F-Gas Regulations and Heat Pumps: Refrigerant Handling, REFCOM Registration and Record-Keeping

Quick Answer: F-Gas regulations apply to split-system heat pumps (where refrigerant pipes run inside the building) because the installer handles the refrigerant circuit during commissioning. Monobloc ASHPs and GSHPs do not require F-Gas certification for the installer (the refrigerant is pre-sealed within the outdoor unit). Split ASHP installers must hold F-Gas certification (City & Guilds 2079 or equivalent) and be registered with REFCOM. All refrigerant handling must be recorded in an equipment log.

Summary

The UK F-Gas Regulations (retained from EU Regulation 517/2014 and implementing regulations) control the use of fluorinated greenhouse gases (HFCs and HFOs) used as refrigerants in heat pumps, air conditioners, and refrigeration systems. For heat pump installers, the key obligations are: certification to handle refrigerants, REFCOM registration for companies, and record-keeping for each piece of equipment containing F-Gas.

The regulations apply primarily to split systems. The majority of domestic ASHP installations use monobloc units (all refrigerant components sealed in the outdoor unit) — these do not require installer F-Gas certification, as the installer only handles water pipework.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table: F-Gas Obligations by Installation Type

Spending too long on quotes? squote turns a 2-minute voice recording into a professional quote.

Try squote free →
Installation Type F-Gas Cert Required? REFCOM Required? Equipment Log Required?
Monobloc ASHP No No No (no installer refrigerant handling)
Split ASHP (R32) Yes — Cat 1 or Cat 2 Yes (company) Yes — above threshold
Split ASHP (R290/propane) No (F-Gas doesn't apply) No No (not an F-Gas)
GSHP (sealed ground loop, factory-charged) No No No
Air-to-air heat pump (split AC type) Yes Yes Yes — above threshold

Detailed Guidance

R32 Handling Requirements

R32 is classified as A2L (mildly flammable). Safe handling requires:

When connecting the refrigerant lineset on a split ASHP, the procedure is:

  1. Braze or flare-fit the refrigerant lines (copper, purpose-sized for the system)
  2. Pressure test the refrigerant circuit with dry nitrogen (typically to 40 bar for R32 systems) — do not use oxygen or compressed air
  3. Evacuate the circuit using a vacuum pump (minimum 500 micron vacuum, hold for 30 minutes)
  4. Break the seal on the outdoor unit's factory charge and allow refrigerant to fill the lineset
  5. If additional charge is required (long lineset), add by weight using the manufacturer's additional charge calculation
  6. Record the total charge weight in the equipment log

REFCOM Registration

Any company that installs, services, or maintains equipment containing F-Gas must be registered with an approved registration body. In the UK, REFCOM (operated by ACRIB) is the principal registration body.

Registration requirements:

REFCOM registration is visible to customers and other contractors — it is proof that the company meets the legal minimum for F-Gas work.

Equipment Log Requirements

For equipment containing F-Gas above the CO2e threshold (3kg CO2e or 5 tonne CO2e for lower-GWP refrigerants), the equipment log must record:

The log must be kept for at least 5 years after the equipment is decommissioned. It must be made available to the Environment Agency or the registration body on request.

Practical approach for split ASHP: Create an equipment log at commissioning. Provide the customer with a copy (or digital record). Schedule annual leak checks into the maintenance contract. Update the log after each visit.

The Refrigerant Phase-Down

F-Gas regulations include a phase-down of high-GWP refrigerants (primarily HFCs). The quota system progressively reduces the total amount of high-GWP refrigerant placed on the UK market, driving manufacturers to transition to lower-GWP alternatives.

Impact on heat pump installers:

Frequently Asked Questions

My customer's ASHP is a monobloc. Do I still need F-Gas certification?

No — a monobloc ASHP has all refrigerant components pre-sealed within the outdoor unit. You only connect water pipes. There is no refrigerant handling involved, so F-Gas certification is not required for the installer. Note: if the monobloc unit ever develops a refrigerant leak and requires servicing of the refrigerant circuit, the manufacturer or a certified engineer must be used.

Can I service an R32 split ASHP if I only hold R410A certification?

No — City & Guilds 2079 Category 1 covers all refrigerant types (including R32). Category 2 covers specific refrigerant types as specified on the certificate. Check the specific certificate scope. If it covers A2L refrigerants, yes; if it only covers A1 refrigerants (non-flammable), no.

Do F-Gas records need to be kept in a specific format?

No specific format is mandated. A paper log, spreadsheet, or dedicated F-Gas management software are all acceptable. The key requirement is that the required information is recorded and can be provided to the Environment Agency on request. Several software tools are available (e.g., F-Gas Manager, REFCOM's own record-keeping template).

Regulations & Standards