Daikin Altherma Air Source Heat Pump in Buckie, SCO

JapanClimate Zone 6

Looking at a Daikin Altherma air source heat pump for your Buckie home? Installed pricing for Daikin Altherma in Scotland runs £7,000 - £14,000 before any support (indicative, June 2026). With the Home Energy Scotland grant of up to £7,500 (£9,000 rural and island), the out-of-pocket cost is illustratively £0 - £6,500. Apply before installation. Buyers wanting proven mainstream hardware with plenty of competing quotes.

Daikin Altherma is priced below the local typical pre-grant installed range of £8,450 - £14,450, making it one of the more affordable routes to a heat pump in this area.

This is the coldest broad heating climate in the UK, and air source heat pumps still work well here when specified properly: Scotland has tens of thousands of installations. Choose a unit with strong cold-weather output, take the heat-loss survey seriously, and budget for radiator upsizing where the survey recommends it. Running costs sit somewhat higher than the same unit would see in southern England, simply because the heating season is longer.

£7,000 - £14,000
Installed before grant
£0 - £6,500
After grant (illustrative)
4.2
SCOP (efficiency)
5yr
Max warranty

Daikin Altherma Models Available

Altherma 3 R 8kW

£7,000 - £12,000
installed before grant, indicative
Heat output
8kW
SCOP
4.2
Running cost (est.)
~£595/yr
Noise
44dB
Suitable for
3-4 bed homes
After £7,500 grant (illustrative)
£0 - £4,500
Outdoor unit (HxWxD)
990x1270x533mm
Weight
105kg

Altherma 3 H HT 14kW

£10,000 - £14,000
installed before grant, indicative
Heat output
14kW
SCOP
4
Running cost (est.)
~£625/yr
Noise
48dB
Suitable for
large or hard-to-heat homes
After £7,500 grant (illustrative)
£2,500 - £6,500
Outdoor unit (HxWxD)
1440x1160x380mm
Weight
145kg

Specifications and pricing are indicative for the UK market as at June 2026. Running costs assume ~10,000 kWh of heat a year at 25p/kWh (Ofgem cap average; changes quarterly). Confirm current models and exact pricing with your MCS-certified installer.

How Daikin Altherma Performs in Buckie's Climate

Good with proper sizingClimate Zone 6

Zone 6 is the coldest broad heating climate in the UK, with longer winters and harder frosts. Daikin Altherma still works well here when specified properly: ask your installer for low-temperature output figures, take the heat-loss survey seriously, and budget for radiator upsizing where recommended. Expect running costs somewhat above what the same unit would see in southern England, simply because the heating season is longer.

Noise Levels in a Regional Area

At 44dB, Daikin Altherma produces moderate noise. In a regional area, the extra distance between properties means noise is less of a concern than in town, but sensible siting still helps.

Pros

  • World's largest heat pump manufacturer
  • High-temperature models suit older radiator systems
  • Wide UK installer base
  • Strong cold-weather output
  • Competitive entry pricing

Cons

  • Warranty shorter than some rivals unless extended
  • Quality of install varies with such a large network - vet quotes carefully

Grants for Daikin Altherma in Buckie

Home Energy Scotland

Up to £7,500 grant (£9,000 rural and island) plus an optional £7,500 interest-free loan

Scotland runs Home Energy Scotland instead of the Boiler Upgrade Scheme; apply before installation. Every Daikin Altherma air-to-water model qualifies when fitted by an MCS-certified installer. 0% VAT until 31 March 2027 applies on top. Accurate as at June 2026.

Full grant details for Scotland

The heating picture in Scotland

Scotland runs its own support: a Home Energy Scotland grant up to £7,500 (£9,000 with the rural and island uplift) plus an optional £7,500 interest-free loan - the Boiler Upgrade Scheme does not apply here. Colder winters make cold-climate ratings and a proper heat-loss survey essential; rural and island homes off the gas grid often heat with oil or electric storage today.

There is no gas ban in the UK and nobody is forcing the switch. The pressure is price: the Ofgem cap gas unit rate rises 27% on 1 July 2026 (5.74p to 7.33p per kWh, with typical bills up around 13%). For Buckie households on a gas boiler, the practical takeaway is to plan ahead: keep using and repairing the boiler you have, but when it reaches end-of-life, pricing a heat pump against a new boiler (with the £7,500 Home Energy Scotland grant and 0% VAT in the maths) is now the rational default.

Compare Other Brands in Buckie

Daikin Altherma in Buckie: Frequently Asked Questions

How much does an air source heat pump cost in Buckie?
Most Buckie households pay £950 to £6,950 out of pocket (indicative, June 2026) after the Home Energy Scotland grant of up to £7,500 is deducted from a typical pre-grant installed price of £8,450 to £14,450. Your installer will guide you through the Home Energy Scotland application before installation. 0% VAT on residential installations (until 31 March 2027) is already reflected in quoted prices. Combi-to-cylinder conversions and radiator upgrades push costs toward the top of the range.
What heat pump grants are available in Buckie?
Scotland runs its own support instead of the Boiler Upgrade Scheme: the Home Energy Scotland grant of up to £7,500 toward a heat pump, rising to £9,000 with the rural and island uplift, plus an optional interest-free loan of up to £7,500 more. Apply through Home Energy Scotland before installation. 0% VAT on residential installations also applies until 31 March 2027. The BUS itself does not operate in Scotland.
Do air source heat pumps work in Buckie's climate?
Buckie has a cold climate with longer, harder winters than most of the UK. This is the coldest broad heating climate in the UK, and air source heat pumps still work well here when specified properly: Scotland has tens of thousands of installations. Choose a unit with strong cold-weather output, take the heat-loss survey seriously, and budget for radiator upsizing where the survey recommends it. Running costs sit somewhat higher than the same unit would see in southern England, simply because the heating season is longer.
Is a heat pump cheaper to run than a gas boiler in Buckie?
On the Ofgem price cap (electricity around 25p per kWh, gas 5.74p rising to 7.33p per kWh on 1 July 2026), a heat pump running at a seasonal efficiency (SCOP) of 3.8 to 4.5 delivers heat at roughly the same cost as a 90%-efficient gas boiler or below it, and the 27% gas rate rise tilts the comparison further toward the heat pump. Households on heat-pump time-of-use tariffs typically do better again, though tariffs change so compare current offers. These are estimates: your actual costs depend on your tariff, your home's heat loss and how the system is set up.
How does the installation process work in Buckie?
Every grant-backed installation starts with a heat-loss survey of your home (an MCS requirement), which determines the heat pump output, the radiator sizing and whether your hot water cylinder needs upgrading or adding. The installer then fits the outdoor unit, cylinder and controls, commissions the system and walks you through it. If a gas boiler is being removed, that part of the work must be done by a Gas Safe registered engineer. Timescales are usually measured in days, not weeks; your installer will confirm after the survey.
What size air source heat pump do I need in Buckie?
Sizing in the UK is driven by your home's heat loss, not just bedroom count: the heat-loss survey that comes with every Boiler Upgrade Scheme installation calculates it room by room. As a rough guide from the current UK model ranges, smaller well-insulated homes suit units around 5 to 8kW of heat output, typical 3 to 4 bed homes around 8 to 12kW, and large or older properties may need more. In a cooler climate like yours, the survey matters even more: low-temperature output and radiator upsizing are the difference between a system that just works and one that works efficiently.
Which air source heat pump brand is best for Buckie?
In Buckie's cooler climate (zone 6 on our 1-7 scale), cold-weather output matters most. Mitsubishi Electric Ecodan (assembled in Livingston, Scotland) and Daikin Altherma both have strong cold-weather pedigrees, and Vaillant aroTHERM Plus and Viessmann Vitocal use R290 refrigerant to reach high flow temperatures, which suits radiator retrofits. Whichever brand you choose, ask the installer for low-temperature output figures, and remember every air-to-water unit here qualifies for the available support when fitted by an MCS-certified installer.
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