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View the thread, titled "How To Become Gas Safe" which is posted in Gas Engineers Forum on UK Plumbers Forums.

I currently live in a house with oil heating and an electric cooker but we’ve saved up enough to buy a house of our own. Me and emma ( my girlfriend) have found 3 houses that look ideal. 2 of them have gas cookers with a gas boiler and the 3rd one has a gas cooker with the option to have an electric cooker as the wiring for an electric cooker is already there. This house also has a gas boiler. Even if we had an electric cooker we would still be heating the house using gas. What is the route we would have to go down to become gas safe, so we could move into a house with gas?
 
Thats a scary thought, imagine if everyone who lived with gas had to be gas safe. Who would we charge our extortionate labour rate too?
 
What is the route we would have to go down to become gas safe, so we could move into a house with gas?

Ask the vendor, probably via your solicitor, to provide the make, model, age and date of last service for the heating system.

Contact a heating engineer who must be on the national 'Gas Safe' register who you will use to service the appliances annually for you. I always recommend chosing a smallish local independent who's been in business for a good number of years and is recommended by your friends or work colleagues. It could be the person the vendor uses if they fit your requirements. Discuss with them whether a pre-sale inspection is appropriate and roughly how much life they'd estimate is left in the current system.

If you are in any doubt about the condition of the appliances or when they were last serviced, get your heating engineer to do them as soon as you move in.
 
As per chuck, tread a bit carefully with old gas boilers. if they ar open flued definiteky have it checked out before using.

You mention 2 houses having gas cookers. You are not under the impression that they will be left by the vendor?
 
As per chuck, tread a bit carefully with old gas boilers. if they ar open flued definiteky have it checked out before using.

You mention 2 houses having gas cookers. You are not under the impression that they will be left by the vendor?
No the cookers are not included we would have to get our own
 
Ask the vendor, probably via your solicitor, to provide the make, model, age and date of last service for the heating system.

Contact a heating engineer who must be on the national 'Gas Safe' register who you will use to service the appliances annually for you. I always recommend chosing a smallish local independent who's been in business for a good number of years and is recommended by your friends or work colleagues. It could be the person the vendor uses if they fit your requirements. Discuss with them whether a pre-sale inspection is appropriate and roughly how much life they'd estimate is left in the current system.

If you are in any doubt about the condition of the appliances or when they were last serviced, get your heating engineer to do them as soon as you move in.
I’m not sure what you mean
 

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How To Become Gas Safe
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