Which Is Better: A Heat Pump or Bottled Gas Heaters?
A heat pump is the better main heating choice for most homes, while bottled gas heaters are usually local appliances rather than whole-home systems. According to Energy Saving Trust (2026), heat pumps typically deliver around 280% to 350% seasonal efficiency, while bottled gas heaters provide direct heat in one area and do not provide integrated hot water or central heating. See also: BUS Grant 2026 guide.
For most homeowners, that makes this comparison very uneven. Bottled gas heaters are usually temporary, supplementary, or emergency appliances. A heat pump is a designed central-heating route that can cover the whole house and domestic hot water. Read our complete guide to heat pumps in the UK, heat pump running costs guide, and heat pump vs gas boiler comparison. If your property is eligible, our BUS grant survey page is the route for domestic ASHP applications, subject to eligibility.
What Are the Main Differences Between Heat Pumps and Bottled Gas Heaters?
The main differences are coverage, fuel handling, safety context, efficiency, and whether the appliance is intended for permanent home heating. According to Ofgem (April 2026), gas remains 7.4p/kWh and electricity remains 24.5p/kWh on the cap, so efficiency and controllability matter far more than a simple unit-price comparison might suggest.
| Feature | Heat pump | Bottled gas heaters |
|---|---|---|
| Main purpose | Whole-home heating and hot water | Local or room heating |
| Fuel source | Electricity | Bottled LPG or butane |
| On-site combustion | No | Yes |
| Grant support | £7,500 BUS grant subject to eligibility | No |
| Coverage | Whole house | One room or one zone |
| Typical South East fit | Strong as primary system | Weak as primary heating |
Prices and services correct at time of writing — always request a current quote.
The practical difference is that bottled gas heaters do not replace a central-heating system. They can provide warmth in one area, but they do not give even room-by-room comfort across the property and they do not supply domestic hot water.
That matters because a cheap portable appliance can look attractive if you compare purchase prices only. In practice, it is solving a much smaller and more temporary problem than a properly designed heat-pump system.
Which One Usually Makes More Sense Financially?
A heat pump usually makes more sense financially if you are replacing a main heating system, because it can heat the whole home efficiently and may attract grant support. According to Ofgem (2026), the current BUS grant for an eligible air source heat pump is £7,500, subject to eligibility, while bottled gas heaters receive no comparable mainstream support.
Bottled gas heaters can look cheaper on day one, but that is because they are not a full heating system. Once you compare them against whole-home comfort, hot water, and the practical reality of heating multiple rooms, the financial case is much weaker.
The practical comparison usually looks like this:
- heat pump: higher project cost but grant support and whole-home value
- bottled gas heaters: low appliance cost but weak fit as a permanent heating route
That is why bottled gas heaters are usually treated as stop-gaps or supplementary devices rather than genuine alternatives to a central-heating upgrade.
What Do Homeowners Most Often Get Wrong?
The biggest mistake is assuming bottled gas heaters can stand in for central heating because they feel cheap, immediate, or powerful in one room. According to Energy Saving Trust (2026), heat pumps can deliver 2.8 to 3.5 units of heat per unit of electricity, so the right comparison is whole-home delivered heat rather than the local warmth of one appliance.
Another mistake is ignoring the practical burden of fuel bottles, ventilation considerations, and the fact that combustion is still happening inside or very close to the occupied space. That is a very different proposition from a permanent low-carbon heating system designed for the whole property.
Typical comparison mistakes include:
- comparing a room appliance with a whole-home system as if they solve the same problem
- focusing only on purchase price rather than overall household comfort
- ignoring hot-water provision completely
- overlooking the value of the £7,500 BUS grant (subject to eligibility), subject to eligibility
Homeowners usually make a better decision when they decide first whether they need a temporary heater for one room or a long-term solution for the whole home.
What Does This Mean in London, Surrey, and TW Homes?
In London, Surrey, and TW homes, a heat pump is usually the stronger primary-heating answer, while bottled gas heaters are best treated as temporary or supplementary only. According to Ofgem (April 2026), electricity remains 7.4p/kWh, so design quality still matters, but the wider comfort and control of a heat pump usually outweigh the narrow appeal of bottled gas room heating.
For the housing stock Electromatic usually sees, bottled gas heaters are not realistic long-term solutions. They do not provide hot water, they do not heat the whole house evenly, and they do not align with how most households want their main heating system to work.
That local context matters because South East homes usually need stable whole-property comfort rather than room-by-room improvisation. If you want a future-facing heating system, bottled gas heaters are the wrong benchmark to optimise around. Our heat pump installation process guide, heat pump cost guide, and renewable energy London guide help frame that decision around the whole property.
They also do not age well as a long-term household strategy because the same home often later needs a proper central-heating solution anyway.
How Electromatic Can Help
If you are comparing heat pump vs bottled gas heaters, the next step is usually a survey that checks how your home is currently heated, what emitters you have, and what a proper central-heating upgrade would involve. According to MCS (2025), compliant heat-pump performance depends on design and commissioning rather than on appliance-level comparisons.
Electromatic offers free home surveys across London, Surrey, and the TW corridor for domestic retrofit projects. We work under MCS certification via our accredited umbrella partner, and where the installation is eligible we can handle BUS grant applications for air source heat pumps, subject to eligibility. We can also coordinate ASHP and solar through one contractor, which helps turn a heating upgrade into a wider energy project.
That gives you a whole-home recommendation instead of a temporary workaround. It also makes quote comparison clearer because the system assumptions are visible before you commit.
Call us: 07718 059 284 | Email: admin@electromatic.uk
Frequently Asked Questions
Most follow-up questions on heat pump vs bottled gas heaters are really about whether a cheaper room heater can avoid a bigger heating project. According to current Energy Saving Trust guidance and Ofgem prices, the answer is usually no if you want efficient whole-home heating rather than temporary local warmth.
How much more efficient is a heat pump than bottled gas heaters?
Energy Saving Trust says heat pumps typically deliver around 280% to 350% seasonal efficiency. Bottled gas heaters do not provide the same integrated efficiency model across the whole house.
Can bottled gas heaters heat a whole house?
Not well. They can improve comfort in one area, but they are not a practical substitute for proper central heating and hot water.
Are bottled gas heaters cheaper to buy than a heat pump?
Yes as appliances, but that is not a like-for-like comparison because a heat pump is a permanent whole-home heating system.
Does a heat pump give me hot water too?
Yes. A heat pump can provide both space heating and domestic hot water when it is designed correctly.
Which option makes more sense in London and Surrey homes?
For most homes in this region, a heat pump makes much more sense as the main heating route. Bottled gas heaters are usually temporary or supplementary only.
The information in this article is for general guidance only and does not constitute financial, legal, or technical advice. Energy savings estimates are based on typical UK household data from the Energy Saving Trust and Ofgem (April 2026 price cap). Actual savings depend on your property type, insulation levels, energy usage patterns, and electricity tariff. The Boiler Upgrade Scheme (BUS) grant of £7,500 is subject to eligibility criteria set by Ofgem — not all properties qualify. Electromatic M&E Ltd operates under MCS certification via an accredited umbrella partner. All installations comply with Building Regulations Part L and MCS standards. E&OE.
Written by Electromatic M&E Ltd — ASHP & Solar installer, London & Surrey (electromatic.uk)
Last updated: April 2026 | Electromatic M&E Ltd, Company No. 13837345
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