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NuWatt designs, installs, and manages solar, battery, heat pump, and EV charger systems across 9 states. One company, one warranty, one point of contact.
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NuWatt installs ducted, ductless, and cold-climate heat pumps across Pennsylvania. We handle the PA Whole Home program, utility rebates (PECO, PPL, Duquesne Light, Met-Ed), and give you honest advice about whether a heat pump makes financial sense for your home.
Heat pumps provide heating, cooling, and dehumidification in one system.
Heat pumps replace both your furnace and air conditioner. One system, one maintenance schedule, year-round comfort.
Heat pumps are 2-3x more efficient than gas furnaces. PA homeowners switching from gas typically save $300-$800/year, depending on gas prices and electric rates.
NJ is a gas-dominant market with relatively low gas prices. We will tell you honestly if the savings justify the switch — some homes see narrow margins.
Modern cold-climate heat pumps operate efficiently down to -13F. PA winters rarely go below 10F, making heat pumps highly effective year-round.
Energy-efficient homes sell faster and for more. A heat pump system modernizes your HVAC and reduces your carbon footprint.
Our certified technicians handle load calculations, equipment selection, ductwork assessment, and installation. Every job includes a workmanship guarantee.
Each PA utility offers different rebate amounts. These stack with the PA Whole Home program (up to $500). The federal 25C credit expired December 31, 2025.
Instant rebate applied at point of sale. Covers qualifying air-source heat pumps.
Greater Philadelphia NJTiered rebate based on system efficiency. $500 for standard, $1,000 for cold-climate rated.
Lehigh Valley NJOne of the highest utility rebates in PA. Available for qualifying ducted and ductless installations.
Pittsburgh MetroHighest utility heat pump rebate in PA. Limited Met-Ed service territory in South Central PA.
South Central PAPennsylvania is a gas-dominant market with relatively low gas prices. Switching from gas to a heat pump typically saves $300-$800/year — less than in states with higher gas costs. The financial case is strongest when you also need AC replacement, when your furnace is 15+ years old, or when you pair a heat pump with solar panels. We will give you an honest savings estimate during your free consultation.
| System Type | Cost Range | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Ductless Mini-Split (single zone) | $4,500-$7,000 | Single room supplement |
| Ductless Multi-Zone (2-4 zones) | $10,000-$18,000 | Targeted comfort, no ductwork |
| Ducted Central Heat Pump | $12,000-$20,000 | Whole-home replacement |
| Cold-Climate Ducted System | $15,000-$25,000 | Primary heating in PA winters |
Prices before PA Whole Home ($500 max) and utility rebates. Federal 25C credit is $0 in 2026.
Heat pump installation in Pennsylvania costs $4,500-$25,000 depending on the type and size. A single-zone ductless mini-split runs $4,500-$7,000. A whole-home ducted system costs $12,000-$20,000. Cold-climate models that serve as primary heating run $15,000-$25,000. These are 2026 prices before utility rebates.
Pennsylvania offers the PA Whole Home program (up to $500) plus utility-specific rebates: PECO $300-$500, PPL $250-$400, Duquesne Light $200-$350, and Met-Ed $200-$300. The federal Section 25C energy efficiency credit expired December 31, 2025 — there is no federal heat pump credit in 2026.
No. The Section 25C energy efficiency tax credit expired December 31, 2025. There is no federal credit for heat pump purchases in 2026. PA state and utility rebates (PA utility rebates + utility-specific) are the primary incentives available.
It depends on your situation. PA has relatively low natural gas prices, so the savings from switching from gas to a heat pump can be narrow ($300-$800/year). Heat pumps make the strongest financial case when replacing an old furnace, when paired with solar panels, or when you also need AC replacement. We will give you an honest assessment.
The PA Whole Home program provides up to $500 for qualifying whole-home electrification projects, including heat pump installations. The rebate is graduated: $2,000 base plus $200 per percentage point of Total Energy Score improvement. A BPI-certified installer (like NuWatt) is required.
Yes. Modern cold-climate heat pumps operate efficiently down to -13F. Pennsylvania winters rarely drop below 10F, and the state is in climate zones 4-5. Cold-climate models maintain 100% heating capacity at 5F and work well as primary heating throughout PA.
If you have existing ductwork in good condition, a ducted heat pump is typically more cost-effective for whole-home comfort. Ductless mini-splits are ideal if you lack ductwork, want zone control, or are supplementing an existing system. Many PA homes use a hybrid approach.
Yes. NuWatt installs heat pumps across all of Pennsylvania including PECO, PPL, Duquesne Light, and Met-Ed utility territories. We handle the rebate paperwork for whichever utility serves your home.
Get a free consultation with honest advice about whether a heat pump makes sense for your home. We handle all rebate paperwork.