The water heater market changed in 2024 and 2025. Federal incentives, new efficiency standards, and heat pump technology improvements now make the choice between a heat pump water heater and a tankless unit genuinely competitive.
A heat pump water heater (HPWH) uses electricity to move heat from the surrounding air into the water tank. It is 2 to 4 times more efficient than a standard electric water heater. A tankless unit heats water on demand with no storage tank. Both are more efficient than traditional tank water heaters.
But they work very differently. And the right choice depends on your home, your climate, and your budget.
Jump to Fix
- Upfront Cost Comparison
- IRA Rebates and Incentives
- Energy Factor and Efficiency Ratings
- Space Requirements
- Climate Performance
- Payback Period Analysis
- When to Call a Pro
Upfront Cost Comparison
These are national average installed prices for 2025-2026:
| Water heater type | Unit cost | Installed cost | Key installation notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 50-gallon heat pump water heater | $1,200 to $2,000 | $1,800 to $3,000 | Needs condensate drain, 240V outlet, 750+ cubic ft of space |
| 65 to 80-gallon heat pump water heater | $1,500 to $2,500 | $2,200 to $3,500 | Larger tank, needed for 4+ person households |
| Gas tankless (whole house) | $600 to $1,200 | $1,500 to $2,800 | Gas line upgrade, stainless venting, condensate drain |
| Electric tankless (whole house) | $500 to $900 | $1,200 to $2,500 | Panel upgrade likely (80 to 150 amp draw, $800 to $2,500) |
| Standard 50-gallon electric tank | $400 to $700 | $700 to $1,200 | Simple swap, no special requirements |
The HPWH upfront cost is higher than tankless in most cases. But the IRA rebate changes that math substantially.
IRA Rebates and Incentives
The Inflation Reduction Act created significant financial incentives for heat pump water heaters specifically. Tankless units do not qualify for the same level of support.
| Incentive | Heat pump water heater | Tankless (gas or electric) |
|---|---|---|
| Federal tax credit (30% of cost) | Up to $2,000 | Up to $600 (gas only, 95%+ efficient) |
| HOMES rebate (income-qualified) | Up to $1,750 | Not eligible |
| State-level HPWH rebates | $200 to $1,000 (varies) | $50 to $200 (gas efficiency rebate) |
A $2,000 HPWH installed for $2,500 minus a $1,750 rebate = $750 out of pocket. That makes the HPWH cheaper than a tankless unit after incentives in many states.
The federal tax credit applies to any HPWH with a Uniform Energy Factor (UEF) of 2.0 or higher. All major brand HPWHs (Rheem, AO Smith, Bradford White, Ruud) meet this threshold.
The HOMES rebate is administered by each state. Some states have launched their programs. Others are still setting them up. Check your state energy office for current availability.
Energy Factor and Efficiency Ratings
| Metric | Heat pump water heater (50-gal) | Gas tankless | Electric tankless | Standard electric tank |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| UEF rating | 2.0 to 4.0 | 0.82 to 0.96 | 0.94 to 0.99 | 0.88 to 0.95 |
| Annual energy cost (family of 4) | $150 to $250 | $200 to $350 | $350 to $500 | $400 to $600 |
| Annual savings vs standard electric | $250 to $350 | N/A (gas vs electric comparison) | $50 to $150 | Baseline |
The HPWH is the most efficient option by a wide margin. A UEF of 3.0 means it produces 3 units of hot water energy for every 1 unit of electricity it consumes. No other water heater type comes close.
Tankless is still an efficiency improvement over standard tanks. Gas tankless saves $100 to $200 per year over a standard gas tank. Electric tankless saves $50 to $150 per year over a standard electric tank. But neither matches HPWH efficiency.
Space Requirements
This is the most common dealbreaker for heat pump water heaters.
Heat Pump Water Heater Requirements
- 750+ cubic feet of air space. The HPWH pulls heat from the surrounding air. In a small closet, it will rapidly cool the space and switch to resistance heat (less efficient). Minimum suggested space: 10 x 10 x 7.5 feet. Larger is better.
- Mechanical room or unfinished basement. Ideal location. Plenty of air volume, condensate drain nearby, and noise is not an issue.
- Garage in warm climates. Works great in a garage in the South. In cold climates, a garage that drops below 40 degrees F forces the HPWH into resistance mode, eliminating efficiency gains.
- Condensate drain required. HPWHs produce condensation (similar to an AC unit). You need a floor drain, condensate pump, or drain connection. Without one, you have moisture problems.
Tankless Requirements
- Wall-mounted, compact unit. A tankless unit occupies about 2 cubic feet on a wall. No floor space needed.
- Gas line or electrical service. Gas tankless needs a 3/4 inch gas line. Electric tankless needs 80 to 150 amps of panel capacity.
- Venting (gas only). Category III stainless steel vent pipe to the exterior. Cannot share a vent with other appliances.
- Cold weather location. Tankless units installed outdoors in freezing climates need freeze protection features. Some models have internal heaters. Others need to be indoors.
If you have a small 5x5 utility closet: Tankless is the better fit. A HPWH in a space that small will not perform well.
If you have an unfinished basement or large mechanical room: HPWH is ideal. The space and drain requirements are easy to meet.
Climate Performance
| Climate zone | Heat pump water heater | Gas tankless | Electric tankless |
|---|---|---|---|
| Warm climate (Southeast, Southwest) | Excellent. Heat pump efficiency peaks in warm air. Bonus: dehumidifies the space. | Good | Good |
| Mixed climate (Mid-Atlantic, PNW) | Good. Can be installed in conditioned basement. Efficiency drops slightly in winter. | Good | Good |
| Cold climate (Northeast, Midwest) | Fair. Must be in conditioned basement. Garage or uninsulated space kills efficiency. | Good | Good |
| Very cold climate (MN, WI, ME, ND) | Limited. Strongly depends on indoor installation in heated space. Garage installs are not viable. | Good | Good |
The cold climate HPWH question: If you install a HPWH in your basement in Minnesota, it works fine because the basement is conditioned (heated) space. But you need to ensure the basement has 750+ cubic feet of open space. If the HPWH is in a small utility room with a closed door, it will switch to resistance heat mode and lose efficiency.
Bonus benefit in warm climates: HPWHs dehumidify the space they are in. In a humid basement, this is an actual benefit that reduces musty odors and helps prevent mold.
Payback Period Analysis
Here is the 10-year cost comparison for a family of 4 replacing an old standard electric water heater:
| Water heater type | Installed cost | Annual energy cost | 10-year total (installed + energy) | 10-year savings vs standard electric |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard electric tank (50-gal) | $900 | $450 | $5,400 | Baseline |
| Heat pump water heater (50-gal) | $2,200 | $200 | $4,200 | $1,200 saved |
| Heat pump WH with IRA rebate ($1,750) | $450 (after rebate) | $200 | $2,450 | $2,950 saved |
| Gas tankless | $2,000 | $300 | $5,000 | $400 saved |
| Electric tankless (with panel upgrade) | $2,800 | $400 | $6,800 | -$1,400 (costs more) |
HPWH payback period without rebate: 4 to 6 years. After that, you are saving $250 to $350 per year.
HPWH payback period with IRA rebate: Immediate. The rebate covers most or all of the upfront premium. You save from year one.
Gas tankless payback period vs standard gas tank: Comparing gas to gas, a gas tankless costs about $1,000 more upfront and saves $100 to $200 per year. Payback period: 5 to 10 years.
Electric tankless with panel upgrade: The panel upgrade ($800 to $2,500) kills the financial case unless you specifically need tankless for space or flow rate reasons.
When to Call a Pro
Both HPWH and tankless installations typically require a professional.
Call a licensed plumber or HVAC contractor when:
- You are converting from one fuel type to another (gas to electric or electric to gas)
- You need a new 240V circuit or subpanel (HPWH and electric tankless both need this)
- Your gas line needs upsizing for a gas tankless unit
- You are unsure whether your space meets the 750+ cubic foot minimum for HPWH
- You need a condensate drain line run to a suitable location
- Your home requires permits for water heater installation
- You have an older home with galvanized steel or polybutylene plumbing
HPWH specific: Some utility companies and state programs offer free or heavily discounted HPWH installations as part of their energy efficiency programs. Before buying a unit, check with your local utility. You may qualify for an installed unit at $500 or less out of pocket.
Bottom Line: Heat Pump Water Heater vs. Tankless
Choose a heat pump water heater when:
- You have a basement, garage (warm climate), or large mechanical room (750+ cu ft)
- You qualify for the IRA or state rebates (most people do)
- You want the lowest possible energy bill
- You live in a warm to mixed climate
- Your home has electric service already (HPWH replaces electric tank directly)
Choose a gas tankless when:
- You have limited indoor space (small closet, no basement)
- You have natural gas service already
- Your household has high simultaneous hot water demand (4+ people showering at once)
- You want endless hot water without recovery time
- You live in a very cold climate with no conditioned basement space
Choose an electric tankless only when:
- You have no natural gas available
- You have ample electrical panel capacity (200+ amp panel)
- You need a compact unit and cannot use gas
- You understand the higher operating cost and potential panel upgrade expense