Which rooms to prioritise for air con in a family home
A practical guide to choosing which rooms to cool first in a UK family home. Which rooms deliver the most comfort per pound spent.
Every family we quote has the same conversation. Do we do the master bedroom first, or the living room? The kids’ rooms or the home office? Here is the order that produces the most comfort per pound.
Priority 1 - Main living room
Where the family spends the most awake hours. Cooling this room affects six people (in a family of four) simultaneously for four to six hours a night. No other single room in the house delivers as much comfort per install pound.
Standard spec: 3.5 kW single split, fitted at £2,000 to £2,700.
Priority 2 - Master bedroom
Sleep quality is the second biggest driver of household happiness. A hot master bedroom means bad nights for two adults, which means bad decisions everywhere else. This is where the noise-optimised units earn their money.
Standard spec: 2.5 kW single split with low-fan noise under 22 dB. Fitted at £2,000 to £2,500.
Priority 3 - Home office (if used full-time)
If one or both adults work from home, this is a productivity investment. Cooling from 9 to 5, five days a week, has a real impact on cognitive performance and mood.
Standard spec: 2.5 kW single split, fitted at £1,800 to £2,300.
If nobody works from home full-time, skip this and go to Priority 4.
Priority 4 - Kids’ bedrooms
Younger children (under 12) sleep worse in heat than adults. Older kids adapt.
The pattern most families arrive at: a single 2.5 kW split for the room shared by the youngest kids, or a small 1.5 kW unit for a single teenage bedroom.
The alternative: use a fan and thermal blinds for kids’ rooms in the first year, and add air con in year two if it is still a problem.
Priority 5 - Kitchen or dining area
Rarely worth a dedicated unit. If the kitchen opens onto the living room in an open-plan setup, the living room unit usually handles it.
Only worth a dedicated kitchen install if:
- The kitchen is completely closed off from other cooled rooms.
- Someone cooks daily and struggles in summer heat.
What we would not prioritise
Three rooms most families ask about that are rarely worth it:
- Guest bedrooms. Used ten nights a year. Not worth the install cost.
- Formal dining rooms. Used for special occasions. A portable unit for those occasions is fine.
- Bathrooms. Cooling a bathroom is impractical (humidity fights the unit) and unnecessary (short exposure).
The three-room family install pattern
Most families end up with three rooms:
- Main living room
- Master bedroom
- Either home office or kids’ room
Three-room multi-split fitted, £5,500 to £8,500. One outdoor condenser, three indoor heads sharing it.
That covers 80% of the household comfort improvement for roughly the price of two separate single-splits.
When to space it out
Three rooms all at once beats three rooms across three years for two reasons:
- Multi-split shares an outdoor unit. Separate installs give you three outdoor units on the wall.
- Bulk labour discount. Three rooms as one job is 15 to 20% cheaper than three rooms across three visits.
But if cash flow does not allow, this is the order:
- Year 1: Main living room (biggest impact).
- Year 2: Master bedroom (second biggest).
- Year 3: Third room (either office or kids’).
Each year’s install can be planned to eventually add to a shared outdoor condenser if you go multi-split - ask the installer to specify a multi-split-ready outdoor unit at the year 1 install even though you are only using one head.
The mistake we see
Families who prioritise kids’ rooms first because they feel guilty. Understandable but wrong. Kids adapt to heat better than adults. Cooling the living room and master bedroom first improves the whole household’s summer experience more than cooling the kids’ rooms.
The correct order is comfort maths, not parental guilt.
Get three quotes for a family install
Fill in the quote form with your priority rooms in the comments. Three fixed prices from vetted North West installers. Three-room multi-split quotes within 24 hours.
Or check the prices page for a rough bracket first.
Ready for a real quote?
Get up to 3 fixed prices from vetted North West installers.
More on Guides
Solar panels and air conditioning - can you run cooling off panels
Can UK solar panels run an air conditioning unit? The honest answer with real numbers on generation, consumption, and the battery question.
Air con noise: what to expect indoors and outside
Real decibel numbers for domestic air conditioning in the UK. Indoor unit noise on different fan speeds, outdoor unit noise, and how to reduce both.
Portable air con vs fitted split - the honest comparison
The real trade-offs between a portable air conditioner and a fitted split system in a UK home. Cost, noise, cooling power, and when each one is the right call.