Equipment, labor, brand comparisons, efficiency tiers, rebates, and the hidden costs most contractors won't mention up front.
Short answer: a full HVAC system replacement in Cedar Grove typically costs $8,500 to $16,000 installed in 2026. AC-only replacements run $6,500–$10,500. Heat pump systems land between $9,000 and $18,000. Ductless mini-splits range $4,500–$14,000 per zone. Final pricing depends on system size, SEER2 efficiency rating, brand, and whether any ductwork modifications are required. After the federal IRA tax credit (up to $2,000 for qualifying heat pumps), effective cost can drop another 10–20%.
The rest of this guide breaks down exactly where that money goes, how the ranges change based on the equipment you choose, what hidden costs to watch for, and which rebates and tax credits apply. If you're shopping quotes right now, this is the page to read first.
A proper full-system HVAC installation covers:
What's not typically included in the base quote: ductwork repairs or replacements, electrical panel upgrades, gas line modifications, attic decking for technician access, or smart-home integration. These are the "hidden costs" covered further down.
Here's where the money goes on a typical $12,000 full-system install in Cedar Grove:
| Line Item | Typical Cost |
|---|---|
| Equipment (condenser + coil + furnace) | $4,500–$9,000 |
| Installation labor (2–3 techs, 1 day) | $1,800–$3,500 |
| Ductwork modifications (if needed) | $0–$2,500 |
| Permits and inspection | $200–$400 |
| Disposal of old system | $200 |
| Line set, whip, pad, minor materials | $250–$600 |
| Thermostat (basic programmable) | $150–$350 |
Equipment is always the biggest line item. Labor runs roughly 20–25% of total project cost on straightforward swaps and closer to 30% when ductwork or fuel-source changes are involved.
The type of system you're installing drives the biggest variance. Here's the 2026 Cedar Grove range for each configuration, fully installed with permit.
| System Type | Typical Installed Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| AC Only (keeping existing furnace) | $6,500–$10,500 | Most common replacement scenario |
| Full HVAC (AC + Furnace) | $8,500–$16,000 | Recommended if furnace is 12+ years old |
| Heat Pump (whole home) | $9,000–$18,000 | Highest IRA credit eligibility |
| Dual-Fuel (Heat Pump + Gas Furnace) | $11,000–$19,000 | Best for homes with existing gas |
| Ductless Mini-Split (single zone) | $4,500–$7,500 | Per zone; good for additions |
| Ductless Mini-Split (multi-zone) | $9,000–$14,000 | Up to 4 indoor heads |
| Geothermal | $25,000–$45,000 | Specialty install; high upfront, low operating |
SEER2 (Seasonal Energy Efficiency Ratio 2) is the federal efficiency rating system that replaced SEER as of January 2023. Higher SEER2 means lower operating cost — but higher upfront cost. Here's how the tiers add up:
| SEER2 Rating | Upgrade Cost vs. Base | Operating Savings |
|---|---|---|
| 14.3 SEER2 (federal minimum) | Baseline | — |
| 15 SEER2 (standard-plus) | +$500–$1,000 | ~6–8% |
| 16 SEER2 (high-efficiency) | +$1,500–$3,000 | ~12–18% |
| 18 SEER2 (premium two-stage) | +$3,000–$5,000 | ~22–28% |
| 20+ SEER2 (variable-speed) | +$4,000–$7,000 | ~30–40% |
For Cedar Grove's cooling-dominant climate, we usually recommend 16 SEER2 as the sweet spot — the upgrade from baseline pays back in 5–7 years through lower bills. Going higher than 18 SEER2 makes sense only if you plan to stay in the home 10+ years, use heavy cooling, or want the quieter, more dehumidified performance that variable-speed systems deliver.
Brand choice matters less than installation quality — but it does matter. Here's how the major brands compare on price, warranty, and reliability based on what we see in the field.
| Brand | Price Tier | Parts Warranty | Our Field Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Carrier | Premium | 10 years | Our most-installed brand. Best reliability we've tracked. |
| Trane | Premium | 10 years | Very close second to Carrier. Strong across the lineup. |
| Lennox | Premium | 10 years | Highest-efficiency variable-speed options (SL28XCV). |
| Rheem | Mid-to-Premium | 10 years | Strong value. Good mid-range option. |
| Bryant | Mid-to-Premium | 10 years | Carrier's sister brand; same factory, slightly lower price. |
| Goodman | Budget | 10 years | Lowest upfront cost. Acceptable for rental/budget installs. |
| American Standard | Premium | 10 years | Trane's sister brand. Same quality, sometimes lower cost. |
| Mitsubishi Electric | Premium (ductless) | 12 years | Ductless and mini-split leader. Hyper-Heat for cold climates. |
All of the above brands require manufacturer-certified installers for their full warranty to apply — which is why installer selection matters more than brand selection. A premium Carrier unit installed sloppily will underperform a properly installed Goodman.
Five expenses that don't always show up in the initial quote but are common in Cedar Grove homes:
Most full-system replacements in Cedar Grove are financed. Common structures:
We process financing applications on-site during the estimate — approvals take under two minutes and don't require a hard credit pull for the pre-qualification step.
Three programs are active in 2026 and together can save $1,000–$10,000 on a qualifying installation:
The Inflation Reduction Act provides a 30% federal tax credit on qualifying high-efficiency equipment through 2032:
Applied via IRS Form 5695 when you file your taxes. We provide the manufacturer certification statement at install.
The High-Efficiency Electric Home Rebate Act provides point-of-sale rebates for low- and moderate-income households:
Texas rolled out HEEHRA in phases through 2025–2026. We check eligibility during every estimate.
Pedernales Electric Cooperative and Bluebonnet Electric Cooperative both offer $50–$500 rebates on high-efficiency HVAC equipment. Austin Energy customers can qualify for higher rebates. We file the paperwork as part of the install.
Three rules for shopping HVAC quotes:
Full HVAC installations typically run $8,500–$16,000 in Cedar Grove. AC-only replacements $6,500–$10,500. Heat pumps $9,000–$18,000. Ductless mini-splits $4,500–$14,000 depending on zones. Final pricing depends on size, brand, SEER2 rating, and whether ductwork changes are required.
For Cedar Grove's heavy cooling load, 16 SEER2 typically pays back in 5–7 years through lower electric bills versus 14.3 SEER2 (federal minimum). The $1,500–$3,000 upgrade also increases IRA tax credit eligibility. Over 15 years, 16 SEER2 costs less total than baseline.
A straight system swap — same size, same configuration — takes 6–8 hours and is completed in one day. A full HVAC replacement with ductwork modifications or fuel source changes (gas-to-heat-pump) runs 1.5–2 days. Most customers have cooling back on the same day.
Not always, but often some modifications. A Manual J load calculation will tell you if your existing ducts are properly sized for the new equipment. In Cedar Grove homes built before 2000, undersized returns are common and should be corrected when replacing the system.
The 25C tax credit covers 30% of qualifying equipment: up to $600 for central AC, up to $2,000 for heat pumps, up to $600 for furnaces. Annual cap of $3,200 across all home-energy upgrades. Income-qualified households can stack the HEEHRA rebate on top, up to $8,000 for heat pumps.
Yes. Meridian offers 0% financing for 12–24 months for qualified buyers and low-APR plans up to 120 months through Wells Fargo and Synchrony. Applications take under two minutes. Approved amounts are applied directly to the installation cost.
Free in-home estimate. Manual J load calc included. No commission-based upsells. Three equipment tiers quoted so you can choose what fits your budget.
Call (512) 555-0143Before you buy a new system, make sure you actually need one. The 50% Rule and age test.
Read Guide →For a new install in Cedar Grove, heat pumps almost always win. Here's the math.
Read Guide →Once the new system is installed, here's how to make it last 15+ years.
Read Guide →Fixed pricing, three equipment tiers, Manual J load calculation included. No pressure, no commission upsells.