Cost & ROI
HVAC cost & ROI calculators
Run the numbers before you sit down with a contractor.
HVAC equipment is one of the largest purchases a homeowner makes in a decade. Contractor quotes on identical scope routinely vary by 30 to 50 percent across the same ZIP code. The spread is real, and walking into a sales meeting without knowing the ballpark is how people end up paying $14,000 for a system that should have cost $9,500 installed.
These seven calculators cover the full financial picture. What does the replacement actually cost in your region, broken out by equipment, labor, refrigerant lines, electrical, and permit? How much can you take off the top with state and utility rebates and the federal HEAR program? Does the upgrade pay back on energy savings inside the warranty period, or are you really paying for comfort? When the unit you already own fails, do you fix it or replace it?
The numbers in these tools come from aggregated installed-quote data verified quarterly, EIA Annual Energy Outlook electricity and natural gas price projections, state energy office rebate portals, and the DSIRE incentive database. Where pricing depends on a regional labor multiplier, we use BLS Occupational Employment data for HVAC installers in each Census region.
The cost & ROI tools
Seven calculators covering everything from a single replacement quote check to lifetime cost comparison between fuel types.
- HVAC replacement cost Popular
Installed price for AC, heat pump, or furnace.
- Heat pump vs gas furnace Popular
Lifetime cost with your utility rates.
- SEER2 savings calculator Popular
Old SEER vs new SEER2 dollar comparison.
- HVAC operating cost
Monthly run cost by climate and unit.
- Heat pump rebate finder
IRA, state, and utility rebates by ZIP.
- Payback period calculator
How long until the upgrade pays for itself.
- Replacement vs repair
Run the math before you sign the quote.
Where the cost data comes from
Quote data is aggregated from current contractor-quote databases plus direct manufacturer pricing for the equipment line items. Energy costs come from federal data sources, not generic estimates.
- Aggregated contractor-quote data verified quarterly for installed pricing by region
- EIA Annual Energy Outlook for residential electricity and natural gas price projections
- DSIRE database (Database of State Incentives for Renewables and Efficiency) for ZIP-level lookups
- Department of Energy HEAR program guidance and state implementation portals
- BLS Occupational Employment Statistics for regional HVAC labor multipliers
The cost tools are reviewed by Dana Okafor, an HVAC contractor and estimator with 11 years of residential business ownership and hundreds of replacement bids written every year, and Priya Natarajan, a licensed mechanical engineer who builds calibrated energy models for retrofits.
What these tools cannot do
Cost numbers age fast. Equipment pricing swings 20 to 40 percent across regions, seasons, and brands, and labor rates shift faster than published surveys can track. Use these tools to know what range you should be hearing, not to argue an exact dollar figure on a kitchen table. Get three quotes on any install over $5,000. Every time.