Editorial heat pump quote review scene for Heat Pump vs Gas Furnace

Heat Pump Guide

Updated By Marcus Reed

Heat Pump vs Gas Furnace

How to compare a heat pump quote against a gas furnace replacement without ignoring comfort, rates, ducts, and backup heat.

Budget

Quick answer: The right comparison is not just equipment price. Compare delivered heat cost, cooling replacement value, duct condition, backup heat, panel work, carbon rules, and whether the furnace quote avoids work the heat pump quote includes.

Best for

US homeowners comparing heat pump quotes, rebates, and replacement options.

Wrong fit

Commercial HVAC projects, DIY refrigerant work, or final tax/legal advice.

Tradeoff

The right heat pump quote is a scope decision before it is a brand decision.

The right comparison is not just equipment price. Compare delivered heat cost, cooling replacement value, duct condition, backup heat, panel work, carbon rules, and whether the furnace quote avoids work the heat pump quote includes.

The commercial mistake is comparing the outdoor unit name and ignoring the installed scope. A heat pump quote is really a bundle: equipment, indoor distribution, controls, electrical work, permits, backup heat, rebate paperwork, and the contractor's design judgment.

Direct answer

For a normal 2026 homeowner quote, ask the installer to separate equipment, labor, electrical, duct or indoor-unit work, backup heat, permits, and rebates. If the quote subtracts a tax credit or rebate, ask for the program name, effective date, eligibility rule, and who receives the money.

What to compare

Quote lineWhat it should sayRed flag
SizingManual J or documented load basisTonnage picked from square footage only
EquipmentExact outdoor and indoor model numbersBrand name without AHRI match
DistributionDuct work, head placement, or mixed designComfort promise with no room-by-room plan
ElectricalPanel, circuit, disconnect, heat stripsElectrical marked as TBD after signing
IncentivesProgram, amount, date, recipientStale federal credit or guaranteed rebate language

Quote red flags

  • The proposal says "whole home" but does not show room loads, ducts, or indoor-unit placement.
  • The installer subtracts a 2026 federal tax credit without a dated IRS source.
  • Backup heat is assumed but not priced, controlled, or explained.
  • The quote lists a premium brand but no AHRI match or low-temperature output.
  • Rebates appear as guaranteed discounts even though the program depends on income, utility territory, participating contractor status, or remaining budget.

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What to ask before signing

  1. What design temperature did you size around?
  2. What are the exact outdoor and indoor model numbers?
  3. Which rooms will be comfortable on the coldest normal design day?
  4. What electrical work is included, and what is excluded?
  5. Which rebates are included, who receives them, and what date was availability checked?

FAQ

Is the cheapest heat pump quote usually the best?

No. A lower quote can be the best one, but only if it includes the same design, electrical scope, backup heat, warranty, and rebate assumptions as the higher quotes.

Do I need Manual J?

For a serious whole-home or cold-climate project, yes. A sizing worksheet is useful for screening, but it is not a replacement for contractor design.

Should I keep backup heat?

Often yes during a transition, especially in cold climates or when duct/room coverage is uncertain. The quote should say how backup heat works and what it costs to run.

Can I trust rebate math in installer proposals?

Only after it is tied to a current primary source, utility territory, income rule if relevant, qualified equipment, participating contractor status, and a reservation or application process.

Sources

Methodology

These guides are built from public specifications, primary program pages, utility documentation, manufacturer materials, and repeated buyer questions that show up in quote and installation decisions.

Manufacturer and installer responses can clarify pricing bands, warranty terms, support footprint, and common mistakes. They do not move a page up the shortlist on their own.

Written by Marcus ReedReviewed by Heat Pump Guide Editorial Team, Editorial review on July 5, 2026How we reviewEditorial policy

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