Electric Underfloor Heating vs Infrared Heating Panels – Which Is Cheaper to Run?

Electric Underfloor Heating vs Infrared Heating Panels – Which Is Cheaper to Run?


Electric Heating Comparison Guide

A practical buyer’s guide comparing running costs, comfort, installation and the best rooms for electric underfloor heating and infrared panel heaters.

Buyers comparing electric underfloor heating with infrared heating panels are usually asking the same core questions: which is cheaper to run, which feels better, which is easier to install and which is best for the room they want to heat. Both systems can be excellent, but they behave very differently.

This guide explains how each system works, where each one performs best, and why the right answer often depends more on room use, build-up and control strategy than on headline wattage alone.

Quick buyer takeaway: underfloor heating is usually strongest when you want whole-room comfort and invisible heating, while infrared panels are often strongest when you want faster perceived warmth, easier retrofit installation and more targeted room-by-room zoning.

Popular Products to Compare

Warmup foil underfloor heating roll for laminate engineered wood and floating floor installations
Electric Underfloor Heating
Warmup Foil Underfloor Heating

A strong dry-install option for laminate, engineered wood and selected vinyl or carpet build-ups.

White infrared panel heater installed in a bright modern bedroom
Infrared Panel Heater
Herschel Comfort Infrared Panel

A slim longwave infrared panel for homes, offices and everyday room-by-room electric heating.

Smart thermostat for electric underfloor heating and electric heating controls
Controls
Thermostats & Controls

Smart thermostats and zoning controls can make a very noticeable difference to comfort and running costs in both heating systems.

How Electric Underfloor Heating Works

Electric underfloor heating uses cables, mats, foil or carbon film installed beneath the floor finish. When powered, the floor surface warms and then releases heat upward into the room. The result is a gentler, more even warmth that many buyers prefer in kitchens, bathrooms and open-plan living areas.

The system type depends on the floor finish and build-up. For example, foil systems are usually chosen for floating floors, while heating mats, loose wire and DCM-PRO are more commonly used beneath tiled floors.

Best fit:
Electric underfloor heating is often strongest where buyers want whole-room warmth, invisible heating and comfortable warm floors.

How Infrared Heating Panels Work

Infrared heating panels work differently from both radiators and underfloor heating. They emit radiant heat that warms people, walls, furniture and surfaces directly, rather than relying mainly on warming the room air first. That is why buyers often describe infrared warmth as feeling a bit like sunshine.

This targeted heat delivery is one reason infrared panels are popular in bedrooms, home offices, churches, studios and hard-to-heat spaces where fast perceived warmth matters. They can be wall mounted, ceiling mounted, mirrored, glass-fronted or designed as picture panels depending on the room style.

Best fit:
Infrared panels are often strongest where buyers want faster perceived heat, simpler retrofit installation and more targeted zone heating.

Running Cost Comparison

Running cost is never just about wattage on paper. It depends on insulation, thermostat programming, room usage, heat loss, heated area, floor build-up and how long the system actively runs.

Underfloor heating often runs as a background comfort system, especially in bathrooms, kitchens and larger open-plan areas. Infrared panels often perform best when they provide targeted heating for occupied areas or for rooms that are not used all day.

System Typical Output How It Usually Runs Common Cost Pattern
Foil / Carbon Film UFH Usually around 100–160W/m² Cycles to maintain floor temperature Often efficient in insulated floating-floor rooms
Heating Mats / Loose Wire Usually around 150–200W/m² Faster tiled-floor warming with thermostat cycling Can feel very cost-effective in bathrooms and kitchens
Infrared Panels Usually around 300–800W per panel Often used in shorter targeted heating periods Can be cheaper in intermittently used rooms

For underfloor heating, good insulation and floor sensing are crucial. For infrared, correct panel placement and room sizing matter enormously. That is why cost comparisons should be based on real room use, not just raw power numbers.

Comfort: Which One Feels Better?

Different Heating Feel, Different Strengths

1
Underfloor heating

Creates an even feeling of background warmth and warm floors underfoot.

2
Infrared panels

Deliver faster perceived warmth directly onto people and surfaces.

3
UFH comfort style

Often feels calmer and more uniform across the whole room.

4
Infrared comfort style

Often feels more immediate and more targeted in occupied zones.

Buyers who love warm floors usually lean toward underfloor heating. Buyers who want faster personal warmth, simpler room-by-room control or heating in spaces with higher ceilings often lean toward infrared panels.

Installation Comparison

Installation is another major deciding factor.

Electric Underfloor Heating Installation

Underfloor heating installation varies by floor finish and system type. Foil heating and carbon film are usually the most renovation-friendly for floating floors. Heating mats are quicker for regular-shaped tiled rooms, while loose wire is better for awkward layouts.

Infrared Panel Installation

Infrared panels are often simpler to retrofit because they are mounted to a wall or ceiling rather than buried beneath the floor build-up. That makes them particularly appealing when buyers do not want to lift floors or alter floor height.

Simple rule:
If you are already replacing the floor, underfloor heating becomes much easier to justify. If you want a more straightforward retrofit, infrared panels often have the edge.

Best Rooms for Each System

Room Type Usually Strongest Choice Why
Bathroom Electric underfloor heating Warm tiles underfoot make a big comfort difference
Kitchen Electric underfloor heating Even whole-room warmth and good use of floor area
Bedroom Infrared panels or foil/carbon film UFH Depends on whether you want targeted heat or hidden floor warmth
Home office Infrared panels Fast warmth in intermittently used spaces
Open-plan living area Underfloor heating Consistent background comfort across a larger floor area
Church / studio / high ceiling room Infrared panels Targeted radiant heat can outperform air-based heating comfort

Which Is Cheaper Overall?

There is no universal winner. That mildly annoying answer is also the honest one.

Underfloor heating may be cheaper overall where the room is used frequently, the floor build-up is well insulated and the buyer wants long comfortable heating periods with even warmth. Infrared panels may be cheaper where rooms are used intermittently, zoning is important or the buyer wants fast personal warmth without heating the whole floor structure.

Best buying mindset:
Choose the system that matches how the room is actually used. The cheapest heating system on paper can become the wrong system if it does not suit the room pattern.

Quick Comparison Table

Feature Electric Underfloor Heating Infrared Heating Panels
Heat feel Even whole-room warmth from the floor up Faster radiant warmth onto people and surfaces
Best rooms Bathrooms, kitchens, open-plan spaces Bedrooms, offices, churches, retrofit rooms
Installation More involved, depends on floor build-up Usually easier retrofit installation
Visibility Invisible Visible wall or ceiling-mounted heater
Zoning Strong with smart thermostats Very strong room-by-room control potential
Comfort style Background comfort Targeted comfort

Running Costs: What Buyers Need to Know

When buyers compare electric underfloor heating with infrared heating panels, the biggest question is usually not just “which uses less electricity?” but which gives the best value for the way the room is actually used.

Both systems run on electricity, but they deliver heat differently. Underfloor heating usually works as a whole-room comfort system, while infrared panels are often used as a more targeted heating solution. That means the cheaper option can vary depending on room size, insulation, how long the room is heated for and whether the system is being used as background heat or for shorter heating periods.

Simple buyer rule:
If you want steady comfort across the whole floor area, underfloor heating may be the better long-term fit. If you want faster, zoned warmth in occupied areas only, infrared panels can often be very cost-effective.

The main factors affecting running costs are:

  • Total wattage installed
  • Heated area or room size
  • Electricity tariff
  • Insulation and heat loss
  • Thermostat programming and zoning
  • How many hours the heating is actually on

Underfloor heating often feels very efficient in bathrooms, kitchens and open-plan living spaces where buyers want longer periods of even comfort. Infrared panels often feel more cost-effective in bedrooms, offices, studios and intermittently used rooms where heating can be switched on only when needed.

How Running Costs Are Calculated

The basic formula is the same for both systems:

System kW × hours used × electricity price per kWh = running cost

For example, a 0.6kW infrared panel used for 4 hours at an electricity rate of 26p per kWh would cost:

0.6 × 4 × £0.26 = £0.62

A 1.4kW underfloor heating zone used for 4 hours at the same rate would cost:

1.4 × 4 × £0.26 = £1.46

Important:
These are maximum-output examples. In real use, thermostats cycle the heating on and off once temperature is reached, so actual running costs are often lower than the headline number.

Heating Running Cost Calculator

Use this quick calculator to compare the maximum running cost of electric underfloor heating zones and infrared panel heaters. You can change the wattage, hours and electricity rate to suit the system you are considering.

Cost per hour 15.6p
Cost for selected time 62.4p
Estimated 30-day cost £18.72

Planning note: this calculator shows maximum electricity use if the system runs continuously for the hours selected. Real running costs are often lower because thermostats cycle the heating once temperature is reached.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is infrared heating cheaper to run than electric underfloor heating?

It can be in rooms that are heated only when occupied, because infrared panels can deliver faster perceived warmth without heating the full floor structure. In frequently used rooms where buyers want longer background comfort, underfloor heating can be the better long-term fit.

Can electric underfloor heating replace radiators?

In many well-designed rooms, yes. Whether it works as the main heat source depends on insulation, heat loss, floor build-up and the specific system chosen.

Do infrared panels heat the whole room?

They can heat a room effectively when sized and positioned correctly, but they do so by warming people, walls and surfaces rather than relying mainly on warm air circulation first.

Which system feels warmer faster?

Infrared panels usually provide faster perceived warmth. Underfloor heating often feels slower initially but can provide a very comfortable steady warmth once the room and floor are up to temperature.

Is underfloor heating better for kitchens and bathrooms?

Often yes. Warm floors make a huge difference in tiled rooms, and many buyers strongly prefer that kind of comfort in kitchens, bathrooms and hallways.

Are infrared panels good for bedrooms and offices?

Yes. They are especially attractive in bedrooms, offices and spare rooms where buyers want responsive electric heat without lifting floors.

Do both systems need thermostats?

Yes. Good control is important for both systems. Underfloor heating usually needs a thermostat with a floor sensor, while infrared panels benefit from smart room-by-room control and scheduling.

Can I combine infrared panels with underfloor heating?

Yes. Some buyers use underfloor heating as the main comfort layer in kitchens or bathrooms and infrared panels in bedrooms, offices or high-ceiling spaces where targeted radiant heat makes more sense.


Ready to Buy?

Choose the system that suits the room, the floor build-up and the way you actually live. For floating floors and whole-room comfort, start with the right electric underfloor heating system. For fast targeted warmth and easier retrofit installation, explore our infrared heating panels. Then add the right thermostat or smart control to keep running costs sensible.


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