Heating System Comparison

Compare different heating systems side-by-side. Analyze costs, efficiency, and environmental impact to find the best option for your home.

Select Systems to Compare (max 4)

Gas Boiler
90% efficiency
Air Source Heat Pump
320% efficiency
Electric Heating
100% efficiency
Oil Boiler
85% efficiency

How the Comparison Works

Our comparison tool analyzes multiple factors to help you make the best decision

1

Installation Costs

Initial investment required for each system

2

Operating Costs

Annual fuel and maintenance expenses

3

Efficiency

How effectively each system converts energy to heat

4

Environmental Impact

CO₂ emissions and environmental footprint

  1. 1

    Select Systems to Compare

    Choose 2-4 heating systems: gas furnace, oil boiler, propane, heat pump (air/ground-source), electric baseboard, wood/pellet. Include your current system plus alternatives you're considering.

  2. 2

    Enter Energy Rates

    Input current fuel prices: electricity ($/kWh), natural gas ($/therm), propane ($/gallon), oil ($/gallon), wood pellets ($/ton). Use recent utility bills and local fuel suppliers for accurate rates.

  3. 3

    Input Building Details

    Enter home size, insulation quality, and climate zone. These factors affect annual energy consumption and system sizing. Better insulation = lower consumption = greater savings from efficient systems.

  4. 4

    Add Installation Costs

    Research or get quotes for each system: Gas furnace ($3k-7k), heat pump ($8k-15k), ground-source ($20k-30k), electric baseboard ($1k-3k). Include labor, permits, and system modifications (ductwork, electrical).

  5. 5

    Review Total Cost Comparison

    Examine: upfront cost, annual operating cost, 20-year total cost, CO2 emissions, and payback period. Cheapest to install often most expensive to run. Consider: budget, environmental impact, fuel availability, and how long you'll own the home.

Pro Tip: Use Ctrl+Enter to calculate quickly, or Ctrl+R to reset the form.

Frequently Asked Questions

Heat pumps (with electricity <$0.15/kWh) are cheapest to operate - 50-70% lower costs than gas, oil, or electric resistance. Natural gas is second-cheapest in most areas. Propane and oil are expensive. Electric baseboard is most expensive except where electricity is very cheap. Consider installation cost + annual operating cost for true comparison.

Gas furnace: 15-20 years. Heat pump: 15-20 years (air-source), 20-25 years (ground-source). Boiler: 15-30 years (cast iron longest). Electric baseboard: 20-30 years. Regular maintenance extends lifespan. Factor replacement timing into total cost - system with 30-year lifespan worth premium over 15-year system.

Depends on: climate, fuel availability, budget, environmental goals. Cold climate + natural gas: high-efficiency furnace or hybrid heat pump. Moderate climate: air-source heat pump. No gas access: heat pump or ground-source. Existing radiators: boiler or low-temp heat pump. Consult HVAC pro for site-specific recommendation.

Hybrid (dual-fuel) system combines heat pump + gas furnace. Heat pump runs when temps above 25-35°F (efficient), furnace kicks in below that (reliable backup). Best of both: efficiency + cold-weather reliability. Cost: $6,000-12,000 installed. Saves 30-50% vs gas-only in moderate climates. Ideal for: cold winters, fluctuating energy prices, maximizing efficiency.

Convert all to cost per BTU delivered: 1) Get fuel prices ($/kWh, $/therm, $/gallon), 2) Calculate BTU content (1 kWh=3,412 BTU, 1 therm=100,000 BTU, 1 gallon propane=91,500 BTU), 3) Divide by system efficiency (heat pump COP 3.0=300%, furnace AFUE 95%), 4) Compare $/million BTU. Example: $0.12/kWh electricity ÷ 3.0 COP = $11.73/million BTU vs $1.20/therm gas ÷ 0.95 = $12.63/million BTU. Heat pump wins.