Why Your Gas Boiler's Days Are Numbered — And What to Do About It
- Nick Zeniou
- 4 days ago
- 2 min read
If your gas boiler is still running fine, replacing it probably feels like a solution to a problem you don't have. But the case for acting now — rather than waiting for it to fail — is stronger than most people realise.

Gas prices have one direction to travel
Australian residential gas prices have risen over 40% in the past five years. That's not a blip — it's a structural shift driven by export market linkages, ageing network infrastructure, and declining domestic supply. The Australian Energy Regulator's own modelling shows no credible scenario where residential gas gets meaningfully cheaper. Every year you stay on gas is another year locked into that trajectory.
Then there's the network charge — the fixed cost you pay just to stay connected to the gas network, regardless of how much gas you use. As more households electrify and gas demand falls, those fixed costs get spread across fewer customers. Network charges are already rising and will continue to do so as the gas network slowly winds down.
The sun tax is coming
Feed-in tariffs — what your retailer pays you for exporting solar — have fallen from around 50 cents per kWh in 2014 to as low as 2–5 cents today in many states. Some networks are now proposing negative export tariffs: charging you to export during periods of oversupply. If you have solar and you're still on gas, you're in the worst of both worlds — exporting your cheapest energy for almost nothing while buying expensive gas to heat your home.
Waiting for the boiler to fail is the expensive strategy
When a gas boiler fails, it usually fails in winter, at the worst possible time, leaving you with no heating and a rushed decision. Emergency replacements mean less time to research, less ability to compare quotes, and no chance to plan around rebates or installer availability. In Victoria, you may also find yourself replacing one gas appliance with another just weeks before gas connections are banned in new builds — a decision you'll be living with for another 15 years.
Replacing a working boiler on your timeline, with proper planning, lets you access rebates, choose your installer, and get the system commissioned properly before you need it.
What to do about it
The transition path is simpler than most people expect. A hydronic heat pump system connects directly to your existing pipework — no new radiators, no replumbing, no structural work. The question isn't whether to make the switch, it's when. And the answer, increasingly, is: before your boiler makes the decision for you.
Book a free site assessment to find out if your home is ready.

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