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Comparison Guide

Heat Pump vs. Furnace: Which Is Right for Your Cedar Grove Home?

A complete 15-year cost comparison — plus IRA tax credits, climate considerations, and why heat pumps win in Central Texas.

Published February 27, 2026 · 10 min read · By Marcus Chen, Lead Installation Technician, NATE Certified
Modern heat pump system installed outside a residential home

Short answer for Central Texas: heat pumps almost always win. Cedar Grove winters are mild enough that a standard air-source heat pump handles heating and cooling from a single unit — no separate AC needed. With the federal IRA tax credit of up to $2,000, heat pumps now beat gas furnace + AC combinations on 15-year total cost of ownership in most Cedar Grove homes. The exceptions — very low electric rates, a newer gas furnace still in good shape, or a home that already relies on gas for cooking and water heating — are real but increasingly narrow.

This guide walks through exactly how each system works, when each wins, and what the 15-year math looks like for a typical Cedar Grove home.

How Each System Works

Heat Pump

A heat pump is a reversible refrigeration system that moves heat rather than creating it. In summer, it extracts heat from indoor air and rejects it outside (cooling). In winter, it reverses the cycle and extracts heat from outdoor air to deliver inside (heating). Because a heat pump moves heat instead of burning fuel, it produces roughly 2 to 4 units of heat energy per unit of electricity consumed — making it 200–400% "efficient" in the way HVAC industry measures (a metric called HSPF2 / COP).

Modern cold-climate heat pumps maintain full heating capacity down to 5°F. Standard heat pumps hold full capacity to about 25–30°F and gradually reduce output below that. Supplemental electric resistance heat ("strip heat") covers any gap during extreme cold.

Gas Furnace

A gas furnace burns natural gas (or propane) in a sealed combustion chamber to heat a metal heat exchanger. A blower pushes household air across that heat exchanger and distributes the warmed air through ductwork. Because combustion is required, efficiency is measured as AFUE (Annual Fuel Utilization Efficiency) — modern high-efficiency furnaces reach 96–98% AFUE, meaning 96–98% of the fuel's energy becomes usable heat.

A gas furnace only handles heating. A separate AC unit is required for cooling, which is why "furnace" installs in the South are always paired with a central AC system.

Heat Pump vs. Gas Furnace: Direct Comparison

FactorHeat PumpGas Furnace + AC
Upfront Cost (installed)$9,000–$18,000$8,500–$16,000
IRA Tax CreditUp to $2,000Up to $1,200 (split)
Annual Operating Cost (CG climate)$900–$1,500$1,300–$2,100
Lifespan12–14 yearsFurnace 15–20 yrs / AC 12–15 yrs
Efficiency RatingSEER2 (cool) / HSPF2 (heat)AFUE (heat) / SEER2 (cool)
Environmental ImpactLowest on clean gridHigher — combustion emissions
Best ClimateMild winters (above 20°F avg low)Cold climates with cheap gas
MaintenanceAnnual tune-up, both modesTwo tune-ups (heat + cool)
Indoor Air QualityNo combustion byproductsRequires vent & CO monitoring

Pros of Heat Pumps

  • One system handles both heating and cooling — simpler install, simpler service, one piece of equipment to maintain.
  • Dramatically more efficient than gas or electric resistance heat — 200–400% efficient via heat transfer rather than 80–98% from combustion.
  • Up to $2,000 federal tax credit through the IRA, plus HEEHRA rebates up to $8,000 for income-qualified households.
  • No combustion in the home — no carbon monoxide risk, no gas leak risk, no venting requirements.
  • Works on any electric utility — if you have power, you have heat and cooling. No gas service fixed charges.
  • Lower carbon footprint on Texas's increasingly renewable grid (Texas is the #1 wind-power state and rapidly growing solar).

Cons of Heat Pumps

  • Higher upfront cost — typically $500–$2,000 more than equivalent furnace + AC, though IRA credits usually close the gap.
  • Shorter lifespan than a gas furnace (12–14 years vs. 15–20) because the system works year-round.
  • Reduced capacity in extreme cold below 25°F (standard units) or 5°F (cold-climate units) — rarely relevant in Cedar Grove but worth knowing.
  • Supplemental heat uses electric resistance ("strip heat") during extreme cold, which is expensive to run — but triggers rarely here.

Pros of Gas Furnaces

  • Longer equipment lifespan — 15–20 years with proper maintenance, vs. 12–14 for a heat pump.
  • Very fast, high-temperature heat delivery — supply air can reach 140°F+ quickly, which some homeowners prefer.
  • Works regardless of outdoor temperature — no capacity curve, no supplemental heat needed.
  • Lower operating cost in areas with very cheap natural gas and high electric rates — this applies to parts of the Midwest, not Central Texas.
  • Familiar technology — most homeowners and many contractors are more experienced with furnaces.

Cons of Gas Furnaces

  • Requires a separate AC system — two pieces of equipment to purchase, install, and maintain.
  • Combustion in the home — carbon monoxide risk, venting requirements, sealed combustion, flue clearances.
  • Gas service fixed charges — if the furnace is the only gas appliance, you're paying $15–$25/month just to keep the meter connected.
  • Lower IRA tax credit — capped at $600 for qualifying furnaces, versus $2,000 for heat pumps.

When Heat Pumps Win

Heat pumps are the clear choice when:

  • Winter temperatures rarely drop below 25°F (most of Texas, including all of Cedar Grove)
  • Electric rates are moderate or low (Pedernales, Bluebonnet, Austin Energy all qualify)
  • Natural gas prices are rising (they have been, nationally)
  • The home has no existing gas service, or the homeowner wants to eliminate gas
  • The household qualifies for IRA or HEEHRA incentives
  • Both the AC and furnace are near end-of-life simultaneously

When Furnaces Win

Gas furnaces still make sense when:

  • Winter temperatures routinely drop below 10°F (cold-climate heat pumps work, but standard heat pumps struggle)
  • Natural gas is extremely cheap and electricity is expensive (uncommon in Texas)
  • The existing furnace is under 10 years old and still has meaningful life remaining
  • The home already uses gas heavily (water heater, range, dryer) so the fixed charge is spread across multiple uses
  • The homeowner strongly prefers the feel of high-temperature forced-air heat

For Cedar Grove: Heat Pumps Almost Always Win

Cedar Grove's climate is close to ideal for heat pumps. Here's why:

  • Average winter low is 38°F. Heat pumps run at or near full capacity.
  • Annual hours below 25°F average 40–80 per year. Strip heat triggers only occasionally.
  • Hours below 10°F are near-zero in typical winters. Cold-climate heat pumps aren't required.
  • Cooling load dominates the year. Heat pumps are effectively "AC units that also heat" — you're already investing in a cooling system.
  • Electric rates via Pedernales and Bluebonnet are competitive. Cheap enough that the heat pump's efficiency advantage comes through clearly in the monthly bill.
If you're replacing both your AC and furnace at once in Cedar Grove, a heat pump is our default recommendation. The IRA credit alone makes the upfront cost comparable, and the long-term math favors it.

15-Year Cost Comparison

Here's the total-cost-of-ownership comparison for a typical 1,800 sq ft Cedar Grove home. Both scenarios start with the same existing ductwork and a single-stage, mid-tier system.

Cost LineHeat Pump PathFurnace + AC Path
Upfront install (mid-tier)$12,500$11,000
Federal IRA tax credit-$2,000-$1,200
Net upfront$10,500$9,800
Annual cooling cost$1,000/yr$1,050/yr
Annual heating cost$300/yr (mild winter)$450/yr (gas + AC fan)
Gas service fixed charge$0$240/yr
Annual maintenance$180/yr (one system)$280/yr (two systems)
15-year energy + O&M subtotal$22,200$30,300
Expected mid-life repairs$1,200$1,500
15-Year Total Cost$33,900$41,600

The heat pump path comes out roughly $7,700 ahead over 15 years in this scenario. The gap widens if you qualify for HEEHRA (another $2,000–$8,000 off upfront) or if natural gas prices continue rising.

IRA Tax Credit (25C)

The Inflation Reduction Act provides a 30% federal tax credit on qualifying high-efficiency heat pumps through 2032, capped at $2,000 per year. To qualify the heat pump must meet efficiency thresholds set by CEE (Consortium for Energy Efficiency) — typically 15.2 SEER2 / 8.1 HSPF2 / 10 EER2 or higher.

Claimed via IRS Form 5695 when you file taxes. The credit is non-refundable (it reduces your tax bill but doesn't generate a refund if you owe nothing), but any unused portion can carry forward. We provide manufacturer certification documentation at install.

HEEHRA Rebate (Income-Qualified)

The High-Efficiency Electric Home Rebate Act provides point-of-sale rebates up to $8,000 on heat pump installations for income-qualified households. Eligibility is based on Area Median Income (AMI):

  • Under 80% AMI: up to $8,000 covered (100% of qualifying project cost)
  • 80–150% AMI: up to $4,000 covered (50% of qualifying project cost)
  • Above 150% AMI: standard 25C tax credit only

HEEHRA can be stacked with the 25C tax credit in some cases. Texas rolled out HEEHRA in phases through 2025–2026 — we check current eligibility on every heat pump quote.

Frequently Asked Questions

For Central Texas, yes. Cedar Grove winters rarely drop below 25°F for more than a few hours, which is well within heat pump operating range. Combined with the $2,000 IRA tax credit and the fact that heat pumps replace both the AC and the furnace, heat pumps typically win on 15-year total cost.

A heat pump moves heat rather than creating it. In summer it pulls heat out of indoor air and rejects it outside (cooling). In winter it extracts heat from outdoor air — yes, even cold air has extractable heat — and delivers it inside. Because it moves heat instead of burning fuel, it produces 2–4 units of heat per unit of electricity.

Modern cold-climate heat pumps maintain full heating capacity down to 5°F. Standard heat pumps hold full capacity to 25–30°F and gradually reduce output below. Cedar Grove rarely has more than 40–80 hours per year below 25°F, so standard heat pumps work well without needing the cold-climate upgrade.

Heat pumps typically last 12–14 years in Central Texas because they work year-round for both heating and cooling. That's comparable to a central AC (12–15 years) but shorter than a gas furnace (15–20 years). The math still favors heat pumps because a single heat pump replaces both units.

Modern variable-speed heat pumps are very quiet — typically 50–60 decibels at the outdoor unit, similar to a refrigerator. Older single-stage heat pumps run 65–75 dB, closer to a loud conversation. Mitsubishi and Carrier Infinity models are among the quietest currently available.

In most Cedar Grove homes, yes — especially if your AC is aging at the same time. Heat pumps typically save $4,000–$8,000 over 15 years after tax credits. Exceptions: homes with very cheap electric rates (uncommon here), a newer gas furnace with meaningful life remaining, or homes heavily invested in gas appliances.

Considering a Heat Pump?

We'll run the numbers for your specific home — load calculation, IRA eligibility, HEEHRA screening, and side-by-side comparison with a furnace + AC quote. Free, no pressure.

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