Does a Vacant Commercial Property Need a TM44 Inspection? UK Landlord Guide 2026

A vacant commercial property can feel like it has no active compliance risk. No staff is working there. No customers are using the space. The building may be empty, partly powered down, or waiting for a new tenant, sale, refurbishment, lease negotiation or handover.

That leads to one common question from landlords, pension schemes, managing agents and commercial property owners:

Does a vacant commercial property still need a TM44 inspection?

The practical answer is this: vacancy alone does not automatically remove the need for a TM44 air conditioning inspection. The main issue is not whether the building is occupied. The key question is whether the building has air conditioning systems with a combined effective rated output over 12kW, and whether those systems remain installed, available, controlled or capable of being used.

UK government guidance states that air conditioning systems must be inspected every 5 years by an energy assessor to confirm they are energy efficient, and GOV.UK also states that failure to have the inspection every 5 years can result in a £300 fine. The wider GOV.UK guidance explains that the purpose of the air conditioning inspection report is to provide the building owner or manager with information about system efficiency, maintenance, controls, sizing, improvement recommendations, carbon savings and operating cost reduction opportunities.

For commercial landlords, this matters because an empty building can still have legal, leasing, insurance, sale and due diligence implications. A vacant office, shop, clinic, warehouse, showroom, school building, leisure unit or mixed-use commercial site can still fall within TM44 requirements if the installed air conditioning system is within scope.

If you own, manage, lease, sell or prepare a vacant commercial building, this guide explains what you need to check, why the property being empty does not always change the requirement, what documents are useful, and how TM44.uk can help you confirm the position quickly.


What is a TM44 inspection?

A TM44 inspection, also known as an air conditioning inspection report or ACIR, is an energy efficiency assessment of qualifying air conditioning systems in non-domestic buildings.

The inspection looks at the air conditioning system’s efficiency, condition, controls, maintenance arrangements, sizing and opportunities for improvement. The report is designed to help the building owner, operator or manager understand whether the system is working efficiently and whether cost-effective improvements may reduce energy use, carbon emissions and operating costs.

The Energy Performance of Buildings Regulations define an air conditioning system broadly as a combination of components that provide air treatment where temperature is controlled or can be lowered. The regulations also define the relevant person for an air conditioning system as the person who has control of the operation of that system.

The current UK position is that qualifying air conditioning systems generally require inspection every 5 years. GOV.UK’s public guidance states this clearly for businesses and building operators.

For a wider explanation of the service, see our main guide here:
TM44 Air Conditioning Inspections


Does vacancy remove the need for a TM44 inspection?

In most cases, no. A vacant property is not automatically outside TM44 requirements simply because nobody is currently occupying it.

The requirement is primarily connected to the installed air conditioning system, its capacity and who controls its operation. It is not simply based on the number of people inside the building on a particular day.

A commercial property may be empty but still have:

Ceiling cassette air conditioning units
Wall-mounted split systems
VRF or VRV systems
Rooftop condensers
Chillers
Server room cooling
Reception area cooling
Comfort cooling for office floors
Cooling systems retained for incoming tenants
AC systems kept live for frost protection, humidity control, security rooms or IT equipment
Systems not currently used but still installed and capable of operation

If the combined effective rated output is over 12kW, the building may still fall within TM44 requirements.

This is especially important where the property is being marketed for lease or sale. A prospective tenant, buyer, solicitor, managing agent, surveyor, fund manager or compliance auditor may ask for evidence of building compliance before completing a transaction.

You can check the wider requirement here:
TM44 Inspection Requirements UK


The key point: TM44 depends on the air conditioning system, not simply occupancy

One of the biggest misunderstandings is that a building only needs a TM44 inspection when it is occupied.

That is not the safest way to look at it.

The more practical test is:

Does the building have air conditioning systems installed?
Is the combined cooling capacity over 12kW?
Are the systems still present, connected, controlled or capable of use?
Who controls the operation of the system?
Is there a valid TM44 report already in place?
Is the property being sold, leased, refinanced, audited or reoccupied?

For example, an empty office floor with four or five ceiling cassette units may easily exceed 12kW. A vacant shop with several split units may exceed the threshold. A small commercial unit with a server room and office cooling may also cross the 12kW line when the total installed capacity is added together.

If you are unsure whether the 12kW threshold applies, read this guide:
How to Check the TM44 12kW Threshold

You can also use our online checker here:
TM44 Checker


Why a vacant building may still need a valid TM44 report

A vacant commercial property may still need a valid TM44 report for several practical reasons.

First, the systems may still be installed. If the AC system remains part of the building services and is capable of use, vacancy does not necessarily make the system irrelevant.

Second, the building may be entering a transaction. If the property is being sold, leased or refinanced, compliance documents are often reviewed as part of due diligence. A missing or expired TM44 report can create unnecessary questions.

Third, the incoming tenant may expect evidence that building systems are compliant. This can apply to offices, clinics, gyms, restaurants, retail units, schools, warehouses, industrial spaces and serviced office buildings.

Fourth, the landlord or managing agent may remain in control of the plant. If the tenant has left but the landlord controls the air conditioning system, responsibility may return to the landlord or freeholder depending on the lease structure and operational control.

Fifth, the report may already have expired. TM44 reports are typically required every 5 years for qualifying systems. If the report expired while the building was empty, the compliance gap may still need to be addressed.

For expired reports, see:
What Happens if a TM44 Certificate Has Expired?


Does a vacant office need a TM44 inspection?

A vacant office may still need a TM44 inspection if the installed air conditioning systems exceed the threshold.

This is one of the most common cases. Many offices have ceiling cassettes, ducted systems, VRF systems or split units. Even if the office is empty between tenants, the air conditioning plant may remain installed and ready for use.

Common examples include:

A vacant open-plan office waiting for a new tenant
A floor in a multi-let building where the previous tenant has moved out
A serviced office space between occupiers
A corporate office being refurbished before reoccupation
A landlord-controlled office building with common area cooling
A commercial office listed for sale

In these cases, the question is not “is anyone using the desks today?” The question is whether the air conditioning system remains within scope.

If a landlord wants the property to appear professionally managed, a valid TM44 report can support the compliance file and reduce friction during leasing negotiations.

See also:
TM44 Inspection Before Selling or Leasing a Commercial Property


Does a vacant shop or retail unit need a TM44 inspection?

A vacant shop may still require a TM44 inspection if the installed cooling system exceeds 12kW.

Retail units often use air conditioning for customer comfort, product conditions, staff areas and sometimes refrigeration-related spaces. Even if the shop is empty, the installed system may remain part of the property.

Examples include:

A vacant high street shop waiting for a new operator
A retail unit inside a shopping centre
A former restaurant or café with retained comfort cooling
A vacant showroom
A former clinic, salon or gym being marketed as commercial space
A retail park unit with multiple AC systems

A common issue is that retail landlords and agents may not have a clear asset list. The property may have several units installed by different tenants over the years. Some units may be redundant. Some may still operate. Some may be visually present but disconnected.

A TM44 assessor may need to inspect the site, identify installed equipment and confirm the relevant system information as far as reasonably possible.

If there is no asset list, this guide may help:
No Asset List for a TM44 Inspection?


Does a vacant warehouse or industrial unit need a TM44 inspection?

Warehouses and industrial units are sometimes wrongly assumed to be outside TM44.

Many warehouses have limited comfort cooling, but some industrial buildings, logistics offices, production areas, control rooms, laboratories, food handling spaces and staff areas have significant air conditioning systems.

A vacant warehouse may still need a TM44 inspection if it includes:

Air conditioned offices
Temperature-controlled admin areas
Server rooms
Control rooms
Production offices
Clean areas
Laboratory spaces
Mezzanine offices with split AC
VRF systems across multiple zones
Former food or pharmaceutical cooling systems used for occupied areas

For pure process cooling, specialist advice may be needed because TM44 focuses on air conditioning systems providing cooling for occupants, but building layouts are not always simple. Many industrial sites have mixed systems serving both comfort and operational areas.

For warehouse-specific guidance, see:
Warehouse and Industrial TM44 Inspections


Does the inspection price change because the property is vacant?

Usually, not significantly.

The property being vacant may make access easier in some cases, but it does not automatically reduce the inspection scope. A TM44 inspection is based on the air conditioning systems, their capacity, number, type, accessibility, controls, condition, records and reporting requirements.

A vacant building can sometimes take longer if:

There is no one on site who knows the system
Keys are missing
Plant rooms are locked
Roof access is not arranged
The AC asset list is unavailable
Maintenance records are missing
The power is isolated
External condensers are difficult to access
Previous tenant documents were removed
The system layout is unclear

So while an empty building may appear simpler, it can also create practical complications. The assessor still needs to inspect the relevant system, understand the equipment, assess controls and prepare the report.

For pricing guidance, see:
TM44 Inspection Cost UK


Who is responsible for TM44 in a vacant commercial property?

Responsibility depends on who has control of the air conditioning system.

In a tenanted property, this may be the tenant, landlord, freeholder, managing agent or another responsible party depending on the lease and service arrangements.

In a vacant property, responsibility often becomes more sensitive because the previous tenant may no longer be in occupation. If the landlord or freeholder has taken back control of the building and the air conditioning systems, they may need to consider the TM44 position before the next lease, sale or occupation.

The Energy Performance of Buildings Regulations refer to the relevant person in relation to an air conditioning system as the person who has control of the operation of the system.

In practical terms, the following parties should check the position:

Commercial landlords
Freeholders
Managing agents
Property asset managers
Pension scheme property owners
Commercial estate managers
Facilities managers
Receivers or administrators managing empty buildings
Developers preparing a building for lease
Solicitors handling commercial property transactions
Commercial agents marketing the property

For more on responsibility, read:
TM44 Legal Responsibility: Landlord, Tenant or Managing Agent?


What if the air conditioning has been turned off?

Turning off the air conditioning does not automatically remove the need for a TM44 inspection.

There is a difference between:

A system that is temporarily switched off
A system that is isolated but still installed
A system that is disconnected but not removed
A system that is redundant and permanently decommissioned
A system that has been removed entirely

If the system is still installed and capable of being used, it may still be relevant. If the system has been fully decommissioned or removed, the compliance position may be different, but evidence may be needed.

Useful evidence could include:

Decommissioning certificate
Engineer’s report
Photographs of removed units
Updated asset list
F-Gas records
Maintenance contractor confirmation
Landlord plant records
Refurbishment documents

Where there is uncertainty, TM44.uk can review the available information and advise what is needed before quoting or attending.

Get started here:
Request a TM44 Quote


What if the building is being refurbished?

Refurbishment does not automatically remove TM44 duties.

If air conditioning systems remain installed during or after refurbishment, the TM44 position still needs to be considered. If systems are being replaced, removed or newly installed, the timing of inspection and future compliance may need to be reviewed.

Typical refurbishment scenarios include:

Old tenant fit-out removed but AC retained
New tenant fit-out planned with existing AC reused
Landlord strip-out completed but ceiling units remain
Plant replaced before re-letting
AC temporarily disconnected during works
New VRF system installed as part of upgrade
Partial building refurbishment with some floors occupied and others vacant

The safest approach is to keep evidence of what has changed. If the old system has been removed, keep records. If the system remains, check whether a valid TM44 report exists. If new equipment is installed, keep commissioning records and asset details because these will help future inspections.


What documents should a landlord prepare for a vacant property TM44 inspection?

A good compliance file makes the inspection faster and cleaner.

For a vacant commercial property, try to prepare:

Previous TM44 report
AC asset list
F-Gas records
Maintenance records
O&M manuals
System drawings if available
Details of indoor and outdoor units
Roof access information
Plant room keys
Landlord or managing agent contact details
Site contact for access
Information on whether systems are live, isolated or decommissioned
Any recent refurbishment information
Any known faults or disconnected equipment
Meter or control panel access where relevant

Do not panic if you do not have everything. Many vacant properties have incomplete records, especially after a tenant leaves. TM44.uk can still advise what is needed and what can be checked on site.

For a full preparation guide, see:
What We Need From You for a TM44 Quote


Common problems with vacant commercial property TM44 inspections

Vacant buildings often create their own inspection issues. These are not always technical problems. Many are access and information problems.

1. No one knows where the outdoor units are

The tenant has left. The facilities manager has changed. The landlord has keys but no plant knowledge. The assessor arrives and nobody can confirm where the condensers, roof plant or plant rooms are located.

2. Missing maintenance records

The previous tenant may have used their own HVAC contractor. When they leave, records can disappear. Without records, the assessor may still inspect, but the report may note limitations or maintenance evidence gaps.

3. Power is isolated

If the building is fully powered down, the assessor may be unable to observe system operation. This may affect the inspection and the quality of available findings.

4. Roof access is not arranged

Many commercial AC systems have outdoor units on roofs, terraces, rear elevations or restricted plant areas. Safe access must be arranged before attendance.

5. Units are hidden above ceilings

Some systems have ducted indoor units above suspended ceilings. Access panels may be needed. If the ceiling has been removed during strip-out, this may help. If access panels are locked or missing, it can slow the process.

6. System capacity is unknown

Where model numbers are visible, capacity can often be checked. Where labels are missing or equipment is old, the assessor may need extra time to establish system details.

7. The landlord assumes the tenant handled it

A previous tenant may have handled compliance while in occupation. Once the tenant leaves, the landlord may discover that no current report exists, or that the report has expired.

8. The property is being marketed without a compliance file

Commercial agents may have EPC documents but not TM44 documents. This can create late-stage questions during lease negotiations.


Case study: vacant office before re-letting

A commercial landlord owns a vacant office building that was previously occupied by a professional services tenant. The tenant has left, and the property is being marketed for a new occupier.

The building includes:

8 ceiling cassette indoor units
8 external condensers on a flat roof
A small server room cooling unit
Comfort cooling across open-plan office space
No current tenant in occupation
No visible AC asset list
A previous TM44 report that expired more than 6 months ago

The landlord initially assumes that because the property is empty, there is no immediate issue. However, the managing agent asks for a compliance file before issuing updated letting documents. The commercial agent also wants to avoid delays if an incoming tenant asks for building services information.

The landlord contacts TM44.uk and provides:

Postcode
Property type
Photographs of indoor units
Photographs of external units
Old report reference
Access contact
Preferred inspection date

TM44.uk confirms that the system is likely to exceed the 12kW threshold and arranges an accredited assessor. The assessor attends, reviews the installed equipment, checks controls, notes the missing maintenance documentation, confirms system details where possible and prepares the TM44 report.

The landlord then has a stronger compliance file for marketing, leasing and future tenant handover.

The key lesson: vacancy did not remove the need to check the TM44 position. In fact, vacancy made the compliance file more important because the property was being prepared for a new commercial transaction.


Case study: vacant retail unit with uncertain air conditioning history

A managing agent is responsible for a vacant high street retail unit. The previous tenant installed several split air conditioning units during their lease. The tenant has now left, and the landlord is preparing the unit for a new occupier.

The issue is unclear responsibility. The landlord does not know whether the tenant arranged a TM44 inspection. The AC maintenance contractor is no longer involved. Some indoor units remain, some pipework has been boxed in and the external condensers are at the rear of the property.

The managing agent wants to know whether the property needs a TM44 inspection before a new tenant takes occupation.

TM44.uk asks for:

Full address
Photos of indoor and outdoor units
Any previous maintenance documents
Any previous TM44 report
Whether the systems are staying or being removed
Access details for the rear plant area

After reviewing the information, it becomes clear that the installed capacity may exceed 12kW. The safest option is to arrange an inspection or obtain clear evidence if systems have been decommissioned.

The inspection helps the landlord understand what is installed and gives the incoming tenant a clearer starting point.

The key lesson: vacant shops often have inherited AC systems. Do not assume the previous tenant’s compliance position is clear.


Why vacant property TM44 compliance matters before selling or leasing

Commercial property transactions can move quickly, but compliance gaps can slow them down.

A missing TM44 report may not stop every deal, but it can create questions such as:

Is the air conditioning system legally compliant?
Who is responsible for the report?
Has the report expired?
Is the system over 12kW?
Will the incoming tenant inherit a compliance issue?
Are there maintenance or efficiency problems?
Will the buyer request a price adjustment?
Will solicitors raise additional enquiries?
Does the landlord have a complete compliance file?

This is why vacant property owners should treat TM44 as part of the building information pack, especially when marketing a property with installed air conditioning.

A strong compliance pack may include:

EPC
TM44 report
F-Gas records
Fire risk assessment documents
Asbestos register where relevant
Electrical reports where relevant
O&M manuals
Maintenance records
Plant asset lists
Lease responsibility notes

TM44 may not be the only document needed, but if air conditioning is installed, it is often one of the documents that gets overlooked.


What happens if a vacant property has an expired TM44 certificate?

If the TM44 report has expired and the system still falls within scope, the building may need a renewed inspection.

The fact that the building is empty does not automatically reset the five-year cycle. If a qualifying system remains installed and controlled, the compliance position should be reviewed.

This is especially important if:

The property is going back on the market
The landlord has received a compliance query
The building is being sold
The property is being refinanced
A new tenant is taking occupation
The managing agent is updating compliance records
The previous report cannot be found
The AC system has changed since the last inspection

The cleanest solution is usually to arrange a new inspection, update the report and keep the certificate details in the compliance file.

You can read more here:
TM44 Certificate Expired: What Happens?


Does a vacant property need TM44 if the AC will be removed?

If the air conditioning system is genuinely going to be removed, the position may change. However, timing and evidence matter.

For example:

If the system is still installed today and the building is being marketed today, the compliance question may still arise.
If the system has already been removed, keep evidence showing removal.
If the system is scheduled for removal before occupation, confirm this clearly in the property file.
If only some units are being removed, check whether the remaining systems still exceed 12kW.
If the incoming tenant will install new systems, future compliance planning may be needed.

The practical advice is simple: do not rely on verbal assumptions. Keep written evidence. If in doubt, ask before making a decision.


Why TM44 is also an energy cost issue, not just a legal issue

TM44 is often seen as a compliance requirement, but it is also linked to operating cost control.

GOV.UK guidance explains that the air conditioning inspection report provides advice on efficiency, maintenance, controls, sizing and performance. It also states that acting on the advice can contribute to efficient running of air conditioning systems, reduce carbon emissions and reduce operating costs.

This matters for vacant buildings because a poorly managed system can still cost money.

For example:

Systems may be left running unnecessarily
Controls may be incorrectly set
Time schedules may not match actual occupation
Old systems may be oversized for the new layout
Maintenance may have stopped after the tenant left
Faults may remain hidden until the next occupier moves in
Common areas may still be cooled while lettable space is empty

A TM44 inspection can help identify these issues before the building becomes fully occupied again.


Why landlords should not wait until the tenant asks

Many landlords only deal with TM44 when a tenant, solicitor, buyer, managing agent or enforcement query raises the issue.

That is a weak position.

A better approach is to check the TM44 position as soon as the property becomes vacant. This gives the landlord time to:

Find the previous report
Check expiry dates
Confirm whether the system is over 12kW
Gather asset information
Arrange access
Deal with missing records
Book an assessor
Update the compliance file
Avoid last-minute pressure during lease negotiations

This is particularly important for pension schemes, commercial property funds and landlords with multiple buildings. A single vacant unit may not feel urgent, but across a portfolio, expired or missing TM44 reports can become a wider compliance problem.

For portfolio support, see:
TM44 Portfolio Management


How TM44.uk helps with vacant commercial property inspections

TM44.uk works with landlords, managing agents, property owners, pension schemes, facilities managers and commercial property teams across the UK.

For vacant commercial properties, we can help you:

Check whether your building is likely to need TM44
Review basic AC information before quoting
Advise what documents are useful
Arrange an accredited TM44 inspection
Coordinate access with landlords, agents or keyholders
Inspect vacant offices, retail units, warehouses, clinics, schools, leisure spaces and commercial buildings
Support single-site and multi-site portfolios
Provide clear reporting and certificate guidance
Help you prepare a stronger compliance file before sale, lease or reoccupation

We do not need perfect information to start. If you only have the postcode, property type and a few photos of the AC units, that is often enough to begin the quote process.

Request a quote here:
Get a TM44 Inspection Quote


What to send us for a fast quote

For the fastest response, send TM44.uk the following:

Property address and postcode
Property type, such as office, shop, warehouse, school, clinic or leisure unit
Whether the building is vacant, partly occupied or occupied
Number of visible indoor AC units
Number of visible outdoor units
Any model numbers or photos
Previous TM44 report if available
Any F-Gas or maintenance records
Whether roof or plant access is needed
Preferred inspection date
Site contact or keyholder details

You can also use our checker here:
TM44 Checker


Example email to send your managing agent or landlord

You can copy this if you need to ask another party for information:

Subject: TM44 air conditioning inspection information needed

Hi,

We are checking the TM44 compliance position for the vacant commercial property.

Please confirm whether there is a current TM44 air conditioning inspection report for the building. If available, please send:

The latest TM44 report
Any AC asset list
F-Gas or maintenance records
Details of indoor and outdoor AC units
Confirmation of whether the systems are live, isolated or decommissioned
Access arrangements for plant rooms, roof areas or external condensers

This information is needed to confirm whether a new TM44 inspection is required before the property is leased, sold or reoccupied.

Kind regards,


Example: when a vacant commercial property probably needs checking

A vacant commercial property should be checked for TM44 if any of the following apply:

It has air conditioning installed
The AC capacity may exceed 12kW
There are multiple split units
There is a VRF or VRV system
There is a chiller or central cooling system
The previous TM44 report has expired
No one can find the previous TM44 report
The property is being marketed for lease
The property is being sold
A new tenant is taking occupation
The landlord controls the AC system
The building has common area cooling
The property is part of a managed portfolio
There is a compliance audit underway

If you are unsure, it is better to check early than wait until the issue appears during a transaction.


Example: when a vacant property may not need a new TM44 inspection immediately

A new TM44 inspection may not be needed immediately if:

There is already a valid TM44 report in place
The system is under the 12kW threshold
The air conditioning has been fully removed
The system has been formally decommissioned and evidence is available
The building does not contain qualifying air conditioning
A qualified party has confirmed the system is outside scope

However, you should keep evidence. A verbal “we think it does not apply” is not ideal for a compliance file.


Frequently asked questions

Does a vacant commercial property automatically need a TM44 inspection?

No. Vacancy alone does not automatically create the requirement. The key issue is whether the building has qualifying air conditioning systems, usually with a combined effective rated output over 12kW, and whether a valid inspection report is already in place.

Does vacancy automatically remove the need for TM44?

No. A building being empty does not automatically remove the need to check TM44 compliance. If the air conditioning system remains installed and within scope, the landlord or responsible person should review whether a valid TM44 report is required.

Does a vacant office need a TM44 inspection?

A vacant office may need a TM44 inspection if the installed air conditioning system exceeds the relevant threshold. Many offices exceed the threshold through multiple ceiling cassette units, split systems or VRF systems.

Does a vacant shop need a TM44 inspection?

A vacant shop may need a TM44 inspection if it has qualifying air conditioning installed. This can apply even if the shop is between tenants or being marketed for lease.

Does the inspection cost less if the property is empty?

Not necessarily. The inspection scope is based on the air conditioning system, not simply whether people are inside the building. A vacant property can sometimes be more complicated if asset lists, maintenance records, keys or access arrangements are missing.

Who is responsible for TM44 in a vacant commercial property?

Responsibility usually depends on who controls the operation of the air conditioning system. In a vacant property, this may often be the landlord, freeholder or managing agent, depending on the lease structure and building control arrangements.

What if the AC system is switched off?

A system being switched off does not automatically remove TM44 relevance. If it remains installed and capable of use, it may still need to be considered. If it has been fully decommissioned or removed, keep evidence.

What documents are useful for a vacant property TM44 inspection?

Useful documents include the previous TM44 report, AC asset list, F-Gas records, maintenance logs, O&M manuals, system drawings, access details and any evidence of decommissioning or refurbishment.

Should I arrange TM44 before leasing a vacant commercial property?

It is often sensible to check the TM44 position before leasing, especially if the building has installed air conditioning. A valid report can support the compliance file and reduce delays during tenant due diligence.

Can TM44.uk inspect vacant commercial properties?

Yes. TM44.uk can arrange accredited TM44 inspections for vacant commercial properties across the UK, including offices, shops, warehouses, clinics, schools, leisure buildings and multi-site portfolios.


Final advice for landlords and managing agents

If your commercial property is vacant, do not assume TM44 no longer matters.

The safer position is to check the air conditioning system, confirm whether the capacity exceeds 12kW, locate any previous report and understand who currently controls the system. If the report has expired, cannot be found or does not reflect the current system, a new inspection may be needed.

Vacant properties often change hands, move between tenants or go through refurbishment. That is exactly when compliance documents are most likely to be checked. A valid TM44 report can help avoid late-stage questions, strengthen your compliance file and give incoming tenants or buyers more confidence.

If you own or manage a vacant commercial property with air conditioning, TM44.uk can help you confirm the next step quickly.

Send us the postcode, property type, number of AC units if known and any previous TM44 report. We will review the information and provide a clear quote for the inspection.

Request a quote here:
https://tm44.uk/get-quote/

Or check your position here:
https://tm44.uk/tm44-checker/

Official-source TM44 checker

Check TM44 status in seconds

Search by postcode to see whether a TM44 record appears valid, due soon, expired, or not visible. If a postcode returns multiple businesses or units, each result now shows the address headline first so users can spot the right property faster.

Example: M17 1SN · No signup needed · Checks official TM44 data routes
Official data routesGOV fallbackCommercial buildings only

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Case Studies & Success Stories Energy Efficiency & Cost Savings Guides & How-To Articles Industry News & Updates TM44 Compliance & Regulations

Related Posts