The Green Economy is the next industrial revolution — join us and help make it happen

Skip to main content
Ecotricity logotype
Home
  • SME Business
  • Large Business
/Our news/2026/How to keep your home cool without air conditioning

Our news

Article tags
Article tags
  • Climate & Nature
  • Green energy
Browse archives
Our news

How to keep your home cool without air conditioning

Press enquiries

If you are a journalist with a media enquiry, please contact our Press Office by email at pressoffice@ecotricity.co.uk

For all other general enquiries, please call 0345 555 7100 or email home@ecotricity.co.uk.

By Adam Ifans
9 Jul 2026

Summer has well and truly arrived along with the sweltering days and nights that climate change is making more likely every year.

It can be tricky to stay cool during a heatwave. Much of the old housing in Britain simply isn’t designed to insulate against extremes of hot or cold. In fact, last year a study showed that almost 5.5 million children in the UK are living in homes at risk of overheating

When a heatwave hits, it may be tempting to rush out and buy a portable air conditioning unit. There’s a problem with this, though - air conditioning is power hungry, so your electricity bills may shoot up.

The good news is that many homes can stay comfortable without air conditioning. Here are our top tips for keeping you cool this summer.

Let nature take the strain

Before tackling the interior of your home, take a look outside. One of the best ways to keep a home cool is to plant deciduous trees on the south or west side. This is a long-term cooling strategy - in summer, the leaves block out the sun before it reaches your brickwork. In winter, the leaves drop to let the winter sun warm your home naturally.

Plants also cool the air around them through a process called transpiration. Moisture evaporates from their leaves, lowering the local temperature. That’s why a garden full of greenery, shrubs and trees is always cooler than a concrete patio, but you’ll even feel the benefit from a balcony or windowsill full of plants.

trees cooling home

Stay in the shade

If you don’t live in the middle of a forest, you can’t just rely on trees to hide your home from the summer sun.

It’s better to shade from the outside if you can. External shutters and awnings are extremely effective at keeping your home cool, so use them if you have them.

Unfortunately, most British houses don’t have external shading, so we need to tackle things from the inside. Draw curtains and blinds as soon as the sun starts to encroach and fit insulating blinds to any upward-facing windows if you have them.

If you still feel there’s too much heat coming in through your windows, there are reflective films that you can apply to the glass, which claim to reduce infrared heat by 70-80 per cent. There are lots of different brands available on the internet. Note that if you leave the films on into winter, you won’t benefit as much from the warming rays of the sun on chilly days.

blinds closed

Get a breeze going

Staying cool during a heatwave is more than just opening a window and hoping for the best.

Warm air rises, so if you live in a home with more than one floor you can create a natural airflow. Open a window on the lowest floor (ideally on a shaded side) and open a window or skylight at the very top. The rising hot air will escape out of the higher window, pulling cooler air in through the bottom.

If this doesn’t work for you, it’s time to get out the fans. These do use electricity but they’re much more cost-effective than air conditioning units.

A breeze helps us keep cool by evaporating moisture but there’s a trick to getting the best airflow. Ideally, you should open one window on the hot side of your home and one on a cooler side. You can then experiment by pointing the fan out of the hot window – this pulls air through the cooler window – or by placing the fan in front of the cooler window and pointing it inwards. The second option has the benefit of cooling you down directly if you’re in the same room, but try both options to see which works best for your home.

fan cooling thumb

Celebrate the night

When the sun goes down, temperatures start dropping and the direct warming from the sun’s rays stops.

Open windows on opposite sides of your home to create a refreshing cross-breeze, flushing out all the heavy, warm air that has built up during the day. Keep them open as long as you can – bearing in mind personal safety – but remember to close them and your blinds in the morning to lock that cool air inside.

It also makes sense to use the evening for household chores. Things like running the dishwasher, washing machine or using the oven generate a lot of heat – it’s why the kitchen is often the warmest room in the winter – so try and time it so the heat they generate can be carried away in the evening breeze.

Ready to start turning your Bills into Mills?

Switch to Ecotricity and we’ll use your bill money to build new sources of renewable energy and build a greener Britain.

Similar articles

fan cooling thumb

How to keep your home cool without air conditioning

Summer has well and truly arrived along with the sweltering days and nights that climate change is making more likely every year.

More