Last updated on January 4th, 2025
When your pressure drops too low, the boiler will stop working, which means no heating or hot water. The pressure should be between 1 and 1.5 bar when the radiators are cold. I have been repairing and servicing boilers for over a decade and have fixed many boiler pressure problems.
Worcester boiler pressure explained
Worcester boilers have a safety device called a pressure relief valve (PRV). If the pressure reaches 3 bar the PRV will open and the water will be let out as a safety precaution, the pressure gauge will drop to zero.
If your pressure is under 1 bar, you should increase it. If it’s over 1.5 bar when the heating is off and the radiators are cold, you should reduce it. The boiler pressure can rise to over 2 bar when the heating is on. This is perfectly normal as the heat expands the water inside the radiators when the heating is turned on.
Boiler pressure too low
Low boiler pressure is very common and can cause your boiler to stop working. If your pressure becomes too low you need to repressurise it. If the pressure drops below 1 bar you should increase it.
How to increase the pressure:
- Open one valve fully (only if there are two valves)
- Open the other valve slowly until you can hear the water
- When the pressure has reached 1 to 1.5 bar close both valves
- Reset the boiler (if needed)
- Turn the heating on
Do not open both filling loop valves fully straight away as the water pressure in the house might be too much for the boiler and cause the pressure to shoot up too high.
Repressurising with a key
Unfortunately, some idiot at Worcester Bosch thought it would be a good idea to use a key to repressurise their boilers. Thankfully modern Worcester boilers don’t use a key to increase the pressure anymore.
How to repressurise a Worcester boiler with a key:
- Insert the white plastic key
- Turn the white square plastic knob anti-clockwise (like a tap) to open the filling loop and let some water in
- Keep turning the white square plastic knob until you can hear the water
- When the pressure has reached 1 to 1.5 bar close the valve
- Reset the boiler (if needed)
- Turn the heating on
Repressurising without a key
To increase the pressure on a Worcester boiler without a key you must:
- Use (or fit) an external filling loop
- Use the new easy fill filling link on modern Worcester combi boilers
How to repressurise with external filling loop:
- Open one valve fully (only if there are two valves)
- Open the other valve slowly until you can hear the water
- When the boiler pressure has reached 1 to 1.5 bar close both valves
- Reset the boiler (if needed)
- Turn the heating on
Do not open both filling loop valves fully straight away as the water pressure in the house might be too much for the boiler and cause the pressure to shoot up too much.
How often should you need to repressurise?
You shouldn’t need to repressurise your boiler at all. A pressurised heating system is sealed so if you need to increase the pressure regularly then the water is getting out. If you have to repressurise once or twice a year I wouldn’t worry about it.
Worcester filling loops
There should be one of these types of boiler filling loops under your boiler:
- A keyhole for a plastic key with a white square knob to turn: This knob will need turning like a tap to open and close.
- Easy-Fill filling link with blue handle: These are on the latest Worcester boilers (thankfully). This will simply need to be pulled down to top up and then released to stop filling.
- An external filling loop:
A filling loop will be built in on the bottom of your boiler on most modern and small combi boilers, but there could also be an external filling loop on the pipework.
Usually, this is below the boiler but there could be an external flexible filling loop anywhere on the heating system, sometimes hidden away in cupboards or behind boxing.
Boiler pressure too high
There are many reasons for a boiler’s pressure to be too high. If the pressure reaches 3 bar the PRV will let the water out. So, if your pressure is above 1.5 bar when the heating is and the radiators are cold, you should reduce it. To reduce the pressure you must let some water (or air) out of the heating system.
How to reduce boiler pressure:
- Bleed a radiator
- Open a drain off valve
- Open the pressure relief valve
- Crack a nut
- Magnetic filter
The first thing you should do to reduce the pressure is bleed the air out of every radiator. There might not be any but if there is, removing it will drop the pressure. Bleeding water out of one radiator is the easiest way to reduce boiler pressure but also the slowest.
Boiler keeps losing pressure
A boiler that keeps losing pressure means there’s a problem that needs to be fixed.
Most common reasons:
- A Leak on the central heating system
- The expansion vessel has lost its air
- Pressure relief valve passing water
- Filling loop open
You should check if the pressure is rising to 3 bar when the heating is on to narrow down the problem. If the pressure is dropping to zero without rising too high first, you most likely have a leak somewhere on the system.
More Worcester boiler guides
- Worcester boiler leaking
- Worcester boiler not firing up
- Worcester boiler no hot water
- Worcester boiler timer replacement
Summary
If your boiler pressure is too low or too high, fixing it is important. Repressurising a Worcester boiler is an easy job. It can save you from paying a plumber to do an easy task.
If you have to keep repressurising your boiler, you should get that problem found and fixed as soon as possible.
Have any questions? Drop them in the comments below, I’ll do my best to help! If you found this post helpful, don’t forget to share it with others who might benefit.
Hi Steve
Thank you for this site. It’s very helpful. I have an old Worcester Bosch that has 2 valves for repressurising the boiler. The one in the right is horizontal when at rest and the one on the left is vertical. I’ve been repressurising it myself for years, once a month, but this month the left one will not turn fully so I’m not able to fill the boiler fully. What should I do please?
Hi Karina,
You can try forcing it with some water pump pliers but you might need to replace the valve. This guide might help https://housewarm.co.uk/blog/heating/boilers/boiler-filling-loop/
I’m a fellow geordie. My Worcester Bosch has slowly required repressurising and recently needed doing twice a day after reaching zero. I have called out the engineers who fitted it twice and both times they couldn’t find the problem. However after both visits the pressure held for a week and then gradually started dropping again. Any ideas on what could be happening?
It could be anything mentioned in this post. You should try isolating the boiler overnight to work out whether it’s a leak on the heating system or a problem with the boiler.
Sorry to ask again. The pressure hasn’t dropped since they were here on Friday but it was dropping to zero every day whether it was on or off before they came. I was wondering if some valve was staying open after the heating has been on. Is that a possibility?
I doubt it’s a valve problem. One possibility is they might have recharged the expansion vessel but the vessel is faulty and slowly losing its pressure.
My green star heatslave ii oil boiler is at full pressure, I’ve been able to de pressure it but it keeps going up. I’ve bled radiators but it keeps going up, I’ve switched it off and the radiators keep filling with water. Please help
Hi Shona,
It sounds like the filling loop for repressurising the boiler is open or not closed fully. It could also be damaged and constantly letting water into the system.
Hi Steve.
I had a new Worcester Bosch 4000 boiler installed on February 20th and it’s already showing low pressure. It took me by surprise as the British Gas engineer never mentioned a word about things like that happening and certainly didn’t show me what to do if it happens.
Good old YouTube. Is this something that happens on a regular basis?
Hi Sara,
It’s quite normal for the boiler pressure to drop after a new boiler replacement as the system gets drained and refilled, it could just be trapped air working it’s way out.
If the pressure keeps dropping then you’ll have a problem that needs to be found and fixed but repressurising the boiler once is fine.
I have a Worcester ( British Gas) 532i which drops pressure on DHW demand. This still provides hot water and pressure recovers when demand stops. This happens when changing from CH to DHW. Is this normal. ?
Hi Rowland,
Yeah that can happen, it’s nothing to worry about as long as the boiler pressure is good when there’s no hot water demand.
Can’t pressurise worcester boiler water just comes straight out of drain pipe. Is there a simple fix?
It sounds like the pressure relief valve is open and probably needs to be replaced.
Hi Steve, I have a Worcester Bosh 29L, 9 years old but serviced every year. When cold the pressure drops to 0.5 bar, when on it rises to 2.5 bar. I can’t see any leaks, I’ve bled all rads and the filling loop is closed. The plumber at last service said it might be the expansion tank losing pressure, does that sound reasonable?
Hi Tony,
Yes, definitely sounds like an expansion vessel problem causing the boiler pressure to keep dropping. You’ll need to recharge it or possibly replace it if the diaphragm inside the vessel has split. You should be able to see water coming out of the copper pipe outside when the pressure drops as the pressure relief valve lets the water out when the pressure reaches 3 bar.
You could turn the heating (radiator) temperature down at the boiler (not the thermostat) to try to keep the pressure down until it’s fixed as this can sometimes help.
Hi Steven
I have an older Worcester Bosch combi boiler with a big plastic key to repressurise the boiler.
I have noticed the boiler pressure dropped below one. One day I turned the heating on, radiators weren’t warm as all. I thought I had to bleed the radiators, then found out the water pressure dropped close to zero. I followed your instruction to repressurise the boiler, nothing happened, and water started dripping from the key, black needle still on red zero.
What can you suggest, there is not water but not the heating and there isn’t a external filling hose.
Thank you, lynn
Hi Lynn,
It sounds like you haven’t inserted and turned the key properly. You must ensure the key is turned and lined up correctly before repressurising the boiler.
Or, you might have a faulty filling loop which will need to be replaced, or you can fit an external filling loop on the pipes.
Hi Steven, I have a WB Greenstar 25si compact boiler with I’m pretty sure an external filling loop. I need to repressurise the boiler as the level is on zero (hot water is fine but I’ve yet to put or try to put the heating on, since March-April this year. There is a single flexible loop that goes upwards and connects to two valves under the boiler but no obvious cap to unscrew to attach one end of it. I can send a picture! Can you help? I’m used to the key method and have no idea what I’m meant to do with this system. Thank you very much! Debbie.
Hi Debbie, yeah sure. I’ll turn on image uploads so if you upload a photo to these comments I’ll have a look and let you know.