Free · Instant · UK homes only

Is your home climate ready?

Get a free climate risk score for your property — covering flood, overheating, and subsidence. Find out what the next 30 years of weather could mean for your home.

Free instant score No sign-up needed Based on Environment Agency data

How it works

A climate check in three steps

Step 1

Enter your postcode

Just your postcode — that's all we need to get started. No account, no email, no fuss.

Step 2

Get your free climate risk score

We check flood risk (Environment Agency), overheating (urban heat islands), and subsidence (clay geology) — all from open data.

Step 3

See what you can do

Understand the risks and unlock a personalised adaptation plan with costs, payback periods, and priorities.

Common questions

Good to know

Your flood risk score is built from three authoritative sources: the Environment Agency's NaFRA2 national flood risk assessment (covering rivers, sea, and surface water), OpenStreetMap for precise distance-to-waterway measurements, and the EPC Register for property-level data. All sources are openly published by the UK government or its agencies.
We don't ask for or store any personal information. No account is required. We don't use tracking cookies. The only data we process is your postcode — to look up publicly available risk data — and we don't log or retain it.
The flood risk score uses the same underlying data the Environment Agency publishes for official flood risk maps — so it's as good as what your mortgage lender or insurer sees. Where UPRN data is available, we can give building-level precision (to within ~1 metre). For postcodes without a match, we use the postcode centroid, which is accurate to within about 100–300 metres. This is an indicative score, not a formal flood risk assessment.
Climate MOT is for any UK homeowner, buyer, or landlord who wants to understand what climate change means for their property — in plain English, without needing to hire a surveyor. It's especially useful if you're buying a home, remortgaging, or thinking about long-term improvements.