Summary

MCS 007 sits alongside MCS 001 (the generic installer standard) as the heat pump-specific technical standard. Where MCS 001 covers business conduct, quality management, and general obligations, MCS 007 specifies the technical requirements for the heat pump installation itself: heat loss calculation, system design, pipe sizing, commissioning parameters, and handover documentation.

For heating engineers entering the heat pump market, MCS 007 compliance is the entry ticket to BUS grant work. Without MCS certification under MCS 007, a heat pump installer cannot lodge MCS installation certificates and cannot claim BUS grants on behalf of customers.

Key Facts

  • MCS 007 — MCS Microgeneration Installation Standard for heat pump systems; covers air source heat pumps (ASHP) and ground source heat pumps (GSHP)
  • MCS 001 — the generic MCS installer standard; applies alongside MCS 007; covers quality management, insurance, CPD, and auditing
  • BUS (Boiler Upgrade Scheme) — DESNZ grant scheme; £7,500 for ASHP; £7,500 for GSHP; requires MCS-certified installation and MCS certificate submission
  • MCS heat loss calculation — MCS 007 requires a heat loss calculation (typically per BS EN 12831) for the property before sizing the heat pump; this is a core skill gap for many heating engineers new to heat pumps
  • CIBSE/REHVA guidance — MCS 007 references CIBSE (Chartered Institution of Building Services Engineers) guidance documents for heat pump design; installers are expected to be familiar with these
  • Heat pump product standard — MCS 011 covers the product standard for heat pumps; all heat pumps installed under MCS must be on the MCS approved product list or meet the equivalent (BS EN 14511, BS EN 14825)
  • Competent Persons Scheme (Part P) — the electrical installation associated with the heat pump (dedicated circuit from consumer unit) is notifiable under Part P; the MCS-certified heat pump installer needs Part P competence or must subcontract the electrical work
  • REFCOM (F-Gas) — heat pumps contain refrigerant circuits (R410A, R32, R290); operatives handling refrigerants must hold REFCOM (or equivalent City & Guilds 2079) F-Gas certification; see f gas regulations heat pumps
  • Qualifications — no single mandatory qualification; typical routes: NVQ Level 2/3 plumbing + City & Guilds 6189 (heat pump specific) or BPEC heat pump qualification; MCS certification body specifies required quals
  • Annual audit — MCS-certified installers undergo at least one annual audit; sample of installations reviewed; records and design calculations checked
  • Installation certificate — each installation generates an MCS heat pump installation certificate lodged on the MCS database; required for BUS grant claim

Quick Reference Table: MCS 007 Key Requirements

Spending too long on quotes? squote turns a 2-minute voice recording into a professional quote.

Try squote free →
Requirement What MCS 007 Specifies Practical Implication
Heat loss calculation BS EN 12831 or equivalent; room-by-room Must be completed before sizing heat pump
Heat pump sizing Matched to calculated design heat load Oversizing is a common mistake; MCS prohibits significant oversizing
Emitter sizing Must confirm existing or new radiators/UFH can deliver design heat at design flow temp Radiator or UFH upgrade may be required
DHW cylinder Must be sized for the property; unvented or MCS-compliant vented Cylinder may need replacement
Commissioning Flow and return temperatures, flow rate, COP measurement Records required on MCS certificate
Handover Customer owner's pack; maintenance schedule MCS 001 specifies minimum handover documents
Controls Weather compensation required; room thermostat or zone controls Programming walkthrough for customer

Detailed Guidance

What MCS 007 Covers

System design: MCS 007 requires the installer to complete a design process before installation, covering:

  1. Site survey and property heat loss calculation (BS EN 12831 or equivalent method)
  2. Heat pump selection matched to calculated design heat load
  3. Emitter system review (existing radiators/UFH adequacy at planned flow temperature)
  4. DHW cylinder sizing
  5. Buffer tank assessment (where required)
  6. Controls design (weather compensation, zone controls, thermostat)

Installation: The installation must follow the heat pump manufacturer's instructions and MCS 007 requirements. Key aspects:

  • Refrigerant pipework handling and pressure testing (F-Gas requirement)
  • Hydraulic pipework design (flow and return, bypass valve, buffer tank if needed)
  • Electrical supply (dedicated circuit, correct protection)
  • Outdoor unit siting (clearances, drainage, noise)

Commissioning: MCS 007 specifies minimum commissioning requirements including:

  • Filling, flushing, and pressure testing the hydraulic circuit
  • Confirming flow rate (via commissioning valve or energy meter)
  • Measuring flow and return temperatures at design conditions
  • Confirming controls are set correctly (weather compensation curve, set points)
  • Legionella check (DHW pasteurisation cycle)

Documentation: At completion, the installer must issue:

  • MCS heat pump installation certificate (lodged on MCS database)
  • Electrical Installation Certificate (for the dedicated circuit)
  • Commissioning record showing flow/return temperatures, flow rate, and system pressure
  • Handover pack for the customer

Certification Process

Step 1: Qualifications Obtain the required heating and heat pump qualifications. Most certification bodies require:

  • Plumbing qualification (NVQ Level 2/3 or equivalent) or equivalent heating experience
  • Heat pump specific qualification: City & Guilds 6189 (Air Source Heat Pumps), or BPEC Heat Pump qualification, or equivalent
  • F-Gas certification (REFCOM City & Guilds 2079) — mandatory for handling refrigerants
  • Part P electrical competence (or a registered electrician for the electrical work)

Step 2: Choose a certification body NAPIT, NICEIC, Stroma, BSI, and HIES are the main MCS-licensed bodies for heat pumps. Compare fees, support, and the scope they certify (some bodies certify both ASHP and GSHP; confirm scope).

Step 3: Application and assessment Submit application with qualification evidence, insurance, and policies. The assessment involves:

  • Desk review of documentation
  • Witnessed installation: the assessor observes a real heat pump installation; checks compliance with MCS 007 at each stage (heat loss calculation reviewed; commissioning witnessed)

Step 4: Certification On passing the assessment, the installer is added to the MCS heat pump installer database. They can now issue MCS installation certificates and claim BUS grants.

BUS Grant Claims

The Boiler Upgrade Scheme (BUS) provides grants for replacing fossil fuel boilers with heat pumps:

  • £7,500 for air source heat pumps (ASHP)
  • £7,500 for ground source heat pumps (GSHP) and water source heat pumps

Eligibility:

  • Properties in England and Wales (separate schemes in Scotland)
  • Property must have a valid Energy Performance Certificate (EPC) with no outstanding recommendation to upgrade loft or cavity wall insulation
  • The boiler being replaced must be a fossil fuel boiler (gas, oil, LPG); the scheme does not apply to properties that already have a heat pump

Claim process:

  1. Customer applies for a BUS voucher through the scheme administrator (Ofgem)
  2. Installer installs the heat pump under MCS 007
  3. Installer lodges the MCS installation certificate
  4. Customer/installer submits the BUS redemption claim within the voucher validity period
  5. Grant is paid to the installer, who reduces the customer's invoice accordingly

Installer registration: Installers must be on the MCS installer database to accept BUS vouchers. There is no separate BUS registration — MCS certification is the entry requirement.

Design Competence: The Heat Loss Calculation

The requirement to complete a heat loss calculation before sizing the heat pump is the most significant differentiator between MCS 007-compliant heat pump installation and non-compliant "swap and go" practice.

Why heat loss calculation matters: A heat pump sized to a heating load that has not been calculated may be oversized. An oversized heat pump short-cycles (turns on and off frequently), reducing efficiency and increasing wear. It also produces the wrong flow temperature for the system, causing the heat pump to work inefficiently against a mismatched emitter circuit.

MCS 007 explicitly requires the heat pump to be matched to the calculated heat load, not to the boiler it is replacing. A property previously heated by a 30kW gas boiler may have a design heat load of only 8kW — a 30kW heat pump would be significantly oversized.

Software tools:

  • Commercial tools: Heat Engineer, Wrightsoft, Nu-Heat, Vaillant Heat Pump Designer
  • MCS Heat Pump Calculator (available from MCS) — a simplified method accepted for smaller domestic installations
  • Manual calculation per BS EN 12831 — acceptable but time-consuming

See heat pump sizing heat loss for a full treatment of heat loss calculation methods.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I install a heat pump without MCS certification?

Yes, legally. There is no statutory requirement to hold MCS certification. However, without MCS certification: the customer cannot claim the BUS grant (£7,500); the installation may not comply with building regulations requirements that reference MCS; and the installer will be at a significant commercial disadvantage. In practice, almost all domestic heat pump work that involves a grant claim requires MCS certification.

How long does MCS 007 certification take to obtain?

The qualification stage (C&G 6189 or BPEC) typically takes 3–5 days of training plus an assessment. After qualification, the MCS certification body application and assessment process takes 4–8 weeks. Total timeline from starting training to first certificate: typically 3–4 months.

Does MCS 007 certification cover both ASHP and GSHP?

MCS certification scopes can cover one or both. City & Guilds 6189 covers air source primarily; a separate GSHP qualification is needed to extend the scope to ground source. Confirm with your certification body what scope your assessment will cover.

Regulations & Standards