Vermont
Water Heater Installation Cost in Vermont
Estimate the installed cost of replacing a tank water heater in Vermont — by fuel (gas / electric / propane), size (40 / 50 / 80 gallon), and efficiency tier. Calibrated to local plumber labor (1.08× the U.S. average) and Vermont energy prices for the operating-cost comparison.
Quick answer: a standard 50-gallon tank runs about $1,300–$3,100 installed in Vermont. Power-vent and condensing tiers run higher; heat pump water heaters $2,200–$4,200; permit $75–$300.
Planning range, not a contractor quote. Verify state and utility programs with the linked administrator before claiming — caps, eligibility, and timelines change.
Optional — auto-sets state
Installed cost · Atmospheric-vent 0.62 UEF 50-gal · Vermont
$2,014
range $1,315 – $3,104
Annual operating cost
$407/yr
UEF 0.62
HPWH alternative
$3,100
Saves $110/yr op
Cost breakdown
- Equipment (50 gal)$1,000
- Install + venting$864
- Permit & inspection$150
- Total (mid)$2,014
Three-way comparison
- Standard tank (this calc)$2,014
- HPWH (50-gal hybrid)$3,100
- Tankless gas$4,300
HPWH typically saves $300-500/yr in operating cost vs gas tank; HEEHRA rebate up to $1,750 for income-qualified buyers.
Quote check — what to ask
- · UEF (Uniform Energy Factor) in writing — replaces older EF rating.
- · Expansion tank included (required by most codes since 2012).
- · T&P (temperature/pressure) valve and drip pan included.
- · Sediment trap on gas line, dielectric unions on water lines.
- · Old unit haul-away included.
- · Combustion-air check (CO test) at startup for atmospheric-vent gas.
- · 6+ year tank warranty (premium tier offers 12 years).
Thinking beyond a like-for-like swap?
A standard tank is the cheapest install, but at Vermont's electricity price of 21.5¢/kWh, a heat pump water heater costs roughly one-third as much to run as electric resistance — and rebates may apply where standard tanks get none.
Frequently asked questions
How much does water heater installation cost in Vermont?
A standard 50-gallon tank water heater runs about $1,300 to $3,100 installed in Vermont, including the unit, plumber labor at the state's 1.08x multiplier vs. the U.S. average, and the permit. Power-vent and condensing gas tiers run higher; a heat pump water heater runs $2,200-$4,200. Use the calculator above to refine by fuel, size, and tier.
Is gas or electric cheaper to run in Vermont?
At Vermont's current prices - electricity 21.5 cents/kWh and natural gas $1.85/therm - a standard gas tank costs roughly $409/year to run vs. $1049/year for an electric resistance tank (EIA state retail prices; usage per DOE test-procedure assumptions for a 50-gal tank). A heat pump water heater cuts the electric figure by roughly two-thirds, which usually makes it the cheapest option to run regardless of the gas-vs-electric split.
Do I need a permit to replace a water heater in Vermont?
Yes - nearly every Vermont jurisdiction requires a plumbing permit for a water heater replacement (plus an electrical permit for new circuits). The inspection checks venting, the temperature-and-pressure relief valve, expansion tank, and strapping where required. Permits typically run $75-$300. Unpermitted installs can void homeowner insurance claims and complicate a sale.
When is a heat pump water heater worth it in Vermont?
If you're on electric resistance today, almost always: a HPWH uses about one-third the electricity, saving roughly $699/year at Vermont rates, which pays back the $1,000-$1,800 upfront premium in a few years. If you are on cheap natural gas, the math is closer - run both numbers in the dedicated calculator at /heat-pump-water-heater-cost-vt/. Income-qualified households may also get up to $1,750 via DOE HEEHRA where Vermont has launched the program (https://www.energy.gov/scep/home-energy-rebates-programs).
My water heater died - what does an emergency replacement cost in Vermont?
Same-day emergency swaps typically add $300-$800 over the planned-replacement price: after-hours labor, whatever unit is on the truck (rarely the best-value model), and no time for competing quotes. If your tank is 10+ years old, pricing the replacement now - before it fails - is the single best way to avoid paying the emergency premium and getting stuck with a low-efficiency unit for the next decade.
Water heater installation cost by state
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