Summary

Selecting the correct radiator size is fundamental to heating system performance. An undersized radiator cannot heat the room to comfort temperature even at maximum system temperature. An oversized radiator heats the room faster but results in the thermostatic radiator valve (TRV) spending most of its time partially closed, wasting energy and reducing system efficiency.

The traditional UK approach was to calculate room BTU/h requirements using simple rules of thumb. The correct method — particularly for new builds, heat pump systems, or rooms with unusual thermal characteristics — is a full room heat loss calculation per BS EN 12831, which accounts for each element of the building envelope (walls, windows, floor, ceiling) and ventilation heat losses.

For most replacement radiator work in existing well-heated homes, the existing radiator size (usually stamped on the radiator or available from manufacturer data) is a reasonable starting point. If the room was adequately warm with the old radiator at a particular flow temperature, a like-for-like replacement will achieve the same result. The critical exception is when switching to a heat pump or condensing boiler operating at lower flow temperatures — in these cases the radiator output at the new (lower) flow temperature must be recalculated, as radiator output falls significantly at lower temperatures.

Key Facts

  • BTU vs watts — 1 kW = 3,412 BTU/h; 1 BTU/h = 0.293 W; radiators are rated in watts (W) at delta T 50°C in the UK (ΔT50)
  • Delta T (ΔT) — the difference between the mean water temperature in the radiator and the room air temperature; ΔT50 means the mean water temperature is 50°C above room temperature (e.g., 75°C flow, 65°C return, room 20°C: mean water = 70°C, ΔT = 70-20 = 50°C)
  • Heat pump flow temperature — ASHPs typically operate at 35–45°C flow; a radiator rated at 1000W at ΔT50 produces only approximately 380W at ΔT20 (flow 45°C, return 40°C, room 20°C)
  • Radiator output correction — output at different ΔT is corrected using the formula: Output_actual = Output_rated × (ΔT_actual / ΔT_rated)^n where n ≈ 1.3 for panel radiators
  • Typical heat loss factors — 80–100 W/m² for poorly insulated older UK homes; 40–60 W/m² for modern insulated properties; 25–35 W/m² for Passivhaus standard
  • Standard room BTU guidelines — bedroom: 750–1500 W; living room: 1500–3000 W; kitchen (heated): 500–1500 W; bathroom: 500–1000 W; these are very rough only
  • K1, K2, K3 radiator types — K1 = single panel, single convector; K2 = double panel, double convector (most common UK type); K3 = triple panel, triple convector; output increases significantly with panel count
  • Single vs double panel — a K2 (double panel, double convector) produces approximately 50–70% more heat than a K1 of the same width and height
  • Radiator sizing software — BS EN 12831 heat loss calculation software (including free tools from radiator manufacturers like Stelrad and Vasco) provides accurate results
  • 10% oversizing margin — it is standard practice to select a radiator 10–15% above the calculated heat loss requirement to provide a margin for cold snaps
  • Towel rails — chromium or stainless towel rails have very low output per m² compared to panel radiators; add a secondary heated towel rail or oversized the rail significantly for a bathroom that needs serious heating

Quick Reference Table — Heat Loss Factors by Room Type

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Room / Condition Heat Loss Factor (W/m² of floor area) Notes
Modern well-insulated house (post-2000) 40–60 Cavity wall insulation, DG windows
1980s–1990s property, good DG 55–75 Typically cavity walls, partial insulation
1970s–1980s property, basic DG 65–85 May have cavity wall insulation
Pre-1970s solid wall, DG 80–100 Solid walls, reasonable draught proofing
Pre-1970s solid wall, single glazed 100–130 High heat loss
Ground floor room (cold floor) Add 10–15 W/m² Uninsulated suspended floor
North-facing room Add 5–10 W/m² Less solar gain
Corner room (two exposed walls) Add 10–15 W/m² Two external walls
Large window area (>25% of wall) Add 10–20 W/m² Windows lose heat faster than walls
Conservatory (uninsulated) Do not include as heated room Poor insulation; heat separately

Worked Examples

Example 1: Master Bedroom Radiator Sizing

Room: 4.0m × 3.5m (14 m²), 2.4m ceiling height, modern semi-detached (post-1990), double glazed, north-facing, one external wall

Step 1: Base heat loss

  • Floor area: 14 m²
  • Base factor for modern property: 55 W/m²
  • Base heat loss: 14 × 55 = 770 W

Step 2: Adjustments

  • North-facing: +7 W/m² → +7 × 14 = +98 W
  • One external wall only (not a corner): no additional adjustment

Total heat loss: 770 + 98 = 868 W

Step 3: Add 10% margin 868 × 1.10 = 955 W required radiator output

Step 4: Select radiator (at ΔT50)

  • A K2 radiator 600mm high × 1200mm long outputs approximately 1400W at ΔT50 — oversized
  • A K2 radiator 500mm high × 900mm long outputs approximately 900W at ΔT50 — close to requirement
  • A K2 radiator 600mm high × 900mm long outputs approximately 1100W at ΔT50 — 15% over requirement, good choice

Selected: K2 double panel convector, 600 × 900mm, ~1100W at ΔT50


Example 2: Living Room — Large Victorian Terraced House

Room: 5.0m × 4.0m (20 m²), 3.0m ceiling height, Victorian (pre-1900), solid walls, modern double glazed sash windows, 2 external walls (corner position), south-facing

Step 1: Base heat loss

  • Floor area: 20 m²
  • Base factor for pre-1970 solid wall, DG: 90 W/m²
  • Base heat loss: 20 × 90 = 1800 W

Step 2: Adjustments

  • Corner room (2 external walls): +12 W/m² → +12 × 20 = +240 W
  • South-facing: -5 W/m² (solar gain benefit) → -5 × 20 = -100 W
  • 3.0m ceiling height vs typical 2.4m: rooms taller than standard lose heat through the ceiling; add approximately 0.5 W/m² per 100mm above 2.4m → (3.0-2.4) × 5 × 20 = +60 W

Total heat loss: 1800 + 240 - 100 + 60 = 2000 W

Step 3: Add 10% margin: 2000 × 1.10 = 2200 W

Step 4: Select radiators

  • A single K2 radiator to meet this would need to be very large (e.g., 600 × 2000mm = ~2500W at ΔT50)
  • Alternatively, two K2 radiators, each approximately 1100W, spread around the room for even heat distribution: e.g., 2 × K2 600 × 900mm = 2200W

Selected: 2 × K2 double panel, 600 × 900mm, total ~2200W at ΔT50


Example 3: Heat Pump Replacement — Output Correction

Scenario: Replacing a gas boiler with an ASHP. Existing radiator is rated 1200W at ΔT50 (75/65°C flow/return, 20°C room). The new ASHP will operate at 45°C flow, 40°C return, 20°C room.

Step 1: Calculate ΔT for new system

  • Mean water temperature (new): (45 + 40) / 2 = 42.5°C
  • Room temperature: 20°C
  • ΔT_actual = 42.5 - 20 = 22.5°C

Step 2: Correction factor Using the formula: Output_actual = Output_rated × (ΔT_actual / ΔT_rated)^1.3

  • Output_actual = 1200 × (22.5 / 50)^1.3
  • = 1200 × (0.45)^1.3
  • = 1200 × 0.369
  • = 443W

The existing 1200W radiator only delivers 443W at heat pump temperatures.

Step 3: Size replacement radiator If the room heat loss is 900W:

  • Required output at ΔT22.5 = 900W
  • Required rating at ΔT50 = 900 / 0.369 = 2439W at ΔT50

The replacement radiator must be rated at approximately 2440W at ΔT50 — double the original radiator's output.

This example illustrates why heat pump installations almost always require radiator upgrades — the radiators designed for 75/65°C flow/return deliver far less output at 45/40°C.

Detailed Guidance

Full BS EN 12831 Heat Loss Method

The simplified method above is suitable for most replacement radiator work. For new installations, system design, or heat pump upgrades, a full BS EN 12831 heat loss calculation is required. This method calculates:

  1. Transmission heat loss — heat loss through each building element (walls, windows, doors, floor, ceiling/roof), using the formula: H_T = U × A × (T_int - T_ext) in watts

    • U = U-value of the element (W/m²K)
    • A = area of the element (m²)
    • T_int = design internal temperature (20°C for living rooms, 22°C for bathrooms, 18°C for bedrooms)
    • T_ext = design external temperature for the UK region (typically -3°C to -5°C for England)
  2. Ventilation heat loss — heat loss from air infiltration and mechanical ventilation: H_V = 0.33 × n × V × (T_int - T_ext)

    • n = air changes per hour (0.5–1.5 typical for UK homes depending on draught proofing)
    • V = room volume (m³)
  3. Total heat loss = H_T + H_V

Typical U-values for UK construction:

Element U-value (W/m²K)
External wall, solid brick (300mm) 2.1
External wall, 50mm cavity uninsulated 1.5
External wall, cavity with mineral wool 0.35
External wall, cavity with EPS bead 0.30
Double glazed window (standard) 2.8
Double glazed window (low-E) 1.8
Triple glazed window 1.0
Roof (150mm mineral wool) 0.25
Roof (270mm mineral wool) 0.13
Ground floor (uninsulated suspended timber) 0.7
Ground floor (insulated solid concrete) 0.25

Radiator Selection — K1, K2, K3 Output Guide

Radiator output varies significantly by type. The following gives approximate outputs for common UK radiator heights (600mm and 700mm are most common):

Type Height Width Approx. Output at ΔT50
K1 single panel 600mm 600mm ~450W
K1 single panel 600mm 1200mm ~900W
K2 double panel 600mm 600mm ~750W
K2 double panel 600mm 900mm ~1100W
K2 double panel 600mm 1200mm ~1500W
K2 double panel 600mm 1800mm ~2200W
K3 triple panel 600mm 900mm ~1500W
K3 triple panel 600mm 1200mm ~2000W
Vertical K2 (1800mm high) 1800mm 600mm ~2500W

Note: these are approximate values; always check the specific manufacturer's datasheet for accurate rated output.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a heat loss calculation to replace an existing radiator?

No — for a straightforward like-for-like replacement, match or slightly exceed the existing radiator's rated output. The existing system's performance confirms the original size was approximately correct. A heat loss calculation is recommended for: adding a new radiator to an existing system, rebalancing a system after major changes, or upgrading to a heat pump.

My radiator is always cold even on full — is it undersized?

Not necessarily. Common causes of a cold radiator are:

  1. Sludge/magnetite in the radiator (cold patches at the bottom) — powerflush required
  2. Air in the radiator (cold at top, warm at bottom) — bleed the radiator
  3. TRV stuck closed — test by removing the TRV head and opening the valve pin manually
  4. Inadequate system pressure — check boiler pressure gauge
  5. Lockshield valve too far closed — adjust to balance

Only after ruling out the above should the radiator size be questioned.

How do I read the output rating on my existing radiator?

Most UK radiators have a label on the side or bottom showing the rated output in watts (W) or kilowatts (kW) at ΔT50. If there is no label, measure the height, width, and panel count (K1, K2, K3) and use the manufacturer's datasheet or the table above to estimate output.

My bathroom towel rail doesn't heat the room — do I need another radiator?

Towel rails are designed primarily as towel warmers, not room heaters. A typical heated towel rail (500mm × 1200mm chrome ladder type) outputs 200–400W at ΔT50 — enough to warm the room slightly but not to reach comfort temperature in a cold UK bathroom. For a bathroom needing serious heating, add a small panel radiator or ensure the towel rail is significantly oversized for the room's heat loss.

Regulations & Standards

  • BS EN 12831-1:2017 — energy performance of buildings; method for calculation of the design heat load; the definitive standard for radiator sizing

  • BS EN 442-1:2014 — radiators and convectors; technical specifications and requirements

  • Building Regulations Part L — conservation of fuel and power; heating system efficiency targets

  • HHIC: Heat pump radiator sizing guidance — industry guidance for radiator sizing at lower flow temperatures

  • Heating and Hotwater Industry Council (HHIC) — radiator sizing guidance and heat pump compatibility

  • Stelrad: BTU calculator — online room heat loss calculator

  • EST: Heat loss guidance — Energy Saving Trust; home heat loss reduction advice

  • CIBSE Guide A: Environmental Design — authoritative UK heating design reference

  • btu kw conversion — BTU to kW conversion table and quick reference

  • radiator sizing — detailed heat loss by room type; radiator output correction factors

  • heat pumps — ASHP coefficient of performance; why radiator upgrades are needed

  • radiator balancing — balancing the system after adding or replacing radiators