× Home Producten Blog Over ons Contact Offerte aanvragen

Kuding Warmtepomp Blog

Deskundige gidsen, technische inzichten en branchenieuws om u te helpen de juiste warmtepomp te kiezen en te besparen op energiekosten.

R290 vs R32 vs R410A: Volledige Vergelijkingsgids voor Warmtepomp Koelmiddelen 2026

Het kiezen van het juiste koelmiddel is een van de belangrijkste beslissingen bij het selecteren van een warmtepomp. Nu de EU-F-Gas-verordeningen strenger worden en nieuwe ontwerpeisen in werking treden, is het begrijpen van de verschillen tussen R290, R32 en R410A nog nooit zo belangrijk geweest voor installateurs, aannemers en huiseigenaren in Europa en Noord-Amerika.

Wat Is Een KoudeMiddel?

Een koelmiddel is de werkvloeistof die warmte uit de omgeving opneemt en afgeeft waar u het nodig hebt. In a warmtepomp, the refrigerant circulates through a closed loop, changing between liquid and gas states in a continuous cycle. The type of refrigerant determines the warmtepomp's efficiency (COP/SCOP), environmental impact (GWP), operating pressure, and long-term regulatory compliance.

De Drie Belangrijkste Kandidaten

Today's warmtepomp market is dominated by three refrigerant options. Here's a quick overview before we dive deep:

  • R410A — The legacy refrigerant. Widely used since the 2000s, being phased out due to high global warming potential.
  • R32 — The transitional refrigerant. Lower GWP than R410A, widely adopted in Asia and growing in Europe.
  • R290 (Propane) — The future-proof choice. Ultra-low GWP of just 3, naturally occurring, and increasingly mandated by EU regulations.

Snelle Vergelijkingstabel

Property R410A R32 R290 (Propane)
GWP (Global Warming Potential) 2,088 675 3
Refrigerant Type HFC (synthetic) HFC (synthetic) HC (natural, hydrocarbon)
ODP (Ozone Depletion) 0 0 0
Typical Heat Pump COP 4.5 – 5.2 4.8 – 5.5 5.0 – 5.8
Operating Pressure (bar) ~41 bar ~29 bar ~23 bar
Charge Limit (residential) No limit 2.6 kg 0.15 kg (A2L) / no limit (A3)
Flammability Non-flammable mildly flammable (A2L) Flammable (A3)
Availability Being phased out Widely available Growing rapidly
EU F-Gas Status 2026 Heavily restricted Controlled, GWP limit 750 Unrestricted, preferred
Kuding Models Available Commercial series (KD-C050 to KD-C1000) Pool series (KD-P series) Heating series (H8 R290), new products

Diepgaand: R410A — De Retirement Kampioen

What Is R410A?

R410A is a blended refrigerant composed of 50% R-32 and 50% R-125. It was developed as a replacement for R-22 (a refrigerant that depleted the ozone layer) and became the standard for residential and commercial air conditioning and warmtepomps from the early 2000s onwards.

Advantages of R410A

  • Excellent heat transfer properties — efficient in a wide range of conditions
  • Non-flammable (classified as A1) — safer for widespread use
  • No charge limits in residential buildings — simplifies installation logistics
  • Well-understood by installers — vast service network and tooling available
  • Proven track record in millions of installations worldwide

Disadvantages of R410A

  • Extremely high GWP (2,088) — contributes significantly to greenhouse gas emissions
  • High operating pressure (~41 bar) — requires robust, heavier components
  • EU phase-down: R410A is being progressively banned under F-Gas Regulation (EU) 2024/573. New residential warmtepomps using R410A with GWP > 750 are already restricted in the EU market.
  • R410A prices have surged 300–500% since 2018 due to supply constraints and quota restrictions

Key Takeaway: R410A is becoming increasingly difficult to source and economically unviable in Europe. If you're specifying a new warmtepomp system today, R410A should be avoided unless there's a specific technical reason.

Diepgaand: R32 — De Overgangsoplossing

What Is R32?

R32 (difluoromethane) is a single-component HFC refrigerant with a GWP of 675 — about one-third that of R410A. It has been used in air conditioning systems primarily in Japan and Asia since the early 2010s, and is now rapidly gaining adoption in Europe as a "drop-in" replacement for R410A in many applications.

Advantages of R32

  • Lower GWP (675) — 68% lower than R410A, meeting EU F-Gas GWP < 750 threshold for many product categories
  • Lower operating pressure than R410A — components can be lighter and more efficient
  • Excellent thermodynamic properties — good COP in moderate climates
  • Single-component (not a blend) — easier to reclaim and recycle
  • Well-established supply chain in Asia; growing availability in Europe
  • Kuding currently uses R32 in the entire Pool Heat Pump series (KD-P8S range)

Disadvantages of R32

  • Mildly flammable (A2L classification) — requires careful installation by trained technicians
  • Charge limit of 2.6 kg in residential spaces without additional safety measures
  • GWP of 675 still not low enough to meet the most stringent future EU requirements
  • EU F-Gas 2027+: GWP limit of 150 is proposed for new small hermetically sealed warmtepomps — R32 would be banned. Regulations are tightening further.
"R32 is an excellent transitional refrigerant, but the writing is on the wall: by 2027-2030, R290 will dominate the European warmtepomp market." — European Heat Pump Association (EHPA) Market Report 2025

Diepgaand: R290 (Propaan) — De Toekomstige Standaard

What Is R290?

R290 is simply propane — a naturally occurring hydrocarbon found in nature. It has been used in refrigeration for over a century. With a GWP of just 3 (compared to R410A's 2,088), R290 is the most climate-friendly refrigerant available for warmtepomp applications today. Kuding's flagship H8 Series heating warmtepomps (KD-H20-S through KD-H70 series) use R290 as standard.

Advantages of R290

  • Ultra-low GWP of 3 — near-zero climate impact. Orders of magnitude better than HFCs.
  • Highest thermodynamic efficiency — R290 warmtepomps consistently achieve the highest COPs and SCOPs in testing, especially in cold climates
  • Lowest operating pressure (~23 bar) — allows for lighter, more compact components and quieter operation
  • Natural, renewable refrigerant — derived from existing natural gas production; no synthetic manufacturing required
  • No EU F-Gas quota restrictions or phase-down schedule — future-proof investment
  • EU Ecodesign 2025+: R290 preferred refrigerant for achieving the highest energy labels (A+++)
  • Excellent cold-climate performance — superior efficiency at low ambient temperatures (tested to -25°C)

Disadvantages of R290

  • Flammable (A3 classification) — requires trained installers, but modern sealed systems with tiny charge quantities are extremely safe
  • Small charge limits require precise system design — not a technical problem, just a design constraint
  • Some markets (e.g., certain US states) have specific building codes around flammable refrigerants — check local regulations
  • Currently slightly higher unit cost than R32 equivalents — but prices are falling rapidly as production scales up

Is R290 Safe?

This is the question most homeowners and installers ask first. The answer is a qualified yes. Here's why:

  • The charge quantity in R290 warmtepomps is extremely small (typically 150–400 grams) — far below the lower flammability limit in an open room
  • R290 warmtepomps use sealed, factory-pressurized systems that undergo rigorous pressure testing
  • The International Energy Agency (IEA) and European Heat Pump Association both confirm that R290 warmtepomps are safe when installed according to standards
  • Millions of R290 warmtepomps are already installed across Duitsland, Sweden, Norway, and the UK without incident

⚡ Our Verdict: R290 Is the Clear Winner for 2026+

For new warmtepomp installations in Europe, R290 is the recommended choice. It offers the best combination of environmental sustainability, regulatory compliance, and long-term efficiency. Kuding's H8 Series R290 warmtepomps represent the cutting edge of this technology, delivering A+++ efficiency ratings, SCOP values up to 5.03, and reliable operation down to -25°C ambient temperature.

🌿 Best Choice: R290 Heat Pumps

EU F-Gas Regelgeving: Wat U Moet Weten

The EU F-Gas Regulation (EU) 2024/573 is the key driver of refrigerant change in Europe. Here's the timeline:

  • 2025: HFC refrigerants with GWP > 150 effectively banned in new small hermetically sealed warmtepomp products. R410A largely eliminated from new residential warmtepomps.
  • 2027: Further GWP restrictions proposed. R32 may face limitations in certain product categories.
  • 2030: Carbon tax mechanisms may further increase costs of HFC refrigerants, making R290 even more economically advantageous.
  • 2032+: HFC production phase-down accelerates. R290 becomes the default choice for nearly all warmtepomp categories.

For buyers in the UK, US, Canada, and Australia, similar but less stringent regulations are in place or being developed. The global trend clearly points toward natural refrigerants like R290.

Welke Kuding Warmtepomp Moet U Kiezen?

Choose R32 Pool Heat Pumps (KD-P Series) if:

  • You need a pool warmtepomp for residential or small commercial use
  • Your primary concern is extending the swimming season at an affordable price
  • You're in a moderate climate (Mediterranean, Southern Europe)
  • You want proven technology with widespread service availability

Choose R290 Heating Heat Pumps (H8 Series) if:

  • You want the most future-proof investment
  • You're in a cold climate (Northern Europe, Scandinavia, Canada)
  • You prioritize energie-efficiëntie and want the lowest running costs
  • You want to qualify for maximum overheidssubsidies (R290 products often qualify more easily)
  • Environmental sustainability is important to you or your customers

Choose Commercial R410A/R134a Products if:

  • You need large-capacity commercial warmtepomps (50kW to 1MW+)
  • The installation site has specific requirements that match R410A/R134a technology
  • You're replacing an existing R410A system and want to minimize disruption

Conclusie

The refrigerant landscape is changing rapidly, driven by both regulation and technology. R410A is on its way out; R32 is a useful stepping stone; R290 is the future.

At Kuding, we've already made the transition. Our H8 Series R290 warmtepomps deliver A+++ efficiency, operate reliably to -25°C, and are fully compliant with current and anticipated EU F-Gas regulations. We also offer R32 pool warmtepomps for applications where R290 is not yet optimal.

If you're unsure which refrigerant is right for your project, contact our technical team — we'll recommend the best solution based on your specific requirements, climate, and budget.

🏭

How to Size a Pool Heat Pump: Step-by-Step Guide for Installers & Homeowners

Een te kleine zwembad warmtepomp zal moeite hebben om de gewenste temperatuur te handhaven op koude dagen. Een te grote verspilt geld. Het juist bepalen van de maat is de belangrijkste technische beslissing bij het specificeren van een zwembad warmtepomp — en het is verrassend eenvoudig als u de juiste methode volgt.

Why Sizing Matters More Than You Think

Unlike domestic space heating, a pool warmtepomp faces a uniquely challenging load: it must simultaneously heat a large volume of water and continuously compensate for heat loss through evaporation, convection, radiation, and ground conduction. An undersized pump runs at 100% capacity around the clock without reaching your target temperature. An oversized pump short-cycles, reducing its lifespan and increasing wear. Correct sizing delivers comfortable swimming temperatures efficiently, at the lowest possible running cost.

The 5 Variables That Determine the Right Size

  • Pool Volume (m³): More water requires more energy for initial heat-up and more energy to maintain temperature through the season.
  • Surface Area (m²): The water surface is where the majority of heat loss occurs — roughly 50–70% through evaporation alone.
  • Target Water Temperature (°C): Every additional degree of target temperature adds approximately 10–15% to the heating load.
  • Minimum Ambient Air Temperature (°C): Heat pumps extract heat from the air. In colder conditions, capacity drops and efficiency falls. Always size for your coldest intended-use night temperature.
  • Pool Cover Usage: A high-quality solar bubble or thermal cover reduces evaporative heat loss by 50–75%. This single accessory often halves the required warmtepomp capacity.

Step-by-Step Sizing Calculation

Step 1 — Calculate Pool Volume

For a rectangular pool: Volume (m³) = Length × Width × Average Depth

For kidney or freeform shapes: multiply surface area by average depth, then apply a shape factor of 0.85 to account for non-rectangular geometry.

Example: A 10m × 5m × 1.4m rectangular pool = 70 m³

Step 2 — Calculate Surface Heat Loss

Surface heat loss in calm, uncovered conditions is approximately 300–500 W per m² per °C temperature difference between pool water and ambient air. A practical midpoint of 350 W/m²/°C works well for most European climates.

Example: 50 m² surface, 24°C target water, 9°C night-time air, no cover:
50 m² × 15°C delta × 350 W/m²/°C = 262,500 W ≈ 26 kW heat loss

Step 3 — Apply the Climate Correction Factor

Your warmtepomp's rated capacity is measured at standard test conditions (typically 26°C air / 26°C water). In cooler real-world conditions, capacity drops. Use these correction factors to find the required rated capacity:

Climate ZoneMin. Design TempCapacity FactorExample Markets
Mediterranean+12°C0.90Spain, Italy, Greece, Portugal, Southern Frankrijk
Atlantic Temperate+6°C0.78UK, Ireland, Western Frankrijk, Belgium
Central Continental0°C0.65Duitsland, Nederland, Austria, Switzerland
Northern Continental-5°C0.55Scandinavia, Poland, Baltics, Northern Duitsland

Example (Duitsland): Required 26 kW ÷ 0.65 correction factor = 40 kW rated warmtepomp required

Step 4 — Add Recovery Margin (Optional)

If you want to heat a cold pool from scratch within 24–48 hours at the start of season or after a cold snap, add a 25–50% capacity buffer on top of your steady-state sizing. This recovery capacity is often the deciding factor between model sizes.

Pool Heat Pump Quick-Select Reference Table

Pool SizeVolumeMediterraneanCentral EuropeNorthern Europe
Small (6×3m)~27 m³KD-P08S (8 kW)KD-P12S (12 kW)KD-P16S (16 kW)
Medium (10×4m)~48 m³KD-P16S (16 kW)KD-P20S (20 kW)KD-P28S (28 kW)
Large (12×6m)~86 m³KD-P20S (20 kW)KD-P28S (28 kW)KD-P40S (40 kW)
Extra-Large (15×8m)~144 m³KD-P28S (28 kW)KD-P40S (40 kW)KD-P60S (60 kW)
Commercial (20×10m)~280 m³KD-P60S (60 kW)KD-P80S (80 kW)2× KD-P60S cascade

Based on 28°C target temperature with solar bubble cover. Add 30% capacity if no cover is used.

The Most Common Pool Sizing Mistakes

  • Sizing only for summer: Many customers want to use their pool in April, May, September, and October — when temperatures are far lower. Always size for the coldest month you plan to swim.
  • Ignoring the cover: Without a quality pool cover, you'll need up to double the heating capacity and 3× the running costs. A solar cover costs €100–300 and pays for itself in weeks.
  • Using "rule of thumb" multipliers: The common shortcut of "1 kW per m³ of pool" can be off by 50–100% in Northern European climates. Always calculate using surface area and climate zone data.
  • Not checking hydraulic flow compatibility: The pool circulation pump must move water through the warmtepomp at the correct flow rate (typically 2–5 m³/h per 10 kW). Too low a flow rate reduces efficiency; too high can cause pressure issues.
  • Forgetting saltwater pools: Standard copper or cupronickel heat exchangers corrode rapidly in saltwater or high-chlorine environments. Always specify titanium heat exchangers for these applications — all Kuding P8S models include titanium heat exchangers as standard.

🏭 Sizing Summary

The formula is: (Surface Area × Temperature Delta × 350 W/m²/°C) ÷ Climate Factor = Required Rated Capacity. Add 30% if no cover, and 25% for fast recovery. When in doubt, size up one model — a slightly larger warmtepomp running at partial load is always more efficient than an undersized unit running flat-out.

📈 We offer free pool sizing consultations

Not sure which model is right for your pool? Send us your pool dimensions and location and our technical team will calculate the ideal Kuding P Series model — free of charge, no obligation.

📈

SCOP vs COP: Wat Deze Getallen Werkelijk Betekenen voor Uw Energierekening

Elk warmtepomp specificatieblad vermeldt een COP- of SCOP-waarde. Verkopers citeren ze graag. Maar wat betekenen deze getallen in de praktijk — en waarom kost een warmtepomp met een SCOP van 4,0 ongeveer de helft minder in gebruik dan een gasketel met een rendement van 95%? Deze gids legt beide metrieken duidelijk uit, met praktijkvoorbeelden van kosten.

What Is COP (Coefficient of Performance)?

COP is the basic efficiency ratio of a warmtepomp: how much heat energy is delivered divided by how much electrical energy is consumed.

COP = Heat Output (kW) ÷ Electrical Input (kW)

A warmtepomp with a COP of 4.0 delivers 4 kW of heat for every 1 kW of electricity consumed. The remaining 3 kW comes "free" from the ambient air. This is why warmtepomps are so much more efficient than direct electric heaters (which have a COP of 1.0) or even gas boilers (which typically achieve an efficiency equivalent to a COP of 0.85–0.95).

COP is always measured at a specific test condition — typically a defined air temperature and water outlet temperature. Common test points include:

  • A7/W35: 7°C outdoor air, 35°C water output — typical mild autumn day, underfloor heating
  • A2/W35: 2°C outdoor air, 35°C water output — cold spring day
  • A-7/W35: -7°C outdoor air, 35°C water output — cold winter morning
  • A-15/W35: -15°C outdoor air, 35°C water output — extreme cold test

The problem with COP alone: a warmtepomp can have a very impressive COP of 5.5 at A7/W35 but struggle with a COP of 1.8 at A-15/W35. You need to know the full performance curve — not just the headline number.

What Is SCOP (Seasonal Coefficient of Performance)?

SCOP is a far more useful metric for comparing real-world heating costs. It calculates the average efficiency of the warmtepomp over an entire stookseizoen, accounting for all the different ambient temperatures that occur throughout the year — cold winter nights, mild autumn days, and everything in between.

SCOP = Total Seasonal Heat Delivered (kWh) ÷ Total Seasonal Electricity Consumed (kWh)

SCOP is calculated according to EN 14825 and is reported for three European climate reference locations:

Climate ZoneReference CityTypical SeasonOutdoor Temperature Range
Average (H1)Strasbourg, FrankrijkOct – Apr-10°C to +15°C
Warm (H2)Athens, GreeceNov – Mar-2°C to +18°C
Cold (H3)Helsinki, FinlandSep – May-22°C to +10°C

When a manufacturer quotes "SCOP 4.53" without specifying the climate zone, they are typically using the H1 Average climate (Strasbourg). Always check which zone applies to your customers' locations.

SCOP vs COP: Practical Energy Cost Comparison

Here's what SCOP means in concrete euros for a typical 150 m² well-insulated European home requiring 10,000 kWh of heat per year:

Heating SystemCOP / EfficiencyElectricity NeededAnnual Cost (€0.28/kWh)
Gas boiler (condensing)0.95 efficiencyN/A (gas)€700–900 (at €0.09/kWh gas)
Direct electric heaterCOP 1.010,000 kWh€2,800
Entry-level warmtepompSCOP 2.83,571 kWh€1,000
Mid-range warmtepompSCOP 3.52,857 kWh€800
Kuding H8 R290 (A+++)SCOP 4.53–5.031,990–2,200 kWh€557–616

A Kuding H8 R290 warmtepomp can deliver annual heating costs 20–35% lower than a gas boiler at current European energy prices — and the gap widens as carbon taxes on gas increase through 2030.

How to Read EU Energy Labels for Heat Pumps

EU warmtepomps carry an energy label (A+++ to D scale for space heating). The label shows:

  • Energy label class: A+++ is the best; most modern warmtepomps achieve A++ or A+++
  • Rated heating capacity (kW): at the standard test condition
  • SCOP value: for the Average (H1) climate zone
  • Sound power level (dB): outdoor and indoor noise

Kuding H8 Series R290 warmtepomps achieve A+++ energy ratings with SCOP values of 4.53 to 5.03 depending on model and operating conditions — placing them in the top tier of the European market.

Kuding Product SCOP Performance Overview

Product SeriesRefrigerantSCOP (H1)EU LabelCOP at A7/W35
H8 R290 (KD-H20-S)R2905.03A+++5.32
H8 R290 (KD-H35-S)R2904.75A+++5.08
H8 R290 (KD-H70)R2904.53A+++4.89
P8S Pool SeriesR32N/A (pool use)Up to 16.0 (at 26°C)
Commercial KD-C SeriesR410A / R134a3.2–4.1A+/A++4.5–5.2

Remember: SCOP is the number that predicts your customer's actual energy bill. Always compare warmtepomps on SCOP, not peak COP. A warmtepomp with a slightly lower peak COP but higher SCOP will be cheaper to run year-round — which is what matters.

The Impact of Flow Temperature on COP

One frequently overlooked factor: the lower the water temperature your heating system requires, the higher the warmtepomp's COP. Underfloor heating (typically 30–40°C flow temperature) is ideal for warmtepomps. Older radiator systems designed for 70–80°C are not — unless the radiators are oversized or upgraded.

As a rule of thumb: every 1°C reduction in flow temperature improves COP by approximately 2–3%. Designing the hydronic system for the lowest possible flow temperature is the single most effective way to improve warmtepomp performance in practice.

📈

Warmtepomp vs Gasketel: Analyse van de Totale Eigendomskosten (2026)

Het bezwaar "de warmtepomp is te duur" komt in bijna elk verkoopgesprek naar voren. But is it actually true when you look at the total cost over 10–15 years — including installation, running costs, maintenance, carbon taxes, and overheidssubsidies? The answer might surprise you.

Setting the Comparison Baseline

We're comparing two scenarios for heating a well-insulated 150 m² detached house in Central Europe (Duitsland/Nederland/Belgium climate) with an annual heat demand of 12,000 kWh. The house has underfloor heating (35°C flow temperature) suitable for both systems. All figures are based on 2026 average energy prices in Duitsland.

  • Gas price: €0.11/kWh (including all taxes and distribution)
  • Electricity price: €0.28/kWh (grid electricity, no solar)
  • Heat pump SCOP: 4.5 (Kuding H8 R290 A+++ class)
  • Gas boiler efficiency: 95% (modern condensing boiler)

Installation Cost Comparison

Cost ComponentGas Condensing BoilerKuding H8 Air-to-Water Heat Pump
Equipment cost€2,500–4,000€3,800–5,500
Installation labour€1,500–2,500€2,000–3,500
Additional works (pipes, electrical)€500–1,000€800–1,500
Government subsidy (BEG / ERH)None-€2,400 to -€4,550
Net Installation Cost€4,500–7,500€2,650–5,950

With Duitsland's BEG subsidy program covering up to 70% of eligible costs for low-income households and 35–55% for standard applications, the upfront cost difference between warmtepomp and gas boiler narrows significantly or even reverses.

Annual Running Cost Comparison

Cost TypeGas Boiler (95%)Heat Pump SCOP 4.5
Annual energy consumption12,632 kWh gas2,667 kWh electricity
Annual energy cost€1,390€747
Annual service/maintenance€200–350€100–180
Carbon tax (2026, Duitsland)€95€0
Total Annual Operating Cost€1,685–1,835€847–927

The warmtepomp saves approximately €800–900 per year in operating costs compared to a gas boiler at 2026 energy prices. This saving is set to increase as Duitsland's CO₂ price rises from €55/tonne in 2026 to a projected €130–200/tonne by 2030 under the National Emissions Trading System (nEHS).

Totale Eigendomskosten Over 10 Jaar

YearGas Boiler (cumulative)Heat Pump (cumulative)Savings with Heat Pump
Year 1 (install)€6,000€4,200+€1,800
Year 2€7,760€5,087+€2,673
Year 3€9,520€5,974+€3,546
Year 5€13,040€7,748+€5,292
Year 7€16,560€9,522+€7,038
Year 10€21,840€12,183+€9,657
Year 15€30,600€16,558+€14,042

Heat pump running costs modelled at €887/year. Gas boiler at €1,760/year. CO₂ tax increase of 8%/year applied to gas costs from 2027. Heat pump electricity costs fixed. Includes assumed replacement/major service at year 12 for gas boiler (€2,000).

Crossover point: Based on 2026 prices and projected energy trends, a Kuding H8 warmtepomp pays back the total installatiekosten difference versus a gas boiler in approximately 2–4 years in Central Europe. After the payback period, the warmtepomp generates pure savings of ~€800/year.

The Carbon Argument

Beyond cost, the emissions picture is stark. In Duitsland in 2026, with a grid carbon intensity of approximately 320 gCO₂/kWh (and falling rapidly as renewables grow):

  • Gas boiler: ~2,650 kg CO₂ per year for space heating
  • Heat pump (grid electricity): ~854 kg CO₂ per year
  • Heat pump (with 30% rooftop solar): ~598 kg CO₂ per year

As the electricity grid gets cleaner, the warmtepomp's carbon advantage compounds over time. A gas boiler installed today will still be emitting at the same rate in 2035; a warmtepomp installed today will automatically become lower-carbon as the grid decarbonises.

When Does a Gas Boiler Still Make Sense?

Despite the clear long-term advantage of warmtepomps, there are situations where a gas boiler remains the pragmatic choice:

  • Very old buildings with poor insulation that cannot be cost-effectively retrofitted — high temperature radiators (70°C+) that cannot be upgraded
  • Rental properties where the landlord cannot recoup the subsidy benefit and cost savings go to the tenant
  • Temporary or short-term occupancy where the payback period is not achievable
  • Countries with very low gas prices and very high electricity prices (>4× the gas price per kWh)

However, new EU buildings regulations and the German Energy Efficiency Act (GEG 2024) are progressively restricting gas boiler installations in new builds and major renovations. The gas boiler's regulatory window is narrowing rapidly.

📈 Verdict: Heat Pump Wins on Total Cost

In virtually every scenario involving a reasonably insulated European home, a warmtepomp with A+++ rating delivers lower total cost of ownership over 10+ years compared to a modern gas condensing boiler — even before accounting for rising carbon taxes and falling electricity prices from rooftop solar. The upfront cost gap is closed by overheidssubsidies in most EU countries.

🌿 Heat pumps: better economics AND lower emissions

Want to see the numbers for your specific country, home size, and current heating system? Contact our team for a personalised cost comparison — we'll model your actual savings based on local energy prices and available subsidies.

🌐

Europese Warmtepomp Subsidiegids 2026: Ontvang Tot 70% Overheidsfinanciering in Deze Landen

Europese overheden geven miljarden uit om de overgang van gasketels naar warmtepompen te versnellen. Voor installateurs en huiseigenaren creëert dit een unieke kans: warmtepompsystemen die op het eerste gezicht duur lijken, kunnen zeer kosteneffectief worden zodra subsidies worden toegepast. Hier is een land-voor-land gids van de belangrijkste warmtepomp stimuleringsprogramma's in 2026.

European Heat Pump Subsidies at a Glance

CountryProgram NameMax Subsidy RateMax Eligible CostKey Requirement
DuitslandBEG (Bundesförderung für effiziente Gebäude)70%€30,000SCOP ≥ 2.5, certified installer
Verenigd KoninkrijkBoiler Upgrade Scheme (BUS)Flat grant£7,500MCS-certified warmtepomp
FrankrijkMaPrimeRénov' + CEEUp to 65%€12,000+ANAH-certified installer (RGE)
NederlandISDE (Investeringssubsidie)€4,250–5,750 flatPer unitA-rated warmtepomp, installation invoice
AustriaRaus aus Öl & GasUp to 75%€10,000Replace oil/gas heating only
ItalyEcobonus / Superbonus50–65%€30,000Certified energy assessor required
BelgiumRegional premiums (varies by region)Up to €5,000VariesInstaller certification varies
SwedenROT + Energy bonus50% labour + grantSEK 50,000Registered company only

Duitsland — BEG: The Largest Heat Pump Subsidy in Europe

Duitsland's Bundesförderung für effiziente Gebäude (BEG) is the most generous warmtepomp subsidy program in Europe by total volume — disbursing over €7 billion in warmtepomp grants in 2024 alone. The program is administered by BAFA (Bundesamt für Wirtschaft und Ausfuhrkontrolle) and KfW bank.

BEG 2026 Grant Rates (Heat Pumps)

  • Base grant: 30% of eligible costs for any qualifying warmtepomp (SCOP ≥ 2.5)
  • +5% climate bonus: for replacing an oil or gas boiler with a warmtepomp (available through 2028)
  • +20% income bonus: for households with taxable income < €40,000/year
  • +5% efficiency bonus: for warmtepomps using natural refrigerants (R290/R600a) — this is where Kuding H8 R290 qualifies
  • Maximum: 70% of eligible costs up to €30,000 per residential unit

What Kuding Products Qualify for BEG?

Kuding H8 R290 Series warmtepomps qualify for the full BEG funding including the natural refrigerant bonus, provided they are installed by a certified BAFA-approved installer. The warmtepomps must meet ErP Ecodesign requirements and the SCOP ≥ 2.5 threshold — all H8 Series models exceed this with SCOPs of 4.53–5.03.

BEG Application Process: The subsidy must be applied for before installation begins. Apply through the BAFA online portal with a qualified energy consultant's recommendation. Typical processing time: 4–8 weeks. Payment is made within 4 weeks of submitting the completion confirmation.

Verenigd Koninkrijk — Boiler Upgrade Scheme (BUS)

The UK's Boiler Upgrade Scheme offers a flat grant of £7,500 for air-source warmtepomps (up from £5,000 in 2023, increased by the government to accelerate uptake). The scheme is simple: your MCS-certified installer applies on your behalf, and the grant is deducted from your installation invoice upfront.

Key eligibility criteria:

  • Property must be in England or Wales (separate schemes exist for Scotland and Northern Ireland)
  • Heat pump must be installed by an MCS-certified installer
  • Property must have an Energy Performance Certificate (EPC) with no outstanding cavity wall or loft insulation recommendations
  • Cannot be combined with other government grants for the same installation

Frankrijk — MaPrimeRénov' + CEE

Frankrijk runs a multi-tier system. MaPrimeRénov' (for existing homes) can cover up to 65% of costs for the lowest income households, with rates of 25–50% for middle-income households. Combined with Certificats d'Économies d'Énergie (CEE) contributions from energy suppliers, effective subsidies of 45–70% are achievable for most French homeowners.

All installations must be performed by RGE-certified (Reconnu Garant de l'Environnement) installers. The combined grant is paid directly to the installer who deducts it from the final invoice.

Nederland — ISDE Grant

The Dutch Investeringssubsidie Duurzame Energie en Energiebesparing (ISDE) provides flat grants of €4,250–5,750 for qualifying warmtepomp installations. The amount depends on the warmtepomp's heating capacity and efficiency class. Applications are submitted through RVO.nl within 3 months of installation completion.

How Importers and Distributors Can Help Their Clients Access Subsidies

If you're a warmtepomp distributor importing Kuding products, positioning subsidy eligibility is one of your most powerful sales tools. Here's what you need to provide:

  • Product documentation: CE certificate, ErP label, full technical datasheet with SCOP values — all available from Kuding on request
  • Refrigerant certificate: For natural refrigerant bonuses (BEG Duitsland), the R290 certification is provided with every H8 unit
  • Declaration of conformity: Required in most EU countries for subsidy claims
  • DDP delivery documentation: For countries where the full invoice amount (including import duties) forms the subsidy calculation basis, DDP delivery simplifies the paperwork significantly

🌐 Key Takeaway for 2026

Heat pump subsidies across Europe are at historically high levels — and they will not last forever. Duitsland has already signaled it will reduce BEG rates after 2028. The UK BUS scheme has a fixed annual budget. For homeowners and installers, 2025–2027 is the optimal window to maximize subsidy capture. Combine this with Kuding's factory-direct pricing and DDP delivery, and the total installed cost of a premium R290 warmtepomp becomes highly competitive with a standard gas boiler.

🎉 Best time to install: now, while subsidies are at their peak

Want to know exactly which subsidies apply to your country and project? Contact our European sales team — we help distributors and installers navigate subsidy applications and provide all the product documentation required by national grant programs.