Boxt. I'd never actually heard of them until I saw an advert on TV the other day, and I couldn't believe the prices they were quoting.
I had a quote from BG last year to fit a Worcester 24i Greenstar, boiler location to be moved from the kitchen to an airing cupboard in the bathroom: price came down eventually to £2600. Boxt start their quotes for a Worcester boiler fitted in a property like mine--small 2/3 bed property with one bathroom--at £1795, though I haven't had a detailed quote to take account of the relocation and I probably won't be getting it done for a good while yet anyhow.
I notice that on Trustpilot, Boxt have excellent ratings, but if you look hard enough yes, you can find stuff that isn't so complimentary. But isn't it the case that all companies, even sole traders, sometimes get things wrong?
Are companies like this which will quote online without even seeing the job a flash in the pan, or the way forward for the world of domestic gas appliance installation? If the answer to the second question is yes, then clearly the future doesn't look good for the rest of the gas installation market unless they adopt a similar model. And that is obviously impractical if you don't have access to the economies of scale of companies like Boxt, who I believe have a connection with Worcester Bosch themselves.
Intriguing stuff, with apologies if this has already been raised elsewhere.
I had a quote from BG last year to fit a Worcester 24i Greenstar, boiler location to be moved from the kitchen to an airing cupboard in the bathroom: price came down eventually to £2600. Boxt start their quotes for a Worcester boiler fitted in a property like mine--small 2/3 bed property with one bathroom--at £1795, though I haven't had a detailed quote to take account of the relocation and I probably won't be getting it done for a good while yet anyhow.
I notice that on Trustpilot, Boxt have excellent ratings, but if you look hard enough yes, you can find stuff that isn't so complimentary. But isn't it the case that all companies, even sole traders, sometimes get things wrong?
Are companies like this which will quote online without even seeing the job a flash in the pan, or the way forward for the world of domestic gas appliance installation? If the answer to the second question is yes, then clearly the future doesn't look good for the rest of the gas installation market unless they adopt a similar model. And that is obviously impractical if you don't have access to the economies of scale of companies like Boxt, who I believe have a connection with Worcester Bosch themselves.
Intriguing stuff, with apologies if this has already been raised elsewhere.