The UK commercial MEES deadline.
MEES sets the minimum EPC rating you need to let commercial property in England and Wales. Today the floor is EPC E. From 2031, buildings over 1,000 m² will need EPC B. Knowing which of your buildings fall short starts with measured data.
Right now, the floor is EPC E.
MEES is the statutory minimum energy efficiency standard for privately rented property in England and Wales. It uses the building's EPC rating as the trigger. Since April 2023 it applies to all commercial lettings, not just new ones.
F and G cannot be let
A landlord generally cannot let, or continue to let, a commercial building rated F or G unless it is improved to at least EPC E or a valid exemption is registered.
All lettings since April 2023
The EPC E minimum first applied to new and renewed leases in 2018. Since April 2023 it covers all commercial lettings, including leases already running.
Penalties up to £150,000
Non-domestic breaches scale with the building's rateable value and can reach up to £150,000 per property, with the breach published on a public register.
EPC B by 2031 for buildings over 1,000 m².
On 18 June 2026 the government published its interim response to the long-running MEES consultations. It settled the two questions the market had been waiting on: the standard, and the date.
Today: EPC E stays
Unchanged. The F and G letting restriction remains in force across England and Wales, with no reduction in the current standard.
Dropped: no EPC C by 2027
The interim EPC C milestone previously proposed for 2027 has been dropped and will not be taken forward.
From 2031: EPC B for larger buildings
All privately let non-domestic buildings over 1,000 m² will need EPC B, where cost-effective. Smaller buildings stay at EPC E, with no set deadline to go further.
The measured layer under your MEES plan.
An EPC is an asset rating produced by an assessor, not a meter read. But the decisions around it, which buildings to prioritise, which measures to fund, and whether they worked, all rest on knowing what each building really consumes. Rhino delivers that data automatically.
Baseline every building
Connect the meters already in your buildings, via smart meter connection or Rhino hardware, and see actual consumption for electricity, gas, water, and heat, including submeters. Rank your portfolio by real performance instead of the last EPC someone filed.
Prove the improvement
After a measure lands, compare consumption before and after on the same meter. You get evidence the work paid off, a stronger case for the next tranche of capital, and a clear read on which assets still fall short of the 2031 threshold.
One data stream, many obligations
The same metered data that supports your EPC improvement plan also feeds CSRD and GRESB reporting. No infrastructure overhaul: Rhino connects to existing meters and is operational within days.
Commercial MEES, answered.
See your portfolio's EPC exposure in real numbers.
Rhino connects to the meters you already have and shows which commercial buildings are actually falling short, across all utilities, before 2031 forces the question.