Overheating Assessment — Part O
Building Regulations Compliance, UK
Part O Overheating Assessment Required?
Don't let overheating rules catch you off guard. Our Part O assessments use advanced TM59 modeling to ensure your residential development stays cool and compliant.
💰 From £850 • ⏱️ 2-3 week delivery • 🌡️ TM59 compliant modeling

When Overheating Assessment — Part O Is Required
Part O overheating assessment is mandatory for all new residential buildings in England under Approved Document O of the Building Regulations, which came into effect in June 2022. This requirement recognises growing overheating risks associated with climate change, improved insulation standards, and changing occupancy patterns that increase internal heat gains in modern residential buildings.
The assessment requirement applies to new dwellings, residential institutions, and student accommodation, with specific methodologies and criteria dependent on building type, size, and complexity. Assessment demonstrates that buildings provide adequate protection against overheating through appropriate design measures, ventilation strategies, and solar control provisions.
Mandatory Application Scope
Residential Buildings
- • All new houses and flats
- • Residential conversions creating new dwellings
- • Student accommodation and halls of residence
- • Care homes and assisted living facilities
Assessment Triggers
- • Building Regulations applications post-June 2022
- • Major alterations affecting thermal performance
- • Extensions creating new habitable rooms
- • Material changes of use to residential
Climate Change Context
Part O responds to increasing overheating risks associated with climate change, urban heat island effects, and improved building fabric performance that reduces heat loss but can trap excessive internal heat during warm periods. Assessment considers current and future climate scenarios to ensure long-term building resilience.
Risk Factors
- • Increased summer temperatures
- • More frequent heatwave events
- • Urban heat island effects
- • Higher internal heat gains
Building Performance
- • Enhanced insulation levels
- • Improved air tightness
- • Large glazing areas
- • Reduced thermal mass
Standards & Methods — Approved Document Part O
Approved Document Part O establishes specific overheating assessment methodologies based on CIBSE guidance, including simplified methods for straightforward residential buildings and dynamic simulation methods for complex projects. Assessment criteria consider both comfort temperatures and minimum opening areas to ensure adequate overheating protection.
Assessment Route Options
Simplified Method
For straightforward residential buildings meeting specific criteria, including glazing ratios, orientation, and ventilation provisions.
- • Prescribed ventilation opening areas
- • Limited glazing ratios (typically 20-25%)
- • Standard dwelling configurations
- • No mechanical cooling systems
Dynamic Simulation Method
Advanced modelling for complex buildings, large glazing areas, innovative designs, or buildings not meeting simplified method criteria.
- • CIBSE TM59 methodology
- • CIBSE TM52 adaptive comfort criteria
- • Hourly dynamic thermal modelling
- • Future climate scenario assessment
Assessment Criteria & Standards
Part O assessment uses CIBSE TM59 methodology for residential buildings, establishing comfort temperature thresholds and maximum acceptable exceedance criteria that ensure adequate thermal comfort during warm weather periods.
TM59 Criteria
- • 26°C maximum bedroom temperature (living rooms 28°C)
- • 3% maximum annual exceedance hours
- • Current and future weather data
- • Natural ventilation operation assumptions
Assessment Parameters
- • Internal heat gains (occupancy, equipment)
- • Window opening behaviour patterns
- • Solar heat gain calculations
- • Building thermal mass effects
Inputs Required — Drawings, Specifications & Data
Building Design Information
- • Architectural drawings including floor plans and elevations
- • Window schedules with sizes, orientations, and glazing specifications
- • Building fabric U-values and thermal mass details
- • Internal layout and room function definitions
- • Solar shading details (overhangs, blinds, shutters)
- • Ventilation strategies and opening light areas
Environmental & Location Data
- • Site location, orientation, and local climate data
- • Surrounding building heights and shading analysis
- • Urban heat island assessment where applicable
- • Local wind patterns and ventilation considerations
- • Ground floor height and site exposure
- • Landscape features affecting solar gain and ventilation
Mechanical Systems & Occupancy Information
HVAC Systems
- • Heating system specifications
- • Mechanical ventilation details
- • Cooling system proposals (if any)
- • System operating schedules
Occupancy Patterns
- • Intended occupancy levels
- • Room usage patterns
- • Equipment heat gains
- • Lighting heat contributions
Control Strategies
- • Window opening controls
- • Shading control strategies
- • Ventilation system controls
- • User behaviour assumptions
Outputs — Certificates, Reports & Evidence
Assessment Reports & Documentation
- • Part O overheating assessment report
- • Dynamic thermal modelling results and analysis
- • Compliance certificates for Building Control
- • Mitigation strategy recommendations
- • Design optimisation proposals
- • Future climate resilience assessment
Technical Analysis & Data
- • Hourly temperature profiles and exceedance analysis
- • Solar heat gain calculations and shading assessments
- • Ventilation effectiveness analysis
- • Thermal comfort zone mapping
- • Sensitivity analysis for key design parameters
- • Alternative design scenario evaluations
Building Control & Design Support
Compliance Documentation
- • Building Regulations submission package
- • Part O compliance statement
- • Assessment methodology documentation
- • Quality assurance certificates
Design Guidance
- • Overheating mitigation recommendations
- • Ventilation strategy optimisation
- • Glazing and shading proposals
- • Future-proofing strategies
Process & Timeline
Initial Assessment & Route Selection
Project assessment begins with route selection between simplified and dynamic simulation methods based on building characteristics, design complexity, and specific performance requirements. Early engagement enables assessment methodology selection that aligns with design development timescales whilst ensuring robust compliance demonstration.
Week 1
- • Project scoping and route selection
- • Building information review
- • Assessment methodology confirmation
Week 2
- • Thermal model development
- • Climate data and scenario selection
- • Initial compliance assessment
Week 3
- • Detailed analysis and results review
- • Mitigation strategy development
- • Design optimisation recommendations
Dynamic Simulation & Analysis
Dynamic thermal modelling employs advanced building physics software to simulate building thermal performance under current and future climate scenarios. Modelling considers occupancy patterns, ventilation strategies, and solar control measures to provide comprehensive overheating risk assessment and mitigation guidance.
Modelling Phase
- • Building geometry and fabric modelling
- • Internal heat gain allocation
- • Ventilation and control strategy input
- • Climate scenario application
Analysis Phase
- • TM59 criteria assessment
- • Temperature exceedance evaluation
- • Comfort zone mapping
- • Risk factor identification
Optimisation Phase
- • Design sensitivity analysis
- • Mitigation strategy evaluation
- • Cost-benefit analysis
- • Implementation recommendations
Coordination with Building Control
Part O assessment coordination with Building Control ensures overheating assessment integrates effectively with wider Building Regulations compliance, avoiding duplicated effort whilst ensuring all thermal performance requirements are addressed comprehensively through coordinated technical submissions.
Building Control Submission Requirements
Building Control bodies require specific Part O documentation formats and compliance certificates that demonstrate overheating assessment has been completed in accordance with approved methodologies. Submission timing coordination ensures Part O approval aligns with wider Building Regulations approval processes.
Required Documentation
- • Part O assessment report
- • Compliance certificates
- • Thermal model documentation
- • Mitigation strategy details
Submission Timing
- • Design stage submission with plans
- • Pre-construction compliance check
- • Construction phase verification
- • Completion certificate support
Integration with SAP Calculations
Part O assessment coordinates with SAP calculations and Part L energy assessment to ensure thermal performance requirements are addressed consistently across different Building Regulations components. Integrated assessment avoids conflicting design recommendations whilst optimising overall building performance.
Coordination Areas
- • Building fabric specifications
- • Glazing ratios and performance
- • Ventilation strategy alignment
- • Thermal bridging considerations
Performance Optimisation
- • Energy efficiency balancing
- • Comfort vs. energy trade-offs
- • Seasonal performance optimisation
- • Future climate resilience
Fees & Turnaround
Part O Assessment Fees
Includes assessment, modelling, and compliance certification
Delivery Timescales
Timescales from receipt of complete design information
FAQs — Overheating Assessment — Part O
When is Part O overheating assessment required?
Part O assessment is required for all new residential buildings and relevant building alterations in England where Building Regulations applications are submitted after June 2022. This includes houses, flats, student accommodation, and residential institutions.
Can I use the simplified method for my development?
The simplified method can be used for straightforward residential buildings meeting specific glazing ratio, orientation, and ventilation criteria. Buildings with large glazing areas, complex forms, or innovative designs typically require dynamic simulation assessment.
What happens if my building fails the overheating assessment?
Assessment failure requires design modifications to reduce overheating risk through improved ventilation, solar shading, thermal mass, or other mitigation measures. We provide specific recommendations and can reassess modified designs to demonstrate compliance.
How does Part O assessment consider future climate change?
Dynamic simulation assessments use current and future climate datasets that account for projected temperature increases and changing weather patterns. This future-proofing approach ensures buildings remain comfortable throughout their design life.
Can mechanical cooling be used to achieve Part O compliance?
Part O encourages passive design measures rather than mechanical cooling, though limited mechanical cooling may be modelled where necessary. The assessment prioritises natural ventilation and passive design strategies for sustainable overheating mitigation.
Need Part O Assessment That Passes?
Ensure your residential development stays cool and compliant. Our TM59 modeling provides the evidence you need for Building Regulations approval.
🌡️ TM59 compliant • 🏠 Future climate ready • 📋 Building Control approved
