Heat pump installation in Denver runs $7,000 โ $14,000 before rebates. Colorado tax credits and Xcel Energy incentives can reduce your out-of-pocket cost significantly.
Heat pumps provide both heating and cooling in one system. Modern cold-climate models work efficiently down to -15ยฐF โ well suited for Denver Metro winters.
| System Type | Small Home | Average Home | Large Home |
|---|---|---|---|
| Single-stage heat pump | $7,000 โ $8,500 | $8,500 โ $10,500 | $10,000 โ $12,000 |
| Two-stage heat pump โ | $8,500 โ $10,000 | $10,000 โ $12,000 | $11,500 โ $13,500 |
| Variable-speed heat pump | $10,000 โ $12,000 | $11,500 โ $13,500 | $12,500 โ $14,000+ |
| Ductless mini-split heat pump | $3,500 โ $5,000 | $6,000 โ $10,000 | $8,000 โ $15,000 |
โ Two-stage heat pump with gas furnace backup (dual fuel) is our most recommended setup for Colorado.
Heat pumps qualify for rebates that traditional AC does not. Here's what's available in 2026:
State heat pump tax credit for Colorado residents.
Xcel rebates for qualifying heat pump installations.
Income-qualified federal incentives for heat pump installation.
We help you identify and stack every rebate you qualify for. Call (720) 527-0668 for a rebate estimate.
Yes. Modern cold-climate heat pumps with inverter compressors work efficiently down to -15ยฐF. Colorado's dry cold is actually easier on heat pumps than humid cold climates because there's less frost buildup on the outdoor coil.
For most Denver Metro homes, we recommend a dual-fuel setup: heat pump as the primary heating/cooling system with a gas furnace backup for the coldest winter nights. This gives you the efficiency of a heat pump (2-3x more efficient than gas for heating) with the peace of mind of gas backup when temperatures drop below 5ยฐF.
Heat pumps at altitude require proper sizing and refrigerant charge adjustments. We calibrate every installation for Front Range conditions.
Heat pump installation in the Denver Metro runs $7,000-$14,000 before rebates. After Colorado tax credits and utility incentives, many homeowners bring the net cost down by $1,000-$9,000+.
Yes. Modern cold-climate heat pumps work down to -15ยฐF. We recommend dual-fuel systems with gas backup for the coldest nights.
Colorado offers state tax credits up to $1,000+, Xcel Energy rebates, and federal HEAR incentives up to $8,000 for income-qualified households.
A heat pump costs more upfront ($7,000-$14,000) than AC alone ($3,500-$10,500) but replaces both your AC and furnace. After rebates and lower operating costs, a heat pump often costs less over 10 years.
A well-maintained heat pump lasts 12-15 years. Annual maintenance is essential since it runs year-round for both heating and cooling.