As you navigate the world of Passive House in the US, it’s not unusual to find yourself asking what the difference is between the Passive House Institute (PHI) and Phius. While there is no simple explanation, we can look at the approaches, metrics, and results to get a better sense of where each stands. We hope this collection of brief descriptions, charts, and links gives you a better understanding of how the two programs may related to each other and your work. – PHN

Moving Markets or Moving Performance

PHI has applied Passive House understanding to new uses, typologies, and climates while maintaining the most robust requirements, reinforcing its logic, and pushing the industry to move toward normalizing high-quality everywhere. Phius has instead lowered standards on window and ventilation units, and weakened the logic of high-quality, to move toward the American market. We appreciate that markets resist change, but moving quickly to accommodate industry norms instead of challenging them shortchanges the potential for market transformation. This is exemplified in PHI’s Component Database and PHN’s growing Manufacturer’s Directory, where a growing number of manufacturers and suppliers can be found.

Simplification or Complication

PHI offers a focused approach to the process of making exceptionally high-performing buildings, as exemplified by the “5 Principles” and specific energy targets that frame project development efforts. It allows for—but does not require—integration with other certification systems (e.g., LEED, DOE ZERH, and WELL). Phius incorporates multiple U.S. programs as mandatory co-requisites (e.g., EPA Energy Star, EPA airPLUS, and DOE ZERH), which can distract from the critical benchmarks.

The Passive House Network views PHI’s laser-like focus on performance drivers as a great gift to project teams, allowing them to layer in additional goals at their discretion.

Global or National

PHI is the scientific research institute that developed Passive House based on international scientific standards, and focuses on its development worldwide. PHI is led by a team of physicists with over 30 years of global technical leadership and scientific research, producing wide-ranging resources. Phius derived its approach from PHI, but changed the metrics and norms to accommodate the existing American industry.

The Passive House Network (PHN) is part of PHI’s global effort, learning and working with people on buildings across borders, climates, and cultures.

What About Retrofits

PHI launched the EnerPHit retrofit certification standard to address the special needs of existing buildings—including orientation, existing structural thermal bridges, air sealing difficulty, interior insulation, and historic preservation requirements and more — while maintaining the high quality and durable results expected from a Passive House building. EnerPHit is a straightforward and flexible approach that has a track record of results. Phius launched its retrofit standard in 2024 and largely dispenses with Passive House logic, instead focusing on the ability to shelter in place. It is less a retrofit version of Passive House than another animal altogether.

Transparency or Black Box

PHI provides a relatively simple and transparent calculating tool called Passive House Planning Package (PHPP). PHPP is robust enough to provide predictable outcomes. PHPP’s calculated energy balance, with instantaneous feedback, is core to the effort’s DNA. Phius uses the proprietary WUFI Passive program, a more complex calculation engine where the calculations are not openly accessible or transparent.

Calculated or Prescriptive

PHI simplifies the optimization process for single-family homes with the easyPH PHPP, which maintains the core Passive House approach of calculating the energy balance. Phius, however, in an attempt to simplify single-family homes, swaps the calculated energy balance for a prescriptive method, taking a significant step away from Passive House logic.

How do Project Costs Compare

There are a multitude of possible cost drivers in construction. Consequently, Passive House need not be a prime driver of overall project cost. Phius’ general admission of lower quality windows, ventilation units, and thermal bridging mitigation can lead to lower component costs; however, mandating additional EPA and DOE certification requirements add costs.

A range of “extra” costs to building is driven by the team’s experience, and how realistic the baseline cost is, not whether the project is PHI or Phius. See the PHN report, Is Cost the Barrier to Passive House Performance?

What are the Performance Outcomes?

Energy Standards aren’t easy to compare; however, there is an excellent study completed by Emu Passive that looks at PHI, Phius, compares them across a variety of metrics, and presents comprehensive results and analysis. The bottom line? PHI’s Low Energy Building (PHI-LEB) standard performs similarly with Phius Core, while PHI’s Classic, Plus, and Premium standards outperform Phius Core.

To meet the Massachusetts Specialized Code, projects can be certified to PHI-LEB, Classic, Plus, and Premium standards as well as Phius Core and Zero.

Basic Characteristics Comparison Charts

The following charts compare basic characteristics of PHI and Phius programs. Note that retrofit program characteristics will be added in a future iteration of this chart.

New Construction Metrics

PHI Criteria for Buildings describes the fundamental criteria and technical regulations for building certification. Phius requirements are found in the Passive Building Standards Certification Guidebook.

Item PHI Phius
Heating Annual Demand or Peak Load Annual Demand & Peak Load (variable per climate)
Cooling & Dehumidification Annual Demand
(variable per climate)
Annual Demand & Peak Load
(variable per climate)
Primary Energy Primary Energy Renewable (PER) per floor area (variable per climate) or Source Energy per floor area Source Energy per Person
Airtightness per volume per surface area
Internal Heat Gains per use & density per person & use
New Building Standards Classic, Plus, Premium & PHI Low Energy Building Core & Zero
Renewable Energy Generation Per the projected building footprint. (Plus & Premium standards) Per floor area (Zero)
Simplified Method for Single Family easyPH calculation Prescriptive Path
Additional Certifications Required None EPA Energy Star, Indoor airPlus, and DOE ZERH

Other Criteria

In pursuit of occupant satisfaction, durability, comfort, and health, PHI includes a number of other criteria. For the most part, Phius has either relaxed versions or the requirements don’t exist.

Item PHI Phius
Window Temp Allowed Differential ≤7.6 °F ≤13.3 °F
Wall & Ceiling Temp Allowed Differential ≤7.6 °F No requirements
Min. Floor Temp 66.2 °F No requirements
Moisture Protection Min. Temp Factor (fRsi) requirements varies
Ventilation Supply Filters MERV 13 Min. MERV 8 Min.
Ventilation Sound/Noise Protection <25dB No requirements

Personnel

PHI developed a certification system that relies on independent PHI-accredited certifiers, with 30+ working in the US, who look to basic competence regarding personnel completing verification tasks, rather than a particular training program certificate. For Phius, only Phius certifies buildings, and Phius requires Raters and Verifiers to have specific Phius training.

Item PHI Phius Notes
Certifier PHI or a PHI-accredited Certifier Phius There are over 100 PHI-accredited Certifiers worldwide
Energy Modeler/Designer Designated Project Passive House Consultant Designated Project Phius Consultant Neither PHI nor Phius requires the responsible person to be certified.
Verifier(s) Independent qualified individuals as accepted by the Certifier. Phius Certified Rater or Verifier Phius Raters must first be HERS Raters. Verifiers must be certified DOE Raters. Credentials expire every three years.
Builder Responsible for building construction. Responsible for building construction. Neither PHI nor Phius requires the responsible builder/construction manager or subordinates to be certified.

Process

For PHI-certified projects, the process can be varied to fit the needs of the project and team, working in consultation with the PHI-accredited certifier. Our Building Certifier Scope of Services guidance outlines the wide range of services PHI-accredited certifiers may offer depending on the needs of the project and team.

Item PHI Phius Notes
Design requirements Drawings, specifications, and the PHPP model demonstrating compliance with PHI standards. Drawings, specifications, and WUFI model demonstrating compliance with Phius, EPA Energy Star & airPLUS, and DOE ZERH.
Pre-Construction Design Approval (To confirm what will be bid and can be certified) “Design Assurance”
provided
“Design Certification” provided Phius requires Design Certification. PHI does not require Design Assurance. However, incentives or codes may require it.
Verifications required in construction Only Passive House-specific items as outlined by PHI All items required by EPA Energy Star & airPLUS, and DOE ZERH + Phius-specific items. PHI projects may include EPA and DOE program requirements.
Final Certification Required Only PHI EPA Energy Star & airPLUS, DOE ZERH, and Phius. PHI projects may include EPA and DOE program requirements.