Net zero is no longer a distant policy ambition; it is a live operational issue for landlords.
With the UK committed to net zero by 2050, property sits firmly in the regulatory crosshairs. Buildings account for a significant share of national emissions, and rental stock is under increasing scrutiny.
For landlords, this means:
- Rising expectations around insulation and heating systems
- Greater emphasis on EPC trajectories, not just current ratings
- Increasing pressure from lenders and valuers
Importantly, net zero compliance will not arrive overnight; but inaction now compounds future cost. Properties that fail to adapt risk becoming stranded assets.
Forward looking investors are treating net zero as a planning variable, not a compliance surprise.
DXXV helps landlords assess where their assets sit on the transition curve and how to move deliberately rather than reactively.
