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Save up to $2,150/year vs oil & propane heating. NHSaves rebate up to $2,500 + $2,500 Eversource Energy (NH) rebate.
Estimated Savings
$2,150/yr
vs oil & propane
$2,500
NHSaves
$2,500
Eversource Energy (NH)
~7 yrs
estimated
Kingston, New Hampshire homeowners switching from oil & propane to a heat pump can save approximately $2,150 per year on heating costs. The local utility, Eversource Energy (NH), charges $0.20/kWh for residential electricity. A heat pump replaces both your furnace and air conditioner, providing year-round heating and cooling at a fraction of the cost.
Cold winters with design temps of -5°F to -10°F in northern areas. Cold-climate heat pumps are essential. Cold-climate heat pumps (ccASHP) are essential for Kingston — standard models lose significant capacity below 20°F. We recommend Mitsubishi Hyper-Heat and Fujitsu Halcyon XLTH for this area.
The NHSaves rebate covers up to $2,500 of installation costs. Eversource Energy (NH) adds another $2,500 utility rebate on top. Income-qualified households may also receive HEAR rebates of up to $8,000. The federal 25C heat pump tax credit expired at the end of 2025, making these state and utility incentives more important than ever.
NuWatt Energy installs heat pumps directly in Kingston — no subcontractors. We handle the full process: sizing assessment, equipment selection, installation, and all NHSaves rebate applications. Pair with solar to reduce your heat pump operating costs to near zero.
Expired December 31, 2025. Previously 30% up to $2,000.
NHSaves heat pump rebate with additional HEAR rebates launching spring 2026.
Heat pump rebate from your local utility, Eversource Energy (NH). Can be stacked with NHSaves.
Up to $8,000 (low-income) or $4,000 (moderate-income). Stackable with other rebates.
investor_owned · $0.20/kWh
Heat Pump Rebate
$2,500
Cold winters with design temps of -5°F to -10°F in northern areas. Cold-climate heat pumps are essential.
Cold-climate heat pumps (ccASHP) are required for Kingston. Standard models lose significant capacity below 20°F.
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