
By Greentastic Pty Ltd – Energy-Efficient Solutions You Can Trust
There’s been a lot of confusion, headlines, and mixed messaging around Victoria’s move away from gas. Many homeowners are asking the same questions:
- Is gas being banned in Victoria?
- Do I have to replace my gas heater or cooktop?
- What actually changes from March 2027?
At Greentastic Pty Ltd, we work closely with Victorian households every day, helping them navigate government policies, rebates, and energy-efficient upgrades. In this article, we cut through the noise and explain what the March 2027 gas-to-electric rules really mean for homeowners, based on confirmed government publications as of January 2026.
Why Victoria Is Moving Toward Electric Homes
Victoria’s energy policy is focused on:
- Reducing reliance on fossil fuels
- Lowering household energy bills over time
- Improving energy efficiency and safety
- Supporting modern, all-electric homes
Electric technologies like heat pumps and reverse cycle air conditioning are far more efficient than traditional gas appliances. The government’s approach is targeted and staged, not a sudden or blanket ban.
🔸 What Is Happening: Confirmed Government Policy
✅ Gas Hot Water Systems: Mandatory Change from 1 March 2027
From 1 March 2027, if an existing gas hot water system in a Victorian home:
- Breaks down and
- Cannot be economically repaired
➡️ It must be replaced with an efficient electric alternative, such as a heat pump hot water system.
This requirement is part of:
- Victoria’s Building Electrification Regulations
- The Gas Substitution Roadmap
The goal is simple: gas hot water systems are one of the largest and least efficient gas users in homes, and electric heat pumps deliver the same hot water using far less energy.
✔ This rule applies to end-of-life replacement only
✔ You are not required to remove a working gas system
🔸 What Is Not Required: No Blanket Gas Ban
❌ No Mandatory Replacement of All Gas Appliances
There is no longer a rule that forces all broken gas appliances to be replaced with electric alternatives in existing owner-occupied homes.
This means:
- Gas space heaters can still be repaired or replaced with gas
- Gas cooktops and ovens can still be repaired or replaced with gas
- Homeowners can choose when and how they transition
➡️ Electrification is strongly encouraged, but not mandatory for these appliances in existing homes.
This clarification is important — earlier proposals caused understandable concern, but the final policy is far more targeted.
🔸 New Builds and Rental Properties: Different Rules Apply
✔ New Homes from 1 January 2027
All new residential homes and many new commercial buildings built in Victoria from 1 January 2027 must be:
- All electric
- No new gas connections
This ensures new buildings are future-ready from day one.
✔ Rental Properties from 1 March 2027
Rental homes will be subject to minimum energy efficiency standards, including:
- Replacement of end-of-life heating or hot water systems with efficient electric options
- Improved insulation requirements
- Energy-efficient heating and cooling standards
These rules aim to protect renters from high energy bills and poor-quality heating.
📌 Summary: Current Rule Status (January 2026)
| Appliance Type | Mandatory Replacement at End of Life? |
|---|---|
| Gas hot water systems | ✅ Yes – must be replaced with electric (heat pump) from 1 March 2027 if not repairable |
| Gas space heaters (owner-occupiers) | ❌ No – can still be repaired or replaced with gas |
| Gas cooktops & ovens (owner-occupiers) | ❌ No – electrification encouraged, not mandatory |
| New buildings | ✅ Yes – must be all electric from 1 January 2027 |
Final Clarification: What Changed?
Earlier proposals suggested a broad electrification requirement that would have forced all gas appliances to be replaced with electric alternatives when they failed.
➡️ That proposal has been scaled back.
The current rules:
- Only mandate electric replacement for gas hot water systems
- Require electrification in new builds
- Introduce efficiency standards for rental properties
- Do not ban gas appliances in existing owner-occupied homes
What Homeowners Should Do Now
Even if you’re not forced to upgrade today, many Victorians are choosing to switch early because:
- Heat pumps and reverse cycle systems are far cheaper to run
- Government rebates are available now
- Gas prices are rising, while efficient electric systems lower bills
- Upgrading early avoids emergency replacements later
At Greentastic Pty Ltd, we help homeowners:
- Understand what applies to their situation
- Access available VEU and government incentives
- Upgrade at a time that suits their budget and home
Trusted Advice, Not Pressure
Every home is different. Our role isn’t to push unnecessary upgrades — it’s to give you clear, honest advice backed by facts and government policy.
If you’re unsure how the March 2027 rules affect your home, or you’re considering a gas-to-electric upgrade, our team is here to help.
👉 Talk to Greentastic Pty Ltd — trusted experts in energy-efficient solutions for Victorian homes.
Official Victoria government policy on electrification rules (March 2027):
🔗 Energy Victoria – Electric and Efficiency Standards for Buildings
https://www.energy.vic.gov.au/households/electric-and-efficiency-standards-for-buildings

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