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Call key data
Energy renovation solutions – Boosting building renovation through effective markets and instruments
Funding Program
LIFE - sub-programme “Clean Energy Transition”
Call number
LIFE-2026-CET-BETTERRENO
deadlines
Opening
21.04.2026
Deadline
16.09.2026 17:00
Funding rate
95%
Call budget
€ 6,000,000.00
Estimated EU contribution per project
€ 2,000,000.00
Link to the call
Link to the submission
Call content
short description
This topic contributes to the goals of the EU Renovation Wave strategy and aims to help implement current building policies and strategic plans, notably the recast Energy Performance of Buildings Directive (EPBD) and the elements of the European Affordable Housing Plan of relevance for building renovation. This topic supports energy renovations that provide scalable, high-performance and affordable solutions to massify renovations and improve the energy performance and the affordability of buildings and make buildings active energy system assets.
Call objectives
This topic addresses areas that are key for the achievement of the ambitious EU targets for the decarbonisation of buildings, along with improving the energy security and industrial competitiveness in the EU and the affordability of energy. This topic supports the Better Homes partnerships bringing together stakeholders from a fragmented renovation chain to collaborate, conceptualise and deploy renovation projects on the ground. It aims to deploy approaches that bring together market actors and policy frameworks in order to support the large-scale roll out of renovation solutions. The topic aims to increase the attractiveness and cost-effectiveness of building energy performance upgrades and to reduce the administrative, logistical and financial burden that still goes along with building retrofitting.
The topic also aims to ensure the market uptake and integration to the policy framework of advanced building policy and information instruments, to increase their public acceptance and demonstrate their value for verification and financing of building renovation and upgrade. Proposals should, where appropriate, explore synergies with, build on or complement, and promote the market deployment of the results from projects funded under other EU programmes, notably Horizon 2020 and Horizon Europe.
The EU is facing important increases in energy prices, driven by market volatility and exacerbated by its dependence on imported fossil fuels. A key priority for the EU is to strengthen the resilience of its energy system vis-a-vis geopolitical crises impacting the global energy market. Therefore, applicants under this topic are invited, where possible, to develop and implement long-term structural sustainable and energy efficiency measures to enhance EU energy system resilience against future crises, in coherence with short-term energy relief measures needed to respond to the current shock on the global energy markets.
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Expected effects and impacts
Proposals should present the concrete results which will be delivered by the activities and demonstrate how these results will contribute to the topic-specific impacts. This demonstration should rely on a solid analysis of the current situation, realistic assumptions and baselines, and establish clear causality links between activities, results and impacts.
For Scope A:
In terms of qualitative impact, proposals under this topic should demonstrate how they will contribute to the following outcomes, as relevant:
- Increased demand for energy renovation and increased energy renovation rates
- Implementation of demand aggregation strategies
- Viable business models for renovations with reduced costs and time, replicable at large scale
- Improved capacity of companies in the building renovation sector to deliver high quality renovations.
In terms of quantitative impact, proposals should quantify their results and impacts using the indicators provided for the topic, when they are relevant for the proposed activities. Proposals are not expected to address all the listed impacts and indicators. The results and impacts should be quantified for the end of the project and for 5 years after the end of the project. The quantitative indicators for this topic include:
- Number of building units renovated and/or increased renovation rates in the territories targeted by the project
- Number of building units that undergo a deep renovation and/or increased deep renovation rates
- Percentage reduction in renovation costs compared to baseline, potentially detailed by building typology and type of intervention
- Investments in building energy renovation triggered
- Number of companies with improved technical, organisational and business capacity to deliver energy renovations through the uptake of new products, materials, services and processes under the scope of the topic.
Proposals should also provide indicators which are specific to their proposed activities.
For Scope B:
In terms of qualitative impact, proposals under this topic should demonstrate how they will contribute to the following outcomes:
- Enhanced market uptake and effective use of advanced EPCs, SRIs, RPs, DBLs and IEQ
- Roll-out of existing schemes and tools allowing enhanced, integrated, cost-effective building assessments and staged renovation strategies
- Improved use of buildings performance data in actual renovations or building management by financial institutions, service providers and building owners/operators.
In terms of quantitative impact, proposals should quantify their results and impacts using the indicators provided for the topic, when they are relevant for the proposed activities. Proposals are not expected to address all the listed impacts and indicators. The results and impacts should be quantified for the end of the project and for 5 years after the end of the project. The quantitative indicators for this topic include:
- Number of Renovation Passports issued and applied to actual renovation projects
- Number of renovations or building management projects making use of enhanced and integrated building assessment schemes (EPCs, SRI and IEQ) and data repositories (DBL)
- Number of relevant stakeholders (e.g. building owners, service providers, financial institutions, one-stop-shops) actively using improved building-related data and services.
Proposals should also provide indicators which are specific to their proposed activities.
For both scopes A and B
Proposals should also quantify their impacts related to the following common indicators for the LIFE Clean Energy Transition sub-programme:
- Primary energy savings triggered by the project in GWh/year
- Final energy savings triggered by the project in GWh/year
- Renewable energy generation triggered by the project (in GWh/year)
- Reduction of greenhouse gas emissions (in tCO2-eq/year)
- Investments in sustainable energy (energy efficiency and renewable energy) triggered by the project (cumulative, in million Euro).
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Expected results
Proposals are expected to focus on one of the two scopes (A or B) established below. In their introduction, proposals should clearly identify the scope against which the proposal will be evaluated. In case a proposal addresses elements of more than one scope, this should be duly justified.
Scope A: Scaling up high-quality and competitive energy renovations
Under Scope A, actions should aim to increase renovation rates and deliver progress towards a fully decarbonised, zero emission building stock by 2050, as defined in the Energy Performance of Buildings Directive. Proposals should focus on removing market barriers, stimulating demand and scaling up energy renovations.
Proposals should deploy strategies and business models for renovation that can be replicated across multiple buildings and markets, increasing current renovation rates, aggregating demand for products and services with a view to facilitating faster, more cost-effective, affordable, simple and efficient renovations.
Proposals should support the large-scale roll out of solutions, models and approaches that deliver high-quality renovations with energy performance guarantees or other business models, driving market confidence and stimulating investments. They should support the competitiveness and productivity of construction companies, for example through industrialised and standardised processes, digital tools, improved coordination across the supply chain and the uptake of circular and low-carbon solutions.
Proposals should take into account all relevant actors in the renovation value chain, notably building owners, energy solution providers and investors, occupants, public authorities, financial institutions, construction sector representatives, electricity market operators, etc.
In line with the 2050 vision for the building stock, besides improving energy performance, indoor environmental quality and decarbonising energy use in buildings, proposals can go beyond and consider reduction of whole lifecycle emissions, addressing materials, or increased resilience against climate risks in renovations.
Proposals should explain how the proposed activities are adapted to the specific context and maturity of the markets and/or countries addressed and should coordinate with existing support, funding instruments, one stop shops or existing renovation facilitation services in their area of action. Proposals may consider deploying technical building systems and strategies enabling flexibility.
Scope B: Strengthening information instruments under the EPBD
Proposals are expected to strengthen the market and policy uptake, usability and effectiveness of key EPBD instruments, notably Energy Performance Certificates (EPCs), Renovation Passports (RPs) and where relevant the Smart Readiness Indicator (SRI), and the Digital Building Logbooks (DBLs) and Indoor Environmental Quality (IEQ).
Proposals should demonstrate the reliability and market relevance of these instruments for their intended users and customers, and strengthen their contribution to achieving EPBD policy objectives. This roll-out should result in increased and improved use of building energy data for renovation and/or energy management.
Proposals should address the improved implementation and accelerated market roll-out of existing schemes and tools that improve on the one hand the accuracy and quality, and on the other hand the integration and consistency of EPCs, RPs and where appropriate, the SRI, the DBL and IEQ.
Proposals should detail their specific approach, where relevant, for enhancing transparency, assessing renovation needs and energy costs, improving indoor environmental quality and measuring the impacts of building performance improvements. These instruments should strengthen the market value of energy performance by linking its improvements to building valuation and investment decisions.
The roll-out and market uptake of Renovation Passports in line with the recast EPBD should enable clear, staged renovation pathways for building owners, ensuring coherence with EPCs and where relevant, SRI assessments, the DBL and IEQ. This could include actions to improve the practical market implementation aspects, as well as measures to create demand and promote the use of RPs.
The proposed activities need to be compatible with all implementation choices that Member States make in the context of transposing the EPBD and thus need to follow the policy evolutions and frameworks as appropriate. Proposals should also take into account existing funding schemes as well as relevant renovation support services, including one-stop shops.
Technological, including innovative, solutions may be employed as enablers but must not be at the centre of the action.
For both scopes A and B:
All proposals are required to implement pilot actions in real-life buildings or renovation projects, demonstrating practical application, effectiveness and replicability of the proposed solutions and instruments.
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Eligibility Criteria
Regions / countries for funding
Moldova (Moldova), Iceland (Ísland), Montenegro (Црна Гора), North Macedonia (Северна Македонија), Ukraine (Україна)
eligible entities
Education and training institution, International organization, Non-Profit Organisation (NPO) / Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO), Other, Private institution, incl. private company (private for profit), Public Body (national, regional and local; incl. EGTCs), Research Institution incl. University, Small and medium-sized enterprise (SME)
Mandatory partnership
Yes
Project Partnership
In order to be eligible, the applicants (beneficiaries and affiliated entities) must:
- be legal entities (public or private bodies)
- be established in one of the eligible countries, i.e.:
- EU Member States (including overseas countries and territories (OCTs))
- non-EU countries:
- listed EEA countries and countries associated to the LIFE Programme (list of participating countries)
- the coordinator must be established in an eligible country
Proposals must be submitted by at least 3 applicants (beneficiaries; not affiliated entities) from 3 different eligible countries.
other eligibility criteria
Specific cases
Exceptional funding — Entities from other countries (not listed above) are exceptionally eligible, if the granting authority considers their participation essential for the implementation of the action (see work programme).
Natural persons — Natural persons are NOT eligible (with the exception of self-employed persons, i.e. sole traders, where the company does not have legal personality separate from that of the natural person).
International organisations — International organisations are eligible. The rules on eligible countries do not apply to them.
Entities without legal personality — Entities which do not have legal personality under their national law may exceptionally participate, provided that their representatives have the capacity to undertake legal obligations on their behalf, and offer guarantees for the protection of the EU financial interests equivalent to that offered by legal persons.
EU bodies — EU bodies (with the exception of the European Commission Joint Research Centre) can NOT be part of the consortium.
Associations and interest groupings — Entities composed of members may participate as ‘sole beneficiaries’ or ‘beneficiaries without legal personality’.
Countries currently negotiating association agreements — Beneficiaries from countries with ongoing negotiations for participating in the programme (see list of participating countries above) may participate in the call and can sign grants if the negotiations are concluded before grant signature and if the association covers the call (i.e. is retroactive and covers both the part of the programme and the year when the call was launched).
EU restrictive measures — Special rules apply for entities subject to EU restrictive measures under Article 29 of the Treaty on the European Union (TEU) and Article 215 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the EU (TFEU). Such entities are not eligible to participate in any capacity, including as beneficiaries, affiliated entities, associated partners, subcontractors or recipients of financial support to third parties (if any).
EU conditionality measures — Special rules apply for entities subject to measures adopted on the basis of EU Regulation 2020/2092. Such entities are not eligible to participate in any funded role (beneficiaries, affiliated entities, subcontractors, recipients of financial support to third parties, etc.). Currently such measures are in place for Hungarian public interest trusts established under the Hungarian Act IX of 2021 or any entity they maintain (see Council Implementing Decision (EU) 2022/2506, as of 16 December 2022).
Additional information
Topics
Relevance for EU Macro-Region
EUSAIR - EU Strategy for the Adriatic and Ionian Region, EUSALP - EU Strategy for the Alpine Space, EUSBSR - EU Strategy for the Baltic Sea Region, EUSDR - EU Strategy for the Danube Region
UN Sustainable Development Goals (UN-SDGs)
Additional Information
Proposals must be submitted electronically via the Funding & Tenders Portal Electronic Submission System (accessible via the Topic page in the Calls for proposals section). Paper submissions are NOT possible.
Proposals (including annexes and supporting documents) must be submitted using the forms provided inside the Submission System (NOT the documents available on the Topic page — they are only for information).
Proposals must be complete and contain all the requested information and all required annexes and supporting documents:
- Application Form Part A — contains administrative information about the participants (future coordinator, beneficiaries and affiliated entities) and the summarised budget for the project (to be filled in directly online)
- Application Form Part B — contains the technical description of the project (template to be downloaded from the Portal Submission System, completed, assembled and re-uploaded)
- Part C — contains additional project data and the project’s contribution to EU programme key performance indicators (to be filled in directly online)
- mandatory annexes and supporting documents (templates to be downloaded from the Portal Submission System, completed, assembled and re-uploaded):
- detailed budget table (mandatory Excel template available in the Submission System)
- participant information including previous projects, if any (mandatory Excel template available in the Submission System)
- optional annexes: letters of support
Proposals are limited to maximum 65 pages (Part B).
Call documents
Call Document LIFE-2026-CETCall Document LIFE-2026-CET(824kB)



