Heat Pump Cost in Georgia (2026): Prices, Rebates and Savings
Georgia

Heat Pump Cost in Georgia (2026): Prices, Rebates and Savings

Heat pump cost in Georgia in 2026: ducted $7,500 to $17,000, mini splits to $19,000, geothermal to $43,000. See rebates, tax credits, and sizing by home.

MR Marcus Reid Marcus Reid is a former residential HVAC installation technician who writes Reverra's

Heat pump cost in Georgia in 2026 typically runs $7,500 to $17,000 installed for a ducted air-source system, with most whole-home jobs landing near $10,500. Ductless mini splits cover a similar $7,500 to $19,000 band, while geothermal sits far higher at $17,000 to $43,000. Georgia’s mild winters and slightly below-average install costs make it one of the friendlier states for a heat pump.

Savings calculator

Estimate your heat pump savings and payback

A few choices is all it takes. The assumptions are shown below; this is an indicative estimate, not a quote.

Assumptions: heating load is estimated from home size and climate. Current-fuel cost uses roughly $1.40/therm gas at 92% efficiency, $3.80/gal oil at 85%, and $2.80/gal propane at 90%. Electricity uses your state's typical residential rate (national average about $0.165/kWh if no state is chosen), and heat pump running cost applies a seasonal COP that varies by system and climate (about 2.4 to 4.5). Install figures are typical installed ranges adjusted by a state cost factor. The federal tax credit is 30% of cost, capped at $2,000 for air-source systems (IRS Section 25C) and uncapped for geothermal (Section 25D). If you say the system also replaces air conditioning, we subtract the cost of a separate central AC you would otherwise buy (about $4,000 to $7,500 by home size), since a heat pump cools too. State and utility rebates shown below are additional and vary; income-qualified IRA rebates of up to $8,000 are rolling out where available and are not baked into the payback. Indicative only, not a quote or tax advice.

What a heat pump costs in Georgia

Georgia is a strong fit for heat pumps. Winters are mild, so the equipment rarely has to lean on aux heat, and local labor runs about 5% below the national average. That install cost factor of 0.95 is why the numbers below sit a touch under what you would pay in a higher-cost state.

Electricity here averages about $0.14/kWh, close to the middle of the pack and below the national average of roughly $0.165. That matters: a heat pump’s running cost is driven by your rate and by how efficient the unit is, measured in SEER2 for cooling and HSPF2 for heating.

$7,500 to $17,000Ducted central air-source, installed
~$10,500Typical whole-home ducted job
$0.14/kWhTypical Georgia electricity rate
0.95xInstall cost vs national average
Heat Pump Cost in Georgia (2026)

Cost by system type

The three main paths differ a lot in price and in the kind of home they suit. Ducted central systems reuse the ductwork you likely already have. Mini splits skip ducts entirely and heat room by room. Geothermal costs the most up front but delivers the lowest running cost through a buried loop.

System typeGeorgia installed rangeBest for
Ducted central air-source$7,500 to $17,000Homes with existing ductwork
Ductless mini split (multi-zone)$7,500 to $19,000No ducts, additions, zoned comfort
Geothermal (ground-source)$17,000 to $43,000Long-term owners, larger lots

Ranges reflect equipment, labor, and typical Georgia conditions. Your quote depends on home size, existing ducts, and the number of zones.

In a mild state like Georgia, the cheapest quote and the cheapest system to run are often two different things. Efficiency pays you back every winter.

Cost by home size

Sizing is where a lot of Georgia quotes go wrong. Bigger is not better. An oversized unit short-cycles, wastes money, and leaves rooms humid. A proper Manual J load calculation sets the right capacity, measured in tons.

Home sizeTypical capacityDucted installed range
Up to 1,200 sq ft2 tons$7,500 to $10,500
1,500 to 2,000 sq ft3 tons$9,000 to $13,500
2,500 to 3,000 sq ft4 to 5 tons$12,000 to $17,000

Square footage is a starting point only. Insulation, ceiling height, and window count change the load. Insist on a proper sizing calculation before you sign.

Good to know Georgia’s mild winters mean a well-sized heat pump handles most of the season on its own, so you rarely burn expensive electric backup. That keeps the running cost gap over a gas furnace smaller than in cold states, and it favors a higher COP unit that stays efficient at typical local temperatures.

Rebates and tax credits in Georgia

Georgia: check your utility and state energy office for heat pump rebates, on top of the federal tax credit. Income-qualified IRA (HEEHRA) rebates of up to $8,000 are rolling out where available. Check your utility and state energy office.

On the federal side, the 25C tax credit covers 30% of a qualifying heat pump install up to a $2,000 cap, which most ducted and ductless jobs can reach. Geothermal uses a different credit, 25D, which is 30% with no dollar cap, a big reason a ground-source system’s real cost is lower than the sticker suggests. See our tax credit and rebates guide for how these stack.

Watch out The up-to-$8,000 HEEHRA rebate is income-qualified and rolling out where available, so it is not guaranteed for every Georgia household. Confirm eligibility and current funding with your utility and the state energy office before you count on it in your budget.

What drives your Georgia quote

  • Ductwork condition. Leaky or undersized ducts can add cost or push you toward a mini split.
  • Efficiency tier. Higher SEER2 and HSPF2 units cost more up front but cut your $0.14/kWh bill.
  • Refrigerant and equipment. Newer refrigerant systems and variable-speed models sit at the top of each range.
  • Zoning. A multi-zone mini split for a whole home costs more than a single head.
  • Installer. Quality of the crew matters as much as the box. Compare a few bids from our installation guide.

Is a heat pump worth it in Georgia

For most Georgia homes, yes. The mild climate plays to a heat pump’s strengths, the mid-range electricity rate keeps running costs reasonable, and install prices sit below the national average. If you are replacing an aging gas furnace and AC together, a single heat pump often makes the cleanest financial case. Weigh the details in our heat pump vs furnace comparison, and if you own a larger lot for the long haul, price a geothermal system against the uncapped 25D credit.

Frequently asked questions

How much does a heat pump cost in Georgia in 2026?

A ducted central air-source heat pump typically runs $7,500 to $17,000 installed in Georgia, with most whole-home jobs near $10,500. Ductless mini splits range $7,500 to $19,000, and geothermal systems run $17,000 to $43,000.

Why are heat pump installs cheaper in Georgia?

Local labor and market conditions put Georgia install costs about 5% below the national average. The mild winters also mean smaller, simpler systems that rely less on backup heat, which keeps quotes reasonable.

What rebates are available for heat pumps in Georgia?

Check your utility and state energy office for heat pump rebates on top of the federal tax credit. Income-qualified IRA (HEEHRA) rebates of up to $8,000 are rolling out where available, so confirm eligibility and funding locally.

Can I claim the federal tax credit in Georgia?

Yes. The 25C credit covers 30% of a qualifying heat pump install up to a $2,000 cap, which most ducted and ductless jobs reach. Geothermal uses the 25D credit, which is 30% with no dollar cap.

What size heat pump do I need for a Georgia home?

It depends on your home, not just square footage. A rough guide is 2 tons up to 1,200 sq ft, 3 tons for 1,500 to 2,000 sq ft, and 4 to 5 tons for 2,500 to 3,000 sq ft. Always get a Manual J load calculation before you buy.