One System, All Year Round: How Air Conditioning Heats Your Home in Winter and Cools It in Summer
Serving Kirkcaldy, Fife, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Dundee, Perth and all of central Scotland.
How does air conditioning heat as well cool?
How does AC heat a room?
It sounds counterintuitive, but even cold outside air still holds some heat — and a fixed aircon unit is built to pull that heat out and move it indoors. Inside the outdoor box, refrigerant absorbs whatever warmth is available in the air, even on a chilly Fife afternoon. A compressor then squeezes that refrigerant, raising its temperature further, before the indoor unit releases that heat into your room. Run the same system in summer and the whole process flips: it pulls heat out of the room and dumps it outside instead. One unit, one HVAC system, two jobs
How It Heats, Step by Step
Cooling and Dehumidifying in Summer
Cooling only tells half the story. As an aircon unit pulls warm air out of a room, it also condenses moisture out of the air passing over its coils — which is exactly how a dehumidifier works. That matters more in Scotland than people expect. Older stone-built homes across Fife and Edinburgh are prone to condensation on cold walls and windows, and a system that quietly reduces humidity while it cools does real work against damp, not just heat.
How It Cools, Step by Step
Aircon is 0% VAT
Government scheme - when supplied and fitted
Right now, installing a fixed air conditioning system in Scotland can qualify for 0% VAT. Under HMRC's current rules, a zero rate applies to the installation of qualifying energy-saving materials - including air source heat pumps - from May 2023 through to 31 March 2027. After that date, the rate reverts to 5%
HMRC's own guidance is clear that most air conditioning units are treated as air source heat pumps, provided they're permanently fixed rather than portable, and reversible enough to provide cooling in summer as well as heating in colder periods. That's good news for anyone assuming aircon and heat pumps are two separate categories of purchase - for VAT purposes, they're treated the same way.
The relief applies automatically. There's no application form and nothing to claim back — it should simply show as 0% VAT on your invoice, provided the equipment and installation are contracted together by a VAT-registered installer. Portable units don't qualify, and neither does buying a unit separately from having it fitted