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Kent Home Improvement News: Late June 2026

Contemporary Structures 26 June, 2026

Policy and prices drove the home-improvement news this month, with one announcement that directly cuts the cost of going low-carbon. Here is what late June meant for anyone planning work on a Kent home.

Table of Contents

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  • Heat pump grant rising to £9,000 for oil and LPG homes
  • Building material prices still drifting up
  • Construction activity hits a six-year low
  • Future Homes Standard confirmed for 2027
  • Related guides

Heat pump grant rising to £9,000 for oil and LPG homes

The government announced on 26 June that the Boiler Upgrade Scheme grant will rise by 20%, from £7,500 to £9,000, from 21 July 2026, for households currently heated by oil or LPG in England and Wales. Leaflets are going out this week to 200,000 eligible off-gas-grid homes. Many rural and village properties across Kent sit off the gas grid, so for those owners the larger grant takes a real chunk off the upfront cost of an air-source or ground-source heat pump. Read the announcement on gov.uk.

Building material prices still drifting up

Official figures published on 3 June show building material prices rose 3.2% in the year to April 2026, with fabricated structural steel up 8.5% and sand, gravel and clay up 7.7%, though steel reinforcing bars fell 5.2%. Those costs feed straight into quotes for extensions, roofing and structural work. If you are pricing a project, budget a margin for steel and aggregate-heavy jobs rather than assuming flat costs. See the gov.uk commentary.

Construction activity hits a six-year low

The construction PMI fell to 38.2 in May, its weakest reading since May 2020 and a seventeenth straight month of contraction, with housebuilding the hardest hit, as reported by Construction Enquirer. A slower market with stretched supply chains can mean longer lead times on some materials, but it also gives homeowners more room to negotiate as builders compete for fewer jobs. Read the report.

Future Homes Standard confirmed for 2027

Government building circular 01/2026 has confirmed the Future Homes and Buildings Standards, tightening Part L and adding a requirement for on-site renewable electricity on new homes, in force from 24 March 2027. It targets new build rather than existing houses, but it sets the direction: low-carbon heating and on-site renewables are becoming the norm, which is worth bearing in mind when planning a major renovation. Read the circular.

Related guides

  • Conservatory Roof Replacement vs Glass Film: Which Fixes a Too-Hot, Too-Cold Conservatory?
  • Air Source Heat Pump Cost in 2026 After the £7,500 Grant: What You Actually Pay
  • Do You Need Planning Permission for a Rear Extension in Kent? 2026 Permitted Development Rules
  • How Much Does a Conservatory Base Cost in the UK? (2026 Price Guide)
  • Do You Need a Party Wall Agreement for a Rear Extension? Cost and Rules Explained
  • Underfloor Heating vs Radiators for a Home Extension: Cost, Running Bills and Which to Choose
  • How Much Does a House Extension Cost in 2026? Full UK Price Breakdown
  • Loft Conversion Cost and Types: Dormer, Hip-to-Gable and Velux Explained
  • Kent Home Improvement News: June 2026
  • House Extensions: The Complete UK Homeowner’s Guide
  • Single Storey Extension Ideas, Costs and Planning Rules
  • Double Storey Extensions: Costs, Designs and What You Can Build
  • Side Return Extensions Explained: Cost, Light and Layout
  • Kent Home Improvement News: Mid-June 2026
  • Garage Conversion Guide: Cost, Building Regs and Best Uses
  • Extension vs Moving House: Which Is Better Value in Kent?
  • Wraparound vs Rear Extension: Cost and Space Compared
  • House Extension Builders in Kent: Costs, Lead Times and How to Choose
  • Conservatory Guide: Styles, Costs and How to Choose One

Please call 01959 933 100
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