sgt_woulds Posted Friday at 09:50 Posted Friday at 09:50 16 hours ago, Post and beam said: A future owner of my house might want a pool, should i install one now just in case. FFS! Solar panels are very popular, green and likely to become mandatory soon. Should i also install some Calm down dear 🙂 Solar panels are already Mandated by the Future Homes Standard - PV panels are now cheaper than roof tiles so it isa win-win for the builder as well. Would a swimming pool help reduce the load on the national grid, or provide a habitat for wildlife? Of course not. Another strawman argument. All of the rules that go into building regulations are assessed against safety and societel needs. And apply to NEW BUILD not retrospectively unless a particular modification of your existing building brings it within scope (as with insulation or electrical upgrades) Having said that, anyone who can afford to install solar panels but chooses not to (somehow paying for a new kitchen is more popular!) are only spiting themselves. 2
sgt_woulds Posted Friday at 09:55 Posted Friday at 09:55 6 minutes ago, Oz07 said: Maybe. When was the last time they fired up the boiler on the way round though The BCO might not, but the assessor for any new owners mortgage should. At the very least their solicitors will ask for paperwork during searches to confirm that the EV charger (or boiler or solar) has an installation certificate and up to date servicing record. 1
Oz07 Posted Friday at 17:04 Posted Friday at 17:04 Just as a question. Not trying to strawman or whatever. If I built a house to basic b regs u values, would I be obliged to fit a heating system? Or for that matter even a water heating system?! 1
Mattg4321 Posted Friday at 18:06 Posted Friday at 18:06 8 hours ago, sgt_woulds said: The BCO might not, but the assessor for any new owners mortgage should. At the very least their solicitors will ask for paperwork during searches to confirm that the EV charger (or boiler or solar) has an installation certificate and up to date servicing record. what servicing needs to be done on an EV charging point? 1
kandgmitchell Posted Sunday at 17:39 Posted Sunday at 17:39 On 24/04/2026 at 18:04, Oz07 said: Or for that matter even a water heating system?! Have a look at Requirement G3 - they've even got you needing to provide hot water despite always washing in cold! G3. (1) There must be a suitable installation for the provision of heated wholesome water or heated softened wholesome water to: (a) any washbasin or bidet provided in or adjacent to a room containing a sanitary convenience; (b) any washbasin, bidet, fixed bath and shower in a bathroom; and (c) any sink provided in any area where food is prepared. Whatever next! 1 1
sgt_woulds Posted yesterday at 09:45 Posted yesterday at 09:45 On 24/04/2026 at 19:06, Mattg4321 said: what servicing needs to be done on an EV charging point? As set by the manufacturer. For our chargers at work this is every 6 months, domestic will probably be 12 monthly until the warranty expires. As with PV, (which should be checked at least once bi-annualy from my experience) the checks will mostly cover any screw connectors to ensure the neutrals are not working lose and causing resistance/arcing. You could do this yourself, (if competent) but it probably voids the warranty if the inspection schedule is not maintained. Newer installs have hopefully moved over to pushfit or Wago type connectons rather than screws (so there should be less issues), but, given the value of the item you are plugging into it, paying for a sparky to check the install once a year would seem like money well spent. 1
sgt_woulds Posted yesterday at 09:51 Posted yesterday at 09:51 On 24/04/2026 at 18:04, Oz07 said: Just as a question. Not trying to strawman or whatever. If I built a house to basic b regs u values, would I be obliged to fit a heating system? Or for that matter even a water heating system?! Not if you build a certified Passiv house and can prove that the indoor temperatures will meet regulation requirements. In practice, most Passiv builders fit a (very) small heating system 'just in case'. In the same way, we should fit EV chargers to new build - just in case the next owner (or even the current one) gets an EV. Your personal preference may be to wash in cold water, but a house built to building regulations isn't built specifically for your personal hygene arrangements 🙂 1
Post and beam Posted yesterday at 11:15 Posted yesterday at 11:15 1 hour ago, sgt_woulds said: In the same way, we should fit EV chargers to new build - just in case the next owner (or even the current one) gets an EV. We keep coming back to this without resolving why. What is this 'should' nonsense? Because the 'rules say so' is not what i mean by an answer. The 'rule' is an unfair and ridiculous burden on the house builder. 2
Oz07 Posted yesterday at 11:42 Posted yesterday at 11:42 I don't wash in cold water and do like a warm house i was just wondering how far these rules go. Do we all have to fit stairlifts soon? We do have an ageing population. 2
kandgmitchell Posted yesterday at 13:57 Posted yesterday at 13:57 1 hour ago, Oz07 said: Do we all have to fit stairlifts soon? We do have an ageing population. Ah, they have that covered too. If your planning permission switches on additional requirements in Part M - access for the disabled M4(3) requires space for a lift to be installed and/or dedicated sockets for a potential stair lift. Originally the building regulations set a basic standard for health and safety of persons within and around the building. Most people could see the sense in requiring properly built buildings that were structurally safe, weathertight with decent drainage. Then conserving energy was added, then electrical safety, and then it all went to pot when internet connectivity, electric car charging etc were added. By then the original purpose of the regulations had been subsumed into using them to carry out policy decisions of the government of the day.
Mattg4321 Posted yesterday at 14:18 Posted yesterday at 14:18 4 hours ago, sgt_woulds said: As set by the manufacturer. For our chargers at work this is every 6 months, domestic will probably be 12 monthly until the warranty expires. As with PV, (which should be checked at least once bi-annualy from my experience) the checks will mostly cover any screw connectors to ensure the neutrals are not working lose and causing resistance/arcing. You could do this yourself, (if competent) but it probably voids the warranty if the inspection schedule is not maintained. Newer installs have hopefully moved over to pushfit or Wago type connectons rather than screws (so there should be less issues), but, given the value of the item you are plugging into it, paying for a sparky to check the install once a year would seem like money well spent. Meanwhile, back in the real world… Perhaps this happens with a very small amount of equipment fitted on the premises of big corporations, but I guarantee you it does not in the case of 99.99999% of domestics, even though it might be a good idea! It’ll get fixed when it breaks. If the terminal has been correctly torqued, it pretty unlikely it will come loose. I don’t fit loads of these, but I do fit 1 or 2 a month. Mostly Hypervolt and Andersen. I’m not aware of either of those requiring any servicing to maintain the warranty, or even suggesting it at all.
Carrerahill Posted 23 hours ago Posted 23 hours ago On 22/04/2026 at 15:00, sgt_woulds said: Don't forget, if you have an EV charger fitted, you also need an SPD under current regulations. To be honest SPD are so cheap these days I don't know why they are fitted as standard with a new installation anyway. They are required regardless of EVC now as part of BS7671 in all new installations and boards - which is why almost all consumer units now come loaded with one.
Carrerahill Posted 23 hours ago Posted 23 hours ago On 23/04/2026 at 09:30, Square Feet said: But someone who comes to visit you might. Be a bloody cheek charging at my expense!
kandgmitchell Posted 23 hours ago Posted 23 hours ago Not having an EV mine's switched off at the board just to make sure a "visitor" doesn't charge whilst we are on holiday!
Post and beam Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago 18 hours ago, kandgmitchell said: requires space for a lift to be installed and/or dedicated sockets for a potential stair lift. And if we carried this logic over to the EV charger point, a cable and connection point ready for a charger would appear to be enough. That is reasonable. 1
-rick- Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago 20 hours ago, kandgmitchell said: Ah, they have that covered too. If your planning permission switches on additional requirements in Part M - access for the disabled M4(3) requires space for a lift to be installed and/or dedicated sockets for a potential stair lift. I'm at that point when I'm spending time thinking about parents increasing needs and having homes prepared for future accessibility needs seems completely sensible. In many ways it would be good if all homes had to be built with this in mind as retrofitting a building not designed for it can be much more troublesome/expensive at what may be a very stressful time. The regs only require it if the PP says so because requiring it everywhere would prevent some homes being built (mostly tiny starter type homes). I'm generally in favour of less mandates, etc, in regs but this one (and functional EV chargers) passes the bar for me. (I see the argument for just putting the cables in for EV chargers, but the extra cost of installing the charger if all the prep work is done is very small and if it's there it will get used*). * We are at about the point now where EVs are same price or cheaper to buy than combustion (before accounting for fuel costs) and it's only going to swing more towards EVs. China is already making 1500km range, 6 min charge EVs, so the reasons for not getting an EV are diminising rapidly. 1
Square Feet Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago 18 hours ago, Carrerahill said: Be a bloody cheek charging at my expense! I don't know where you live, but here in Scotland we try to be nice to our friends. It's likely to cost less than the price of a bottle of wine and is the least I can do if someone is helping me out. Also if they come to visit me then it's nice to be nice. I honestly can't stand the mentality of 'what's in it for me?' Just be a nice human.
-rick- Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago 3 minutes ago, Square Feet said: I don't know where you live, but here in Scotland we try to be nice to our friends. It's likely to cost less than the price of a bottle of wine and is the least I can do if someone is helping me out. Also if they come to visit me then it's nice to be nice. I honestly can't stand the mentality of 'what's in it for me?' Just be a nice human. It's not quite that though. Depending on the situation is equivalent to 'I'll pay for a taxi/train ticket to get you to my place'. If it's a child coming to visit then maybe it makes sense. If it's a contractor coming to do work for you, it doesn't. It's nice to be able to offer the generousity if you have the means but even semi regular charging by guests could be a substantial drain on some people*. Especially as the bills tend to come much later so the scope for running up bills and not seeing the impact until months later (when the electricity company revises your direct debit). * This is a self build forum that has a very specific audience who are much more likely to be knowledgable about these things, have solar, are relatively wealthy so the impact of charging might be less. But in a world where the EV charger is a legal requirement for any new property, plenty of people who know much less, are less wealthy, etc, will be living in places with EV chargers soon. So with that in mind, my view is that if you drive an EV and you ask if you can charge your EV at someones house you should always offer to pay (generously) for the priviledge of charging and only accept free charging if very confident the person offering understands what they are offering.
Dave Jones Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago car charger (not a piece of paper) is a planning requirement for us. It has to be a proper charger not a socket.
Square Feet Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago 9 minutes ago, -rick- said: It's not quite that though. Depending on the situation is equivalent to 'I'll pay for a taxi/train ticket to get you to my place'. If it's a child coming to visit then maybe it makes sense. If it's a contractor coming to do work for you, it doesn't. It's nice to be able to offer the generousity if you have the means but even semi regular charging by guests could be a substantial drain on some people*. Especially as the bills tend to come much later so the scope for running up bills and not seeing the impact until months later (when the electricity company revises your direct debit). * This is a self build forum that has a very specific audience who are much more likely to be knowledgable about these things, have solar, are relatively wealthy so the impact of charging might be less. But in a world where the EV charger is a legal requirement for any new property, plenty of people who know much less, are less wealthy, etc, will be living in places with EV chargers soon. So with that in mind, my view is that if you drive an EV and you ask if you can charge your EV at someones house you should always offer to pay (generously) for the priviledge of charging and only accept free charging if very confident the person offering understands what they are offering. Well exactly. I like to be nice, but if someone is taking the p1ss then they aren't going to be my friend for very much longer.
Post and beam Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 2 hours ago, -rick- said: but the extra cost of installing the charger if all the prep work is done is very small You must be minted. £600 for the charger on a supply only basis is not 'very small'. Neither is the £300 plus installation fee.
-rick- Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 7 minutes ago, Post and beam said: You must be minted. £600 for the charger on a supply only basis is not 'very small'. Neither is the £300 plus installation fee. I'm not, but Ohme chargers are £415 + vat and if you are building a new house you don't pay VAT and your electrician bill overall is significant. The standard installation charge includes the wiring that this thread as talked about as the middle ground. My statement is that if you are adding the wiring anyway, then adding the charger shouldn't cost much more than the cost of the charger. The electrician is there anyway running the cables. It may be that you've got caught out here and didn't initially plan on installing the charger and now getting people back to do so is expensive. Obviously that's unfortunate and not a great situation, but it's not the general case.
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