Water is always worth saving
Protect a precious resource
Small changes
Good for the planet
Good for your pocket

Water Saving Advice

Use water wisely

Water use accounts for 6% of UK greenhouse gas emissions. 1% of this is from the treatment & transport of water and waste water, and the remaining 5% is from the energy used to heat water in the home*.

So saving water can save energy, which can help save money on your energy bills – it’s good for your pocket and the planet.

From drinking tap water to washing, cooking, cleaning or flushing, we all use water every day. It also needs energy to heat water for showers, baths and washing dishes.

Here’s a few simple steps you can take to help save water & energy in and around your home and help protect a precious resource. 

 

*CIWEM, 2013, A Blueprint For Carbon Emissions Reduction in the UK Water Industry.   

How much water do you use?

Find out how much water you use in your household

Click here

Water Saving Challenges

Play here

Saving Water in the Bathroom

Stopwatch  

Showers and baths use the most amount of water in the home (30%). Knocking 2 minutes off your shower can save over 5,000 litres and £130 off your energy bill, each year.

 

Watercolour graphic of toothpaste and toothbrush  

Cleaning our teeth with the tap running wastes 5 litres of water a minute - an instant saving by simply turning off the tap while brushing.

 

Tap

 
Found a dripping tap?  A dripping tap can waste over 5,500 litres of water a year so make sure taps are turned off properly or replace the washer. 

 

Leaky Loos

Toilet
A leaking toilet can waste between 215 and 400 litres of water every day. Between 5 and 8% of toilets are leaking, and it is most common with dual flush toilets. 

So if your toilet is leaking, get it fixed as quickly as possible.

It can be tricky to tell if your toilet is leaking, but you can use this simple test to find out.

Alternatively, if you have easy access to your cistern put food dye or a dye tablet in the cistern and wait 20 minutes, if the water in the toilet bowl ends up coloured then you have a leak.  

Leaky Loo Test

Step 1: Half an hour after a flush, wipe the back of the pan dry with toilet tissue.
Step 2: Then place a new, dry sheet of toilet tissue across the back of the pan.
Step 3: Leave it in place for up to three hours without using the toilet, or overnight.
Step 4: If the paper is wet or torn in the morning – you have a leaky loo.

Saving Water in the Kitchen

Watercolour graphic of kettle

Save on your energy bills by filling the kettle with only the water you need, you’ll also save time waiting for the kettle to boil!

 

 

 

Watercolour graphic of a plate with a knife and fork on top 

Remember to wash your dishes in a basin or bowl instead of under a running tap, or if using a dishwasher wait for a full load and use the eco setting to help save not only water but energy too!  Did you know? A tap left running while washing dishes or fruit and vegetables for 10 minutes can use around 125 litres of water which disappears straight down the drain.

 

 

Watercolour graphic of washing machine

 

Fully load your washing machine and dishwasher and use the eco-setting where possible to save water and energy. Washing clothes at 30 degrees rather than 40 degrees reduces your machine’s energy consumption by 57%. 

Saving Water Outside

Sponge

Did you know? A hosepipe can use enough water in 30 minutes to fill five bath tubs. Top Tip: Use a bucket and sponge to wash the car to help save water.    

 


 

Watering can

 

A hose wastes 1,000 litres of water an hour. Save water and nourish your plants’ roots using a watering can instead. Alternatively, you can fit your hosepipe with a trigger nozzle so it only runs when you need it. 

Kirsty Wilson, BBC Beechgrove presenter, shares her garden tips

Kirsty Wilson shares her water storing and water saving tips for your garden

Watch here

Save Water in the Garden

What you can do to get ready for the growing season

Watch here
Watercolour graphic of rain cloud

 

Use a water butt! Did you know?  Rainwater is better for your plants as there is nitrogen in the rain which helps plants thrive. A small Scottish roof collects over 45,000 litres of water each year, that’s more than enough to keep your water butt topped up!

 


For more expert advice on how to help save water in and around your garden, visit rhs.org.uk

Litres, carbon and financial savings in the simple steps above are from the Energy Saving Trust.

Saving assumes a gas price of 10.3p/kWh, standard electricity price of 34p/kWh and off-peak electricity price of 20p/kWh.

It is assumed 0.75 showers per day per person, and weights shower type and water heating type across households in Scotland. 

Valid from October 2022.