generally more favourable to heat pump systems than SAP, and Building Regulations Part L1B (existing buildings) and Part L2B (commercial refurbishments) set minimum efficiency requirements for new mechanical systems. Any replacement AC system must meet the SEER/SCOP minima required under ErP regulations.

Tax Relief on Energy-Efficient Commercial AC

The Enhanced Capital Allowance (ECA) scheme, which previously offered 100% first-year tax relief on qualifying energy-efficient plant including AC, was closed to new investments from April 2020. Commercial buyers can still claim under the Annual Investment Allowance (AIA), which currently allows 100% deduction for qualifying plant in the year of purchase (up to the AIA limit, currently £1 million/year).

Businesses installing AC for commercial premises should be advised to discuss capital allowances with their accountant, particularly for larger VRF or chiller systems where the capital cost is significant.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between SEER and EER, and which should I use?

EER is a point-test value measured at full load and specific conditions (35°C outdoor, 27°C/47% RH indoor for cooling). SEER integrates performance across a range of part-load and ambient conditions, giving a much more accurate picture of real-world seasonal efficiency. SEER is the figure required on energy labels and the one used to assess regulatory compliance. EER is still useful for comparing how units perform in hot climates or at maximum load, but for UK customers, SEER is the correct metric to quote.

Is a higher SEER always worth the extra cost?

Not automatically. The payback calculation depends on how many hours per year the system runs. In a UK domestic home used primarily for sleeping, the annual cooling hours might be 100-200, making the energy saving from a higher SEER unit quite small. In a commercial office or retail space running 8-10 hours a day through summer, the payback on a higher SEER unit is compelling. Always run the numbers based on the customer's anticipated usage pattern.

Do these efficiency ratings apply to VRF systems as well as split systems?

VRF/VRV systems are subject to the same ErP minimum requirements and must display energy labels, but the SEER/SCOP values for VRF systems are calculated across the whole system (outdoor unit plus a representative selection of indoor units) and can be harder to compare directly with single split systems. VRF manufacturers publish system-level efficiency data. For very large VRF systems, the ESEER (European Seasonal Energy Efficiency Ratio) is sometimes used for commercial applications.

What noise levels should I be quoting to customers?

The energy label shows sound power level (LWA) in dB(A). For customer conversations, sound pressure level at a given distance is more intuitive. As a rough guide, subtract 15 dB from the sound power level to get the approximate sound pressure level at 1 metre. A typical budget wall-mounted unit has an indoor sound power level of around 52-58 dB(A); a premium unit can achieve 32-40 dB(A). Outdoor units range from 55-66 dB(A) sound power level. In planning applications and Building Regulations assessments, the outdoor unit sound power level is often a key constraint.

What about the impact of AC on a home's EPC rating?

Installing cooling-only AC in a domestic property does not improve the EPC rating — it may slightly worsen it by adding an electrical load. However, if the AC system is used in heat pump mode and replaces or supplements gas or electric resistance heating, it can improve the EPC, particularly under newer versions of SAP that assign a lower carbon factor to electricity from the increasingly renewable grid.

Regulations & Standards