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Canadian Heat Pump Hub Team
HVAC Research & Analysis
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Last Updated
February 16, 2026
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Read Time
7 min read

Heat Pump ROI Calculator — BC

A heat pump's financial case depends on three numbers: what you currently spend on heating, how much a heat pump reduces that cost, and how much the installation costs after rebates.

This calculator provides a rough-order-of-magnitude estimate. Use it as a starting point — not a contract.

ESTIMATE ONLY — Actual results may vary based on site conditions, utility rates, and final rebate approval.

Heat Pump ROI Calculator

Enter your current heating details to estimate annual savings and payback period.

Typical range: $8,000–$18,000

Auto-filled from heating type

ESTIMATE ONLY. Actual results may vary based on site conditions, utility rates, and final rebate approval. Rebate availability is subject to program funding and individual eligibility. Consult a qualified HVAC contractor for a site-specific assessment.

How the Savings Estimates Are Calculated

The calculator applies a fuel-type-specific savings rate to your current annual heating cost:

Current SystemEstimated Savings RateBasis
Oil Furnace / Boiler~62%Oil → heat pump is the highest-ROI conversion in BC
Propane Furnace / Boiler~60%Propane costs 2–3× natural gas; heat pump savings are significant
Natural Gas Furnace / Boiler~35%BC gas rates are low relative to electricity — savings are real but modest
Electric Baseboard~55%Heat pumps produce 2–3× more heat per kWh than baseboards
Electric Forced Air~50%Depends on existing system efficiency

These rates are midpoint estimates. Actual savings depend on:

  • Equipment COP at your local design temperature — a Mitsubishi Hyper Heat running at COP 2.8 saves more than a standard unit at COP 1.9
  • Your home's insulation level — poorly insulated homes see lower savings because the heat pump runs longer
  • BC Hydro vs FortisBC electricity rates — rates vary by utility and tariff
  • Whether you retain a backup system — a dual-fuel hybrid uses less electricity but also less gas

Pro Tip: Gas Conversions

The ROI on gas-to-heat-pump conversions is longer than oil or baseboard conversions because BC natural gas is relatively cheap. The financial case strengthens significantly if you add BC Hydro's time-of-use rates, carbon tax escalation, or FortisBC rate increases into the projection. The rebates, however, are still generous — and the payback period improves materially once CleanBC grants are factored in.

Default Rebate Values

When you select a heating type, the calculator pre-fills an estimated rebate amount. These defaults are based on 2026 program maximums:

Heating SourceDefault Rebate Used
Oil / Propane$16,000 (OHPA $10,000 + CleanBC $6,000)
Natural Gas$8,000 (CleanBC $6,000 + BC Hydro $2,000)
Electric Baseboard$8,000 (CleanBC $6,000 + BC Hydro $2,000)
Electric Forced Air$6,000 (CleanBC only)

You can edit the rebate field to match your actual eligibility. Use the 2026 BC Rebate Estimator to get a more detailed breakdown.

Typical Installation Cost Ranges in BC (2026)

System TypeInstalled Cost Range
Single-zone ductless (1 head)$4,500–$8,000
Multi-zone ductless (2–3 heads)$10,000–$18,000
Central ducted (forced air replacement)$10,000–$16,000
Air-to-water (hydronic / radiant)$15,000–$30,000
Dual-fuel hybrid (heat pump + gas backup)$12,000–$20,000

Prices vary significantly by region. Interior BC installs typically cost 10–15% more than Metro Vancouver due to logistics and cold-climate equipment premiums.

Next Steps

Disclaimer

This calculator provides educational estimates only and does not constitute financial advice. Actual savings, costs, and payback periods will vary based on site-specific conditions, equipment selection, utility rates, usage patterns, and final rebate approval. Canadian Heat Pump Hub is not responsible for decisions made based on these estimates. Always obtain a written quote from a licensed HVAC contractor and confirm rebate eligibility before purchasing equipment.