You need air conditioning. Maybe your home has no ducts. Maybe your existing system is failing. Maybe you just want something more efficient. The two main options are a mini-split (ductless) system and a central AC system with ducts.
They work differently. They cost differently. And one is usually a better fit for your specific home than the other.
Here is a direct comparison of cost, efficiency, installation, and which one works where.
Jump to Fix
- Upfront Cost Comparison
- Efficiency and SEER2 Ratings
- Installation Requirements
- Multi-Zone Capability
- Aesthetics and Design
- Best Use Cases by Home Type
- When to Call a Pro
Upfront Cost Comparison
These are national average installed prices for 2025-2026:
| System type | Installed cost | Coverage |
|---|---|---|
| Single-zone mini-split (12,000 BTU) | $1,500 to $3,000 | One room or open area up to 500 sq ft |
| Single-zone mini-split (18,000 BTU) | $2,000 to $4,000 | Large room or small apartment (up to 800 sq ft) |
| Dual-zone mini-split | $3,500 to $6,500 | Two rooms or zones |
| Tri-zone mini-split | $4,500 to $8,500 | Three zones |
| Quad-zone mini-split | $5,500 to $11,000 | Four zones |
| Central AC (2-3 ton, 14 SEER2) | $4,500 to $6,500 | Whole home (1,200 to 2,000 sq ft) with existing ducts |
| Central AC (3-4 ton, 16 SEER2) | $5,500 to $9,000 | Whole home (2,000 to 3,000 sq ft) with existing ducts |
| Central AC with new ductwork | $10,000 to $18,000 | Whole home including new duct system |
The cost crossover point is critical. For a home with existing ductwork, central AC is cheaper for whole-home cooling. A 3-ton central AC at $6,000 covers the entire house. A mini-split system covering the same 2,000 sq ft would need 4 to 6 zones at $6,000 to $10,000.
For a home without ducts, mini-split wins on cost. Adding ductwork to an existing home runs $5,000 to $12,000 on top of the AC equipment cost. A multi-zone mini-split for $5,500 to $8,500 is significantly cheaper.
Efficiency and SEER2 Ratings
Mini-splits are generally more efficient than central AC systems of the same age and price tier.
| Efficiency metric | Budget mini-split | Premium mini-split | Budget central AC | Premium central AC |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SEER2 rating | 17 to 21 | 22 to 38 | 14 to 16 | 18 to 26 |
| EER2 rating | 10 to 12 | 13 to 18 | 10 to 12 | 12 to 15 |
| HSPF2 (heating mode) | 7.5 to 9 | 10 to 14 | N/A (Separate furnace) | N/A |
Why are mini-splits more efficient? Inverter technology. Nearly all mini-splits use variable-speed inverter compressors that modulate output to match demand. Central AC systems in the budget and mid-range use single-speed scroll compressors that run at full capacity until the thermostat is satisfied, then cycle off. Premium central AC is inverter-driven but costs $8,000 to $15,000.
Duct losses matter. Central AC loses 15 to 30% of its cooling capacity through ductwork, especially in unconditioned attics and crawlspaces. Mini-splits deliver refrigerant directly to the indoor unit with minimal line loss. The actual efficiency difference in a real home is larger than the SEER2 number suggests.
The heating bonus. Mini-splits are heat pumps. They provide both cooling and heating down to about 5 degrees F (cold climate models) or 20 degrees F (standard models). Central AC provides cooling only. You need a separate heating system.
Installation Requirements
Mini-Split Installation
- No ductwork required. Just a 3-inch hole through the wall for the refrigerant line, power cable, and condensate drain.
- Mount indoor unit on wall, ceiling, or floor. Wall-mounted units are the most common. Cassette units mount in the ceiling. Floor units work in rooms with no wall space.
- Refrigerant lines run up to 50 to 100 feet. The outdoor unit can be on the ground or mounted on a wall bracket.
- Condensate drain must slope downhill. Gravity drains are preferred. Condensate pumps help if the drain line must run uphill.
- Electrical requirement. Small, single-zone units run on standard 120V or 208-230V, 15-amp circuits. Larger multi-zone systems need dedicated circuits.
Central AC Installation
- Ductwork is required. If ducts already exist, installation is straightforward. Install the condenser outside, the evaporator coil inside (on top of the furnace), and connect them.
- Ductwork condition matters. Leaky ducts, undersized ducts, and uninsulated ducts in attics reduce efficiency by 15 to 30%.
- Larger electrical requirement. A central AC condenser needs a 30 to 60 amp dedicated circuit, typically 208-230V.
- Evaporator coil compatibility. The new coil must match the furnace or air handler dimensions. Older furnaces may need a transition piece or replacement.
- Refrigerant lines. Pre-existing lines from the old system must be flushed if switching refrigerants. New line sets add $200 to $500.
Multi-Zone Capability
| Feature | Mini-Split | Central AC |
|---|---|---|
| Zone control | Each indoor unit is its own zone | Requires zoning dampers ($1,500 to $3,500 add-on) |
| Temperature control per room | Yes, each room has its own thermostat | With zoning, yes. Without zoning, one thermostat for whole house. |
| Simultaneous heat and cool | Some systems (3-pipe) allow different rooms to heat and cool | Not possible without complex zoning |
| Expansion cost | Add a zone for $1,500 to $3,500 | Would need new AC system or major zoning changes |
This is the mini-split’s strongest feature for many homes. If you want to cool the bedroom at night without freezing the living room, a mini-split system with individual controls is simpler and cheaper than a fully zoned central AC system.
Zoning a central AC system requires motorized dampers in the ductwork, a zone control panel, and a bypass duct to prevent high static pressure. This adds $1,500 to $3,500 to the installation and is best done during initial construction or major renovation.
Aesthetics and Design
| Aesthetic factor | Mini-Split | Central AC |
|---|---|---|
| Indoor presence | Wall-mounted unit in each room (7 to 12 inches wide, 10 to 12 inches tall) | Floor registers or ceiling vents only |
| Outdoor presence | Single condenser for 1 to 5 indoor units | Single condenser for whole home |
| Noise (indoor) | 19 to 45 dB depending on setting (very quiet on low) | 25 to 55 dB at registers (varies with ductwork) |
| Noise (outdoor) | 50 to 60 dB | 55 to 70 dB |
| Installation visibility | Lineset cover (3x3 inch plastic channel) on exterior wall | No visible components except vents |
Mini-splits are visible in every room. The wall-mounted white panel is the most common type. Some people do not mind it. Some find it unattractive and prefer the invisible cooling of central AC. Ceiling-cassette and floor-mounted units offer better aesthetics but cost more.
Central AC is invisible. The only things you see are the supply registers (usually on the floor or ceiling) and the return grille. If aesthetics matter, central AC wins.
Best Use Cases by Home Type
Homes Without Ductwork
Winner: Mini-Split. Adding ductwork to an existing home is expensive and disruptive. Mini-splits eliminate that entirely.
Best for:
- Older homes (pre-1950) with radiators or baseboard heat, no AC
- Homes with hydronic (hot water) heating systems
- Additions, garages converted to living space, sunrooms
- Homes with crawlspaces that make ductwork impractical
Homes With Existing Ductwork in Good Condition
Winner: Central AC. The ducts are already there. A central AC replacement is $5,000 to $9,000 for whole-home cooling. A mini-split covering the same area costs more.
Best for:
- Standard single-family homes with forced air furnaces
- Ductwork that is sized correctly and in conditioned space
- Homes where aesthetics matter and owners want no visible indoor units
Homes With Specific Hot or Cold Rooms
Winner: Mini-Split (as a supplement). A single mini-split in the master bedroom or second-floor bonus room solves temperature problems without redoing the whole system. This is called a “hybrid” approach: central AC for the main living areas, one mini-split for the problem room.
Best for:
- Second floors that are 5 to 15 degrees warmer than the first floor
- Rooms over garages that never cool properly
- Home offices that need separate temperature control
- Basement apartments or in-law suites
Multi-Family and Rental Properties
Winner: Mini-Split. Each unit has independent control, separate metering is simple, and there is no shared ductwork between tenants.
Best for:
- Apartment buildings and condos
- Duplexes and triplexes
- Vacation homes and Airbnbs (per-room control saves energy when rooms are unoccupied)
When to Call a Pro
Mini-split installation is not a DIY job despite what the “pre-charged line set” marketing suggests. Mistakes with refrigerant charge, line connections, vacuum pull, and electrical wiring lead to poor performance and shortened compressor life.
Call a licensed HVAC contractor when:
- You need a multi-zone system (2+ indoor units on 1 outdoor unit)
- The outdoor unit location is more than 50 feet from the farthest indoor unit
- You are not sure about electrical panel capacity
- Your home has no existing ductwork and you need whole-home cooling
- You want a permit and professional load calculation
- The installation requires penetrating a brick, stone, or stucco exterior wall
- You need a condensate pump (drain runs uphill)
For homeowners with some electrical and mechanical skill, a single-zone mini-split is a manageable install if you have the proper tools: vacuum pump, manifold gauge set, torque wrench, and flaring tool. The manufacturer’s installation manual must be followed exactly.
Bottom Line: Mini-Split vs. Central AC
Choose mini-split when: You have no ducts, need zoned control, want the highest efficiency, or need to supplement an existing system. Expect to pay $1,500 to $5,000 per zone installed.
Choose central AC when: You have existing ductwork in good condition, want invisible cooling, or need to cool the whole home at the lowest cost. Expect to pay $4,500 to $12,000 installed.
Choose a hybrid when: Central AC handles most of the house and a single mini-split fixes one problem room. This is often the most cost-effective solution for older homes with one or two uncomfortable rooms.