Disadvantages of Triple Glazing
Weight, cost, light transmission, and diminishing returns in the UK climate.
Weight and Frame Requirements
Triple glazed units are ~50% heavier than double glazed units. A typical 1.2m × 1.2m triple glazed window weighs 30–40kg vs 20–25kg for double glazing.
This extra weight requires:
- Stronger frames: uPVC or timber frames need internal reinforcement. Thin aluminium frames may not be suitable.
- Upgraded hinges and mechanisms: Standard casement hinges may sag under the weight over time.
- Reinforced sills: Heavier sash windows need stronger counterweights and pulleys.
Older properties with slim wooden frames may not be able to accommodate triple glazing without frame replacement, which adds to the cost.
Higher Cost
Triple glazing costs £4,800–£7,200 more than double glazing for a typical 3-bedroom house (12 windows). The energy saving is £50–£100/year, giving a 15–25 year payback.
For most UK homeowners, spending that money on wall insulation, loft insulation, or a heat pump delivers better return on investment.
Reduced Light Transmission
Triple glazing transmits ~5% less visible light than double glazing (75–80% vs 80–85%). The extra pane and low-e coatings block more light.
In south-facing rooms with large windows, this difference is barely noticeable. In north-facing rooms or properties with small windows, triple glazing can make rooms feel slightly darker.
Diminishing Returns in UK Climate
The jump from single to double glazing is dramatic (80% heat loss reduction). The jump from double to triple is modest (40–50% further reduction through the window, but only 5–10% reduction in whole-house heat loss).
In the UK's temperate climate, double glazing already exceeds Building Regulations requirements (1.6 W/m²K). Triple glazing makes more sense in Scandinavia, Germany, or alpine regions with long cold winters.
Not Always Suitable for Retrofit
Retrofitting triple glazing into older properties can be problematic:
- Frames may not be strong enough
- Reveals may not be deep enough to accommodate thicker units
- Listed building restrictions may still apply (though triple glazing doesn't change external appearance)
In these cases, secondary glazing may be a better option. It's cheaper (£150–£400 per window), doesn't require frame replacement, and achieves U-values of 2.5–3.0 W/m²K (halfway between single and double glazing).
When Triple Glazing Still Makes Sense
Despite these disadvantages, triple glazing is worth it for:
- New builds (lower marginal cost, stronger modern frames)
- Passive house projects (requires 0.8 W/m²K windows)
- Cold-climate homes (Scotland, northern England)
- Noise reduction needs (triple glazing is 5 dB quieter than double)
Full guide: Triple Glazing →
Alternative: Secondary Glazing →
Last reviewed: 2026-06-27