North Dakota
Heat Pump Water Heater Cost in North Dakota
Estimate the installed cost of a hybrid heat pump water heater in North Dakota. Calibrated to local HVAC + plumber labor (0.98× the U.S. average), retail electricity (11.8¢/kWh), and natural-gas price for the operating-cost comparison.
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
$3,350
Typical range $2,075 – $6,150 · 240V hybrid HPWH (50 gal)
Low
$2,075
Best case
Mid
Typical$3,350
Typical
High
$6,150
Worst case
Itemized cost breakdown
Click a row for math & sources| Line item | Low | Mid | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| $1,500 | $2,000 | $2,800 | |
State labor multiplier applied (ND). | $473 | $827 | $1,300 |
| $75 | $175 | $350 | |
Reflects installation difficulty, home type, and timing. | $0 | $150 | $1,437 |
| $140 | $200 | $260 | |
| Total | $2,075 | $3,350 | $6,150 |
Monthly energy impact
Savings−$4/ mo
Likely savings between $2 and $7 per month vs. your current fuel.
Simple payback (mid)
66 years
Net cost ÷ annual savings vs. current fuel.
Panel upgrade likelihood
Low risk100A typically supports HPWH addition
- Is a 120V plug-in or 240V hybrid model being quoted?
- Is condensate drain work included (drain pan, pump, or gravity routing)?
- Is the install location large enough for proper airflow (typically ≥700 cu ft)?
- Is sound rating (dB) acceptable for the location?
- Is old water heater removal and disposal included?
- Which rebates require pre-approval, and have they been applied for?
- Is the 240V circuit, outlet, or breaker work included if needed?
- Are permits and inspection included?
- Will the cold-air output affect any nearby living space?
- What is the warranty on tank, compressor, and labor?
Next step: how to vet a contractor & compare bids
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 Energy Saver — Heat Pump Water Heaters— U.S. Department of Energy, 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
See the single most-likely cost and the realistic range it falls in — not just a low/high band.
- ~35%Dedicated 240V circuit run (gas-to-electric conversion)+$300–$1,200
- PossibleCondensate drain or pump routing in a tight space+$150–$700
- PossibleDucting kit or louvered door for a small mechanical closet+$200–$900
Surprise odds are approximate planning estimates, not measured rates; cost ranges are sourced where shown. How this works.
Method: each cost line is drawn from a triangular distribution and correlated by a shared market factor (~0.5), then sampled across 10,000 outcomes (a Monte Carlo simulation); the most-likely value and range emerge from the simulation, not the band. A planning simulation, not a quote.
HPWH rebates & credits in North Dakota
| Program | Type | Amount | Expires |
|---|---|---|---|
| Federal · Credit | 30% up to $2,000 | 2025-12-31 | |
| Income-qualified | Federal · Rebate | $0–$1,750 | 2031-09-30 |
Frequently asked questions
How much does a heat pump water heater cost installed?
A 50-gallon 240V hybrid HPWH typically runs $2,200 to $4,200 installed nationally. A 120V plug-in unit runs $1,700 to $3,400. State labor rates and the cost of a new 240V circuit shift the band. Use the calculator above for a state-calibrated estimate.
What rebates apply to HPWHs?
The federal 25C credit expired Dec 31 2025 (OBBBA). DOE HEEHRA provides up to $1,750 for HPWHs in income-qualified households where the state has launched the program. State and utility programs vary; the rebate table above shows what applies in your state.
Where should an HPWH be installed?
HPWHs need about 700 cubic feet of free air space to maintain rated efficiency. A conditioned basement or utility room works well; an unconditioned garage is fine in moderate climates but risky where ambient drops below the unit cutoff temperature.
HPWH cost by state
- Alabama
- Alaska
- Arizona
- Arkansas
- California
- Colorado
- Connecticut
- Delaware
- Florida
- Georgia
- Hawaii
- Idaho
- Illinois
- Indiana
- Iowa
- Kansas
- Kentucky
- Louisiana
- Maine
- Maryland
- Massachusetts
- Michigan
- Minnesota
- Mississippi
- Missouri
- Montana
- Nebraska
- Nevada
- New Hampshire
- New Jersey
- New Mexico
- New York
- North Carolina
- North Dakota
- Ohio
- Oklahoma
- Oregon
- Pennsylvania
- Rhode Island
- South Carolina
- South Dakota
- Tennessee
- Texas
- Utah
- Vermont
- Virginia
- Washington
- West Virginia
- Wisconsin
- Wyoming
- District of Columbia