How Is External Wall Insulation (EWI) Installed and What Are the Building Regulations?

Quick Answer: External wall insulation (EWI) is a system of insulation boards fixed to the outer wall face, covered by a reinforced render or cladding. For existing dwellings, Building Regulations Part L requires a U-value of 0.30 W/m²K (or better); for new build it is 0.18 W/m²K. Work funded through government schemes (ECO4, Great British Insulation Scheme) must comply with PAS 2030:2023 and PAS 2035:2019. Above 18 metres, buildings must comply with fire performance testing under BS 8414. Systems must hold a BBA or equivalent certificate.

Summary

External wall insulation wraps the outer face of a building in a continuous layer of insulation, eliminating cold bridges at wall ties, joists, and floor slab edges that internal insulation cannot address. It is the primary method of improving the thermal performance of solid-wall buildings — the pre-1920 housing stock of Victorian terraces, Edwardian semis, and inter-war housing that forms a large proportion of UK homes and represents some of the lowest thermal performance in Europe.

Unlike internal wall insulation (IWI), EWI does not reduce the internal floor area, does not require residents to vacate during installation, and generally reduces interstitial condensation risk rather than creating it. The masonry remains on the warm side of the insulation, so its thermal mass is available for internal temperature regulation and there is no risk of condensation at joist ends or at masonry/insulation interfaces.

The trade-off is cost (typical full-house installation £6,000–18,000 depending on system and house type), the change in external appearance (which can affect planning consent in sensitive areas), and the need to extend eaves, window sills, and service entries to accommodate the additional wall thickness.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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Insulant Type Lambda (W/m·K) Typical Thickness for 0.30 W/m²K Fire Class Cost Relative Best Application
EPS (grey, graphite) 0.031–0.033 90–100mm E (needs barriers over 18m) Low Standard domestic solid wall
EPS (white) 0.036–0.038 110–120mm E Lowest Budget EWI on solid wall
Mineral wool slab 0.036–0.040 110–130mm A1 Medium Over 18m; conservation areas where non-combustible required
Phenolic board 0.018–0.022 55–65mm B High Constrained reveals; maximum performance
Wood fibre board 0.038–0.050 120–160mm E–D Medium Breathable/heritage systems; vapour-open render

Detailed Guidance

System Components

An EWI system consists of four main components installed in sequence:

  1. Adhesive — a cementitious adhesive applied to the back of the insulation board in a dabs-and-edge pattern (typically 40% coverage minimum) bonding the board to the substrate. The adhesive must be compatible with the insulation type and with the wall substrate. On substrates of uncertain quality or low suction (painted walls, some renders), mechanical fixing alone or a full-coverage adhesive bed may be specified.

  2. Insulation board — the main thermal element; installed in horizontal courses, bond-pattern (joints staggered); boards tightly butted; offcuts not less than 100mm wide at corners and openings; boards at corners interlocked alternately to prevent a continuous vertical joint. Mechanical fixings (EWI anchors, typically 6–10 per m²) are used in addition to adhesive to carry wind load and provide redundancy.

  3. Reinforcement layer — fibreglass mesh embedded in a base coat of cementitious render; minimum 3.5mm thick; mesh must be fully embedded with no dry spots; two layers of mesh (standard mesh plus diagonal mesh strips at opening corners) are used for impact resistance; mesh laps minimum 100mm.

  4. Finish coat — typically a thin-coat silicone or silicone-silicate render (1.5mm or 2mm grain size); applied over the primed base coat; provides weather resistance, colour, and texture. Alternatively, brick slips, tile hanging, or timber cladding systems can be used as the outer face.

Fixing and Mechanical Anchors

EWI anchors (also called fixings or mushroom fixings) are the primary mechanical restraint once the adhesive has cured. They consist of a plastic sleeve driven into a pre-drilled hole in the board and substrate, with a metal or plastic expansion anchor at the base. The head disc is recessed into the insulation board and covered with a plug.

Anchor design (type, length, spacing) must be specified by the system manufacturer and, for buildings over 10m, should be verified by a pull-out test on the actual substrate. Typical specificationis 6 fixings/m² for walls up to 10m; 8–10 fixings/m² above 10m or in exposed locations. Corners and edges require additional fixings at closer spacing.

Base plates and starter tracks are fixed at the base of the EWI to support the first course of boards and provide a level datum. The base of the EWI must terminate a minimum 150mm above external ground level to avoid splash-back wetting of the system base.

Window and Door Detailing

Windows are probably the most technically critical element of an EWI installation. The standard approach:

Where windows are to be replaced at the same time as the EWI installation, the frames can be repositioned on the outer face of the existing wall (set-forward installation), eliminating the reveal and providing a deeper thermal recess. This is the best thermal performance detail but requires window replacement.

Existing window sills that are narrower than the EWI thickness plus overhang are almost always replaced. Failure to replace a sill that does not overhang the EWI face is a common installation defect and causes premature wetting of the system base.

Fire Performance Requirements

Following the Grenfell Tower fire (June 2017), fire performance requirements for EWI systems have been significantly strengthened. The key rules are:

Buildings up to 11m — no specific EWI fire classification required in Approved Document B; however, most specification guidance and SWIGA warranty schemes recommend Class B or better for organic insulants (EPS, phenolic).

Buildings between 11m and 18m — combustible EWI materials (EPS, phenolic) can be used but must be installed with fire barrier rails at each floor level and at the top and base of the system. Fire barriers are mineral wool strips fitted horizontally to break the cavity path and contain fire spread within the system.

Buildings over 18m — only materials classified as A1 or A2-s1,d0 (non-combustible or limited combustibility) may be used as insulation and cladding on the external walls. This means only mineral wool EWI boards are currently acceptable without recourse to full-scale BS 8414 fire performance testing of the complete system.

Any building — if EPS or phenolic boards are used without fire barriers, the system cannot receive a SWIGA guarantee for buildings with any residential accommodation above the ground floor without full fire safety review.

Planning and Conservation Areas

EWI typically adds 100–200mm to external walls, changing the appearance of the building. In most cases this constitutes Permitted Development and does not require planning permission. However, in:

planning permission or conservation area consent will be required. The planning authority may refuse consent or require matching materials (e.g. lime render to match historic character). Brick-slip or flint-aggregate finish coats can reduce the visual impact in sensitive areas.

PAS 2035 and Funded Work

Where EWI is being installed under ECO4, GBIS, LA Flex or similar government-funded schemes, the work must comply with PAS 2030:2023 (installation standard) and PAS 2035:2019 (retrofit design standard). PAS 2035 requires:

PAS 2035 also requires a risk assessment for interstitial condensation in the new wall build-up; for EWI on solid masonry this is generally low risk, but for unusual constructions or where there is pre-existing moisture, a hygrothermal assessment is required.

Frequently Asked Questions

Will EWI stop my walls being cold and damp inside?

Yes, in most cases. EWI raises the temperature of the inner wall face significantly, which reduces surface condensation and the associated mould growth. If the wall currently shows mould in winter, EWI will almost certainly resolve it. However, EWI does not address penetrating damp through defects (failed pointing, missing flashings) — these must be fixed before EWI is applied. Nor does it address rising damp.

How long does EWI installation take on a typical semi-detached house?

A standard two-storey semi-detached with approximately 70–80m² of wall area (including reveals) takes 3–5 working days for a two-person experienced EWI team, including rendering and finishing. Scaffolding erection and strike typically adds 1–2 days each side. Total programme from scaffold up to scaffold down: approximately 7–10 days.

What guarantee should I expect?

A SWIGA (Solid Wall Insulation Guarantee Agency) insurance-backed guarantee of 25 years is the industry standard. This guarantee is with the building, not the installer, and transfers to new owners on sale. It covers failure of the system (debonding, water ingress through the system), not normal wear and cosmetic issues. Check that the installer is SWIGA-registered before signing a contract.

Can EWI be installed on a solid wall with an existing render?

It depends on the condition of the existing render. Render that is sound, well-adhered, and less than approximately 25mm thick can in some cases be used as the EWI substrate. Render that is hollow, cracked, or delaminating must be hacked off first — applying EWI to a failed render will result in the entire system failing when the render does. Pull-off testing of the existing render is required before a decision is made.

Regulations & Standards