Kansas
Heat Pump Cost in Kansas
Estimate the installed cost, applicable rebates, and operating-cost change for a heat pump in Kansas. Calibrated to local labor rates (0.92× HVAC multiplier), retail electricity (14.4¢/kWh), and standard climate.
Planning range, not a contractor quote. Verify state and utility programs with the linked administrator before claiming — caps, eligibility, and timelines change.
Estimated installed cost
$12,575
Typical range $7,675 – $21,750 · Ducted central heat pump (3-ton, ~1,500–2,200 sqft)
Low
$7,675
Best case
Mid
Typical$12,575
Typical
High
$21,750
Worst case
Itemized cost breakdown
Click a row for math & sources| Line item | Low | Mid | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| $5,200 | $7,800 | $10,500 | |
State labor multiplier applied (KS). | $2,176 | $2,902 | $3,869 |
| $150 | $300 | $600 | |
Reflects installation difficulty, home type, and timing. | $0 | $550 | $4,835 |
100A may support heat pump with load calculation; depends on other loads | $525 | $1,025 | $1,950 |
| Total | $7,675 | $12,575 | $21,750 |
Monthly energy impact
Increase+$4/ mo
Likely increase between -$1 and $9 per month vs. your current fuel.
Panel upgrade likelihood
Medium risk100A may support heat pump with load calculation; depends on other loads
Estimated adder included: $525 – $1,950.
- Is this quote for ducted, ductless, or dual-fuel?
- What heating load (Manual J) calculation did you use, and can I see it?
- Is the equipment cold-climate rated (HSPF2 / capacity at 5°F)?
- Is ductwork inspection, sealing, or replacement included?
- Is electrical work, including any required circuit or panel work, included?
- Are permits and inspection included?
- Which rebates and tax credits are included, and who files for them?
- What is the manufacturer warranty and labor warranty?
- Is there a sound-rated outdoor unit option, and what is the dB rating?
- What sizing methodology did you use (Manual S equipment selection)?
What can change this price
- Estimates are planning ranges, not contractor quotes. Actual prices depend on your home, local labor rates, equipment, code requirements, utility rules, and contractor availability.
Actual prices depend on your home, local labor rates, equipment selection, code requirements, utility rules, and contractor availability. Estimates are planning ranges, not contractor quotes.
- DOE & NREL Residential Heat Pump Cost Studies— National Renewable Energy Laboratory, reviewed 2026-05-01
- EIA Electricity Retail Sales (state-level)— U.S. Energy Information Administration, reviewed 2026-04-01
- BLS OEWS — Electricians (47-2111)— U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, reviewed 2026-05-01
Run a Monte Carlo of 10,000 possible outcomes to see the full distribution and the single most-likely installed cost.
- ~25%200A panel upgrade needed to add the heat pump load+$1,800–$4,500
- ~30%Existing ductwork repaired or resized (undersized return)+$800–$4,000
- PossibleLonger refrigerant line set or hard-to-reach air handler+$400–$1,500
- PossibleNew disconnect / circuit run for the air handler+$300–$900
Surprise odds are approximate planning estimates, not measured rates; cost ranges are sourced where shown. How this works.
Each cost line is drawn from a triangular distribution and correlated by a shared market factor (~0.5); the most-likely value and range emerge from the simulation, not the band. A planning simulation, not a quote.
Heat pump rebates & credits in Kansas
| Program | Type | Amount | Expires |
|---|---|---|---|
| Federal · Credit | 30% up to $2,000 | 2025-12-31 | |
| Income-qualified | Federal · Rebate | $0–$8,000 | 2031-09-30 |
Frequently asked questions
How much does a heat pump cost in Kansas?
In Kansas, a typical ducted central heat pump runs $6,975–$18,600 installed. Cold-climate equipment runs higher. Use the calculator above to refine for your home size, panel, and ductwork.
Is a heat pump worth it in Kansas?
Kansas is in a moderate climate zone (4A, 4,900 HDD). Standard air-source heat pumps work well year-round. Operating-cost change vs. your current fuel depends on local electricity (14.4¢/kWh) vs. gas ($1.10/therm).
What rebates are available for a heat pump in Kansas?
In 2026 the federal Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit (25C) no longer applies — it was terminated by OBBBA for systems placed in service after Dec 31 2025. Kansas homeowners can still combine applicable state programs and DOE Home Energy Rebates where the state has launched the program. The calculator surfaces 2 programs for your state and clearly separates confirmed credits from potential ones (e.g. HEEHRA in prelaunch states).
Do I need a panel upgrade for a heat pump in Kansas?
Not always. A 200A panel is usually fine. A 100A panel often works after a load calculation. A 60A service almost always needs an upgrade. The calculator above includes a panel-risk verdict for your selection.
Heat pump cost by state
- Alabama
- Alaska
- Arizona
- Arkansas
- California
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- Connecticut
- Delaware
- Florida
- Georgia
- Hawaii
- Idaho
- Illinois
- Indiana
- Iowa
- Kansas
- Kentucky
- Louisiana
- Maine
- Maryland
- Massachusetts
- Michigan
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- Missouri
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- Nevada
- New Hampshire
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- New Mexico
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- North Dakota
- Ohio
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- Oregon
- Pennsylvania
- Rhode Island
- South Carolina
- South Dakota
- Tennessee
- Texas
- Utah
- Vermont
- Virginia
- Washington
- West Virginia
- Wisconsin
- Wyoming
- District of Columbia