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Posted

There is a train of thought that says in a traditional two storey home (bedrooms upstairs), and depending on levels of insulation applied during the build, that you may not need UFH upstairs.

 

The main question to answer so others can provide improved responses is about the level of insulation and air tightness of the build, and if you have the heat loss figures for the rooms upstairs. Also, what temperatures are you aiming to achieve in those rooms (generally bedrooms are cooler)?

Posted

We’ve got no heating upstairs apart from electric UFH and heated towel rail in the bathroom. Current temperature in the upstairs  is 18.5°C and the coldest it’s been is around 16°C but that was before we moved in. I cabled for electric wall panel heaters just in case  we felt the upstairs got too cold. Keeping the upstairs cool in the warmer months is a bigger issue and you could use the UFH to help there but there are other ways to do that. 

Posted
24 minutes ago, steady said:

What would be the best method in a new build , at the moment we’re doing egg shells and screeding on top ?

Then you will add nice carpets and the output of the floor will be killed.

 

Add fan coils for decent cooling in summer and to add heat in winter. Or radiators and run same temp as UFH or just add fixings for electric heaters, just in case you need!

 

Just wouldn't bother with UFH.

 

Posted
13 minutes ago, steady said:

Ok but IF you were doing it ?

Egg shells plus screed works. Do 16mm Pert-al-Pert tube.  Insulated below at a higher thermal resistance to what ever is above the floor to ensure heat moves upwards not downwards.

Posted

Probably not answering your question but I spent ages going round in circles on this and decided to go wall mounted fan coils upstairs. Panasonic aquarea system. Means we can do heating and cooling. 2 Temperature zones (natively supported by the system) so can run UFH and fan coils at different temps (low if needed for cooling).
 

I’m not sure the cost of UFH upstairs is justifiable but I do think the cost of proper cooling (AC level cooling) is justified - the way our summers are going. Got Panasonic coming out in a couple of weeks to provide a technical assist on the system design if you had any questions

  • Like 1
Posted

I’m going round in circles also 🤣if we did ufh on first floor what would be the minimum screed depth on top of 15mm castle matts . Think it might be easier with rads (more controllable 

Posted
3 hours ago, steady said:

I’m going round in circles also 🤣if we did ufh on first floor what would be the minimum screed depth on top of 15mm castle matts . Think it might be easier with rads (more controllable 

Why are you wasting room with mats when you can just clip directly to the P5 deck (floorboards)?

  • Like 1
Posted
5 hours ago, Nickfromwales said:

wasting room with mats

Mats look good for upstairs, pinned onto board decking and providing sound insulation.

 

But at £10/m2 it's pointless on the ground floor .. except for discipline on the layout. I've forgotten who posted the other day, the very rough layout.

 

I'm not rating ufh upstairs for cooling.

I notice some suppliers are hyping it while others encourage caution.

Hot air rises, so chilling the floor by 2° isn't going to help much.

 

Posted
On 11/11/2025 at 20:19, Kelvin said:

We’ve got no heating upstairs apart from electric UFH and heated towel rail in the bathroom. Current temperature in the upstairs  is 18.5°C and the coldest it’s been is around 16°C but that was before we moved in. I cabled for electric wall panel heaters just in case  we felt the upstairs got too cold. Keeping the upstairs cool in the warmer months is a bigger issue and you could use the UFH to help there but there are other ways to do that. 

Or an aircon unit in bedrooms that can cool and heat?

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