Heat pump or gas furnace? This is the biggest HVAC decision you will make, and the answer changes depending on where you live, your utility rates, and your home’s existing setup.
A heat pump moves heat instead of burning fuel. It runs on electricity and can both heat and cool your home. A gas furnace burns natural gas or propane to create heat and pairs with a separate AC system for cooling.
Both options work. The question is which one costs less over 10 to 15 years in your specific situation.
Here is a straight comparison of upfront cost, operating cost, climate fit, and lifespan.
Jump to Fix
- Upfront Cost Comparison
- Operating Cost by Region
- Climate Suitability
- IRA Tax Credits and Rebates
- Lifespan and Maintenance
- Ductwork Considerations
- When to Call a Pro
Upfront Cost Comparison
These are national average installed costs for a typical 3-ton system in 2025-2026:
| System type | Installed cost | What is included |
|---|---|---|
| Gas furnace + AC (80% furnace, 14 SEER2) | $5,500 to $8,500 | Furnace, condenser, evaporator coil, installation |
| Gas furnace + AC (96% furnace, 16 SEER2) | $7,500 to $11,500 | High-efficiency furnace, matching AC |
| Standard heat pump (14-16 SEER2) | $5,500 to $9,000 | Heat pump outdoor unit, air handler with backup heat |
| Cold climate heat pump (18+ SEER2) | $8,000 to $15,000 | Hyper-heat or inverter heat pump with full capacity at 5 degrees F |
| Ductless mini-split heat pump (single zone) | $2,000 to $5,000 | Single outdoor unit + one indoor head |
The comparison is not equal. A gas furnace system needs separate AC equipment. A heat pump does both heating and cooling in one unit. If you are replacing a furnace alone, adding a heat pump instead means you also get air conditioning for effectively the same price or less.
Gas furnace replacement without AC conversion: $2,500 to $5,500 for the furnace alone.
Heat pump replacement (heating + cooling): $5,500 to $15,000 for the complete system.
On a like-for-like replacement basis, a heat pump is $500 to $2,000 more upfront than a gas furnace with matching AC.
Operating Cost by Region
This is where the math gets specific to your zip code. National averages hide the real story.
| Region | Gas furnace annual heating cost | Heat pump annual heating cost | Winner |
|---|---|---|---|
| Southeast (GA, FL, SC) | $800 to $1,200 | $500 to $800 | Heat pump by $300 to $400/year |
| Mid-Atlantic (NY, NJ, PA) | $1,000 to $1,600 | $900 to $1,400 | Heat pump by $100 to $200/year |
| Midwest (IL, OH, MI) | $1,200 to $2,000 | $1,300 to $2,200 | Gas by $100 to $200/year |
| Northeast (MA, NH, VT) | $1,500 to $2,500 | $1,600 to $2,400 | Close, depends on electric rate |
| Mountain West (CO, UT, WY) | $1,000 to $1,800 | $1,100 to $2,000 | Gas by $100 to $200/year |
| Pacific NW (OR, WA) | $900 to $1,400 | $700 to $1,100 | Heat pump by $200 to $300/year |
| California (coastal) | $700 to $1,100 | $500 to $900 | Heat pump by $200/year |
The key variable is your electric rate vs. gas rate. Heat pumps produce 2 to 4 units of heat for every 1 unit of electricity they consume (HSPF2 rating). But in areas with very high electric rates and cheap natural gas, the gas furnace still wins on operating cost.
Use this rule of thumb: if your electric rate is under $0.12 per kWh and your gas rate is over $1.20 per therm, a heat pump will cost less to run. If the reverse is true, gas is cheaper.
Climate Suitability
This used to be simple: heat pumps did not work well in cold climates. That changed around 2020.
Cold Climate Heat Pumps
Modern cold climate heat pumps (Mitsubishi Hyper-Heat, Carrier Infinity Greenspeed, Daikin Aurora) maintain full heating capacity down to about 5 degrees F and continue operating down to negative 13 to negative 22 degrees F. They use inverter-driven variable-speed compressors and enhanced vapor injection.
These units work well in Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Maine. They are not experimental. They are proven technology with millions of installed units in Canada and Scandinavia.
When Heat Pumps Struggle
- Below 5 degrees F sustained. Even the best cold climate heat pump loses some capacity. Below this point, backup heat kicks in. That backup is either electric resistance strips (expensive to run) or a gas furnace in a hybrid system.
- No backup heat source. If your heat pump cannot keep up and you only have electric resistance backup, your electricity bill will spike on the coldest week of the year.
- Ductwork in uninsulated spaces. Heat pumps deliver lower-temperature air than gas furnaces (95 to 105 degrees F vs 130 to 140 degrees F). If your ducts run through a cold crawlspace or attic, you lose efficiency.
When Gas Furnaces Win
- Very cold climates with cheap natural gas. Northern states with access to low-cost natural gas (parts of Ohio, Pennsylvania, Michigan) are still better served by gas.
- Homes with existing gas infrastructure. If you already have a gas meter, gas line, and venting in place, a gas furnace replacement costs less upfront.
- Large homes in cold climates. A 4,000+ square foot home in northern Minnesota needs serious BTUs. A gas furnace handles this at a lower equipment cost than a massive cold climate heat pump system.
IRA Tax Credits and Rebates
The Inflation Reduction Act made heat pumps significantly more affordable:
| Incentive | Heat pump | Gas furnace |
|---|---|---|
| Federal tax credit (Energy Efficient Home Improvement) | Up to $2,000 (30% of cost) | Up to $600 (30% of cost) |
| High-efficiency natural gas furnace credit | N/A | Up to $600 (95%+ AFUE) |
| HOMES rebate (income-qualified) | Up to $8,000 (low income) | N/A |
| State-level heat pump rebates | $500 to $5,000 (varies) | $100 to $500 |
The $2,000 federal heat pump credit applies to units that meet the highest efficiency tier (CEE Tier 1 or better, typically 15+ SEER2 and 8.5+ HSPF2). Most cold climate heat pumps qualify. Check the AHRI certificate before buying.
A qualified heat pump with federal + state incentives can be $3,000 to $8,000 cheaper than the sticker price.
Lifespan and Maintenance
| System type | Typical lifespan | Annual maintenance cost |
|---|---|---|
| Gas furnace | 15 to 20 years | $100 to $200 |
| Central AC | 10 to 15 years | $100 to $200 |
| Standard heat pump | 12 to 15 years | $150 to $300 |
| Cold climate heat pump | 12 to 15 years | $150 to $300 |
Heat pumps require more maintenance. They run year-round and have more components (reversing valve, expansion valve, defrost board). Annual professional maintenance is important. A gas furnace paired with AC spreads the load across two units but you maintain both.
Ductwork Considerations
Both system types need ductwork unless you go ductless. But there is a catch with heat pumps and existing ducts.
Heat pumps move more air at a lower temperature than gas furnaces. If your ducts are undersized or poorly designed for a heat pump, you may see:
- Higher static pressure (louder airflow, higher electric cost)
- Reduced efficiency (the heat pump works harder to push air)
- Shorter equipment life (blower runs faster, wears sooner)
A Manual D duct analysis should be part of any heat pump quote. If the contractor does not mention duct sizing, ask for it specifically.
For homes without ducts, a ductless mini-split heat pump is the obvious solution. Multiple heads on a single outdoor unit handle different zones. Installation cost per zone runs $2,000 to $5,000.
When to Call a Pro
Unless you are replacing a like-for-like gas furnace with an identical model, you need a professional load calculation and equipment selection. Key triggers:
- You live in a cold climate and are considering a heat pump
- You currently have gas and want to switch to electric (or vice versa)
- Your home is over 3,000 square feet or has unusual layout
- You want to take advantage of IRA rebates and need qualifying equipment documentation
- Your existing ductwork is undersized, leaky, or uninsulated
Get at least three quotes from different contractors. Compare the Manual J load calculation results, not just the price. The same house can get a 2-ton or 5-ton recommendation depending on who does the math.
Bottom Line: Heat Pump vs. Gas Furnace
In the South (Southeast, Southwest, Pacific Coast): Heat pump every time. It costs less to run, handles mild winters fine, and gives you AC for no extra equipment.
In the North with cheap gas (Ohio, Pennsylvania, parts of the Midwest): Gas furnace still makes financial sense. Heat pump technology has improved, but cheap gas is hard to beat for operating cost.
In the North with expensive gas or no gas line (New England, parts of the Midwest, rural areas): Cold climate heat pump is the winner. You avoid propane or oil costs, and modern cold climate units handle all but the coldest few days.
In any climate: A hybrid system (heat pump with gas furnace backup) gives you the best of both worlds. The heat pump handles 80 to 90% of heating hours. The gas furnace kicks in during the coldest weather. This is expensive upfront ($10,000 to $16,000) but optimal for operating cost.