Triple Glazing: Cost, Performance & Is It Worth It?
Three panes of glass with two sealed gas-filled cavities. Better insulation and noise reduction than double glazing, but higher cost and longer payback.
Triple Glazing vs Double Glazing: Quick Comparison
| Feature | Triple Glazing | Double Glazing |
|---|---|---|
| Cost per window | £800–£1,200 Standard casement, supply + fit | £400–£600 Same specification |
| U-value (insulation) | 0.6–0.8 W/m²K Excellent insulation | 1.2–1.6 W/m²K Good insulation |
| Heat loss reduction | 40–50% vs double glazing | Baseline |
| Noise reduction | 35–40 dB +5dB vs double glazing | 30–35 dB |
| Weight | ~50% heavier than double May need reinforced frames | Standard weight |
| Payback time | 15–25 years Based on energy savings alone | N/A (baseline) |
| Best for | Cold climates, noise reduction, new-build, passive house | Most UK homes, retrofit, budget-conscious |
What Is Triple Glazing?
Triple glazing uses three panes of glass with two sealed air or gas-filled cavities between them. The gas (usually argon or krypton) has lower thermal conductivity than air, reducing heat transfer. Each pane is typically 4mm thick, with 12–16mm gaps between panes.
Modern triple glazing also includes low-emissivity (low-e) coatings on one or more panes, which reflect infrared heat back into the room while allowing visible light through.
Cost Breakdown
Triple glazing costs £800–£1,200 per window for a standard casement window (1.2m × 1.2m), including supply and installation. Double glazing costs £400–£600 for the same size.
- Cost per m² (material only)
- £300–£450/m² (triple) vs £150–£250/m² (double)
- Installation labour
- £150–£250 per window (same for triple and double)
- Whole-house cost (3-bed semi, 12 windows)
- £9,600–£14,400 (triple) vs £4,800–£7,200 (double)
The marginal cost of triple glazing is £4,800–£7,200 more for a typical 3-bedroom semi. At current UK energy prices (electricity 24p/kWh, gas 6p/kWh), the extra insulation saves £200–£350 per year in heating costs, giving a payback time of 15–25 years.
Thermal Performance (U-values)
U-value measures heat loss: lower is better. UK Building Regulations (Part L 2021) require new windows to achieve 1.6 W/m²K or better. Both double and triple glazing exceed this minimum.
- Triple glazing U-value
- 0.6–0.8 W/m²K (argon-filled with low-e coating)
- Double glazing U-value
- 1.2–1.6 W/m²K (argon-filled with low-e coating)
- Single glazing U-value
- 5.0–6.0 W/m²K (for comparison)
Triple glazing's lower U-value means 40–50% less heat loss through the window compared to double glazing. However, windows account for only 10–20% of a home's total heat loss, so the whole-house heating bill reduction is modest (5–10% at most).
Noise Reduction
Triple glazing achieves 35–40 dB noise reduction, around 5 dB better than double glazing (30–35 dB). A 5 dB reduction is audible but not dramatic. For maximum noise reduction, acoustic laminated glass with asymmetric pane thicknesses (e.g. 6mm + 4mm + 6mm) is more effective than adding a third pane alone.
Triple glazing is worth considering for homes near busy roads, airports, or railways where both thermal and acoustic performance matter.
Is Triple Glazing Worth It in the UK?
When triple glazing makes sense:
- New-build projects where the marginal cost is lower (£3,000–£5,000 whole-house)
- Passive house or ultra-low-energy homes targeting 0.8 W/m²K window performance
- Cold-climate homes (Scotland, northern England, rural areas with high wind exposure)
- Properties near noise sources (airports, motorways, railways)
- Listed buildings or conservation areas where planning restricts secondary glazing
When double glazing is usually enough:
- Most UK homes in temperate southern and central regions
- Retrofit projects where the marginal cost is high
- Homes with poor insulation elsewhere (walls, loft, floor) where money is better spent on those first
- Budget-constrained projects
Disadvantages of Triple Glazing
Triple glazed units are 50% heavier than double glazed units. This requires stronger frames (uPVC or timber), which adds to the cost and may rule out thin aluminium frames. Older hinges and mechanisms may need upgrading to support the extra weight.
The third pane reduces visible light transmission by ~5% compared to double glazing. In south-facing rooms, this is rarely noticeable. In north-facing rooms or properties with small windows, the difference can make rooms feel slightly darker.
Triple glazing has diminishing returns in the UK's temperate climate. The jump from single to double glazing is dramatic (80% heat loss reduction). The jump from double to triple is modest (40–50% heat loss reduction through the window, but 5–10% reduction in whole-house heat loss).
Triple Glazing in Passive House Projects
Passive house standard requires windows with U-values of 0.8 W/m²K or better. Triple glazing is standard in certified passive house builds. The whole-building energy performance target (15 kWh/m²/year heating demand) requires excellent windows as part of the overall fabric-first approach.
In passive house projects, the payback logic changes: the target is minimising heating demand to allow a tiny heat pump or mechanical ventilation with heat recovery (MVHR) to meet all heating needs. Triple glazing is part of the package, not a standalone upgrade.
Related Guides
- Triple Glazing vs Double Glazing: Side-by-Side Comparison
- Is Triple Glazing Worth It? Payback Calculator
- Triple Glazing Cost: Quotes & Installation
- Disadvantages of Triple Glazing
- Secondary Glazing: Cost & Performance
Sources
- BRE, "Domestic Window Design Guide" (U-value performance data, 2025).
- Energy Saving Trust, "Windows and Doors" guidance (payback calculations, 2026).
- UK Building Regulations Part L (2021), "Conservation of fuel and power" (1.6 W/m²K requirement).
- Passive House Institute, "Certified Components Database" (0.8 W/m²K window standard, accessed June 2026).
- Which?, "Triple Glazing: Is It Worth the Extra Cost?" (cost survey data, 2026).
- BFRC (British Fenestration Rating Council), "Window Energy Ratings" (U-value testing methodology).
Last reviewed: 2026-06-27