Home Cost Report

Heat pump installation cost in Dallas–Fort Worth

Heat pump installation in Dallas–Fort Worth costs about $5,700 to $19,000 (typically $9,500) — local prices run about 5% below the national average.

These figures adjust our national heat pump installation range to Dallas–Fort Worth's local cost level — see the method and sources below.

Low
$5,700
Typical
$9,500
High
$19,000

How we localized this

We start from our national heat pump installation range of $6,000$20,000 and adjust it for Dallas–Fort Worth, where costs run about 5% below the national average. DFW home remodeling runs roughly 5–12% below the U.S. average for most project types, in line with Texas overall. Fast population growth is pushing local labor rates up, and new-construction costs run slightly above national — so the metro sits modestly below average for repair-and-replace work. Materials are priced roughly nationally, so treat this as an approximation — your actual price depends on your home, contractor, and project specifics.

Dallas–Fort Worth cost sources (2)

DFW's fast growth keeps contractors busy, so labor rates have been climbing even though Texas overall runs below the national average. Expansive clay soils make foundation movement — and the plumbing and sewer-line repairs that follow — a recurring local expense. Permitting and fees vary widely across the metroplex's many suburbs, so quotes can differ noticeably from one city to the next.

Estimate your Dallas–Fort Worth heat pump installation

Adjust for your system and home. The estimate starts from our published range.

Adjusts the estimate to local cost levels. Pick a metro or leave on national.

Estimated cost for your options in Dallas–Fort Worth
$5,700$19,000
Typical: $9,500
Adjusted for Dallas–Fort Worth — costs there run about 5% below the national average.

How we got this

Starts from our published heat pump installation range of $6,000–$20,000, adjusted for:

  • System type: Ducted central (air-source)×1
  • Home size: Average (1,500–2,000 sq ft)×1
  • Ductwork: Reuse ducts / ductless (none needed)×1
  • Area: Dallas–Fort Worth×0.95

These figures are planning estimates compiled from public cost data on the dates shown — not quotes, bids, or guarantees. Real prices vary widely with your home, location, materials, permits, and contractor. Always get itemized written quotes from licensed local pros before budgeting or hiring.

What changes the price

  • Home size & capacityRaises cost

    Bigger homes need more heating/cooling capacity, raising equipment and labor.

  • Ducted vs. ductlessVaries

    Mini-splits avoid ductwork but cost more per zone; whole-home ducted systems vary with duct condition.

  • Efficiency & cold-climate ratingRaises cost

    Higher HSPF2/SEER2 and cold-climate models cost more upfront but use less energy.

  • Ductwork & electricalRaises cost

    New ducts or an electrical/panel upgrade to support the heat pump add cost.

  • Rebates & tax creditsLowers cost

    Federal and local efficiency incentives can offset several thousand dollars — confirm current eligibility.

Get real quotes for your Dallas–Fort Worth heat pump installation

Our ranges are for planning. The only way to know your real price is itemized quotes from licensed local pros — always get at least three before you hire.

Tip: search for licensed, insured Dallas–Fort Worth heat pump installation contractors in your area, check reviews and references, and compare written itemized bids — not just bottom-line numbers.

Heat pump installation cost — FAQ

How much does it cost to install a heat pump?
A whole-home air-source heat pump typically runs $8,000–$15,000 installed, averaging around $10,000, within a broader range of about $6,000 to $20,000+. Ductless mini-splits for one or two zones can be lower; large homes, cold-climate or high-efficiency units, and jobs needing new ductwork run higher.
Are heat pumps worth the cost?
Heat pumps both heat and cool, and modern units are efficient enough to cut energy bills versus older systems in many climates. Upfront cost is higher than a basic AC or furnace, but federal and utility incentives can narrow the gap. The payback depends on your climate, energy prices, and what you're replacing.
Is a ducted heat pump or a mini-split cheaper?
For a home that already has good ducts, a ducted central heat pump is often the better value. Ductless mini-splits avoid ductwork but cost more per zone, so whole-home ductless can add up. The right choice depends on your existing ducts and layout.
Do heat pump tax credits lower the cost?
Federal and many local/utility programs have offered incentives for qualifying high-efficiency heat pumps, which can offset a meaningful share of the cost. Programs change, so confirm current eligibility and amounts before counting on them.

Cost data compiled June 13, 2026.

Sources (4)

Ranges synthesize several public 2026 cost guides into a low–typical–high band rather than reproducing any single source's table. Metro-level breakdowns are coming as we verify local data.

Compare other locations

See all Dallas–Fort Worth HVAC costs on the Dallas–Fort Worth HVAC page.