2026 Cost Data

How Much Does a Heat Pump Cost in Bradley?

Normal Range:$6,000 – $14,000

Heat pumps cost $11,000 on average in Illinois, based on 47 real homeowner quotes.

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Data from BLS · ENERGY STAR · EIA · 47+ homeowner reports · Updated March 2026

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Uses BLS labor data for your metro area, NREL electricity rates for your ZIP, and ENERGY STAR equipment pricing.

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We'll use your ZIP code to find local prices, rebates, and climate data.

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Bradley at a Glance

Average Cost

$11,000

median

47 crowdsourced quotes from Illinois

Electricity Rate

7.9¢

below 16¢ avg/kWh

EIA · Commonwealth Edison Co

Climate Zone

Zone 5

IECC 2021

Rebates

$0

expired

DSIRE · EnergySage

A heat pump in Bradley typically costs $6,000–$14,000 installed, based on 47 real quotes from Illinois homeowners. Bradley's electricity runs 7.9¢/kWh (Commonwealth Edison Co) — well below the national average, making heat pumps cheap to run. You're in Climate Zone 5, which means cold winters are the main concern — your system needs to handle temperatures below 10°F.

Cost by Project Type

What Will It Cost?

Cost depends more on what you're installing than your home size. A single ductless unit for one room is very different from a whole-home multi-zone system.

Central ducted heat pump

Replaces existing furnace — uses your current ductwork

$9,050 – $14,500

median $12,000 · 29 quotes

Based on real homeowner-reported costs in Illinois. Your actual cost depends on equipment brand, local labor rates ($30/hr in Bradley), and site conditions.

What Illinois Homeowners Actually Paid

Based on 47 crowdsourced quotes from real homeowners. These are what people reported paying — not contractor estimates.

Budget (25th)

$6,000

Median

$11,000

Premium (75th)

$14,000

Lowest

$1,000

Highest

$21,000

In Their Own Words

"

"Mentioned as a cost amount ('$5300 sounds like a lot') without specifying whether it was a paid price, quote, or estimate; no contractor or…"

Chicago area · 2025

$5,300

"

"Estimate 4 - Better option: Amana AS variable speed inverter up to 17.2 SEER2, 3.0 ton air conditioner (ASXS6) + Amana two-stage variable…"

2025

$18,000

DuctedAmana
"

"No mini split quotes; commenter thinks it would be around 3k."

Chicago area · 2025

$3,000

Ductless Mini-Split

Source: crowdsourced homeowner reports, collected and verified by WattFax.

Cost by System Type

There are a few different kinds of heat pump systems. The right one depends on whether your home has ductwork (the air vents in your walls and ceiling that blow hot/cold air).

Ducted

$12,055

median · 29 quotes

Connects to the air vents (ducts) already in your walls and ceiling. Best if you have existing ductwork from a furnace or AC system.

Ductless Mini-Split

$6,966

median · 7 quotes *

Wall-mounted units in individual rooms, no ductwork needed. Each room gets its own temperature control. Great for older homes or additions.

Dual-Fuel Hybrid

$8,500

median · 2 quotes *

A heat pump paired with a gas furnace as backup. The gas kicks in on the coldest days. Best in very cold climates where temps regularly drop below 10°F.

* Small sample size — may not reflect typical pricing.

Source: 47 homeowner reports from Illinois.

Most Installed Brands in Illinois

Based on what homeowners in Illinois actually bought — not manufacturer recommendations.

Trane

$13,500

8 installs

Bosch

$13,236

5 installs

Lennox

$8,225

4 installs

Amana

$19,500

4 installs

Source: 47+ homeowner installation reports from Illinois.

What Drives the Price in Bradley

$30/hr

Local HVAC Labor Rate

Labor is the biggest variable between cities. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that HVAC installers in the Bradley area earn a median of $30/hr. After business overhead (insurance, trucks, office), contractors typically charge around $105/hr. A typical install takes a 2-person crew 8–12 hours, putting Bradley labor at $1,260–$2,100. That's near the national median of $28/hr.

Source: BLS Occupational Employment Statistics, SOC 49-9021

Zone 5

Your Climate Zone

Bradley is in IECC Climate Zone 5. Zone 5 has cold winters with regular temps below 10°F. Heating dominates. Cold-climate models maintain 70–80% capacity at 5°F. This affects what size and type of system you need: since winters are harsh, your system needs enough heating power to keep up without backup electric heat.

A Bradley home under 1,500 sq ft typically needs a 2-ton system ($5,050–$9,180), while homes over 3,500 sq ft need 5 tons ($8,680–$15,020).

In Zone 5, NEEP-certified cold climate models are strongly recommended. These cost 10–20% more upfront but work efficiently down to -15°F, so you avoid expensive backup electric heat strips.

Source: IECC 2021 Climate Zone Map · NEEP Cold Climate Air Source Heat Pump List

7.9¢/kWh

Your Electricity Rate

This is what you pay per kilowatt-hour of electricity through Commonwealth Edison Co. It matters because a heat pump runs on electricity — so your electric rate directly affects how much it costs to heat and cool your home. Your rate is well below average — even a standard-efficiency system will be cheap to run.

What's SEER2? It stands for Seasonal Energy Efficiency Ratio — think of it like MPG for your car. A 20 SEER2 system uses about 25% less electricity than a 15 SEER2 system. At Bradley's rate, that's roughly $135/year saved on heating alone.

Source: EIA Electric Power Monthly · Commonwealth Edison Co

Will a Heat Pump Save You Money?

If you currently heat with a gas furnace and cool with a separate AC unit, here's how a heat pump compares — it replaces both in a single system. Based on Bradley's electricity rate of 7.9¢/kWh.

Current: Gas Furnace + AC

Heating (gas furnace)$827/yr
Cooling (AC unit)$95/yr
Total$922/yr

With Heat Pump (Heating + Cooling)

Heating$758/yr
Cooling$68/yr
Total$826/yr

Switching could save you roughly $96/year on heating and cooling bills.

Assumes 1,500–2,500 sqft home. Gas furnace at 95% AFUE, existing AC at SEER 10, heat pump COP 2.3. Rates from EIA.

Rebates You Can Use in Bradley

Rebates reduce your upfront cost — some are taken off the price at purchase, others come as tax credits or utility bill credits.

Federal 25C Tax Credit

Expired December 31, 2025. May be renewed — check IRS.gov.

Expired

No state or utility rebates currently found for this area. Check with Commonwealth Edison Co or your contractor — new programs launch frequently.

Source: DSIRE · EnergySage · Rewiring America

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a heat pump cost in Bradley?

Based on 47 real homeowner quotes, the median installed cost in Illinois is $11,000. Budget installs (25th percentile) come in around $6,000, while premium systems hit $14,000+. The price depends on your home size, system type, and whether you need new ductwork.

What rebates are available in Bradley?

The federal 25C tax credit (up to $2,000) expired December 2025. No active state or utility programs found for this area.

Do heat pumps work in Bradley's climate?

Yes. Bradley is in Climate Zone 5. Zone 5 has cold winters with regular temps below 10°F. Heating dominates. Our recommendation: NEEP-listed cold-climate model with COP above 2.0 at 5°F.

What's the difference between ducted and ductless?

A ducted heat pump connects to the air vents already in your walls and ceiling — if you have a furnace now, you probably have ducts. It heats and cools the whole house through those vents. A ductless mini-split uses small wall-mounted units in individual rooms, connected by a thin pipe to an outdoor unit. It's ideal if you don't have existing ductwork, or want to control temperatures room-by-room. In Illinois: Ducted median $12,055 vs Ductless Mini-Split median $6,966.

What does electricity cost in Bradley?

7.9¢/kWh (Commonwealth Edison Co). That's well below the national average — heat pumps are especially cheap to run here. This rate directly affects your monthly operating cost since heat pumps run on electricity.

What brand should I get?

Based on what Illinois homeowners actually installed, the most popular brands are Trane (8 installs, median $13,500), Bosch (5 installs, median $13,236), Lennox (4 installs, median $8,225). Brand choice matters less than proper sizing and installation quality — a well-installed mid-tier system will outperform a poorly installed premium one.

Labor: BLS (SOC 49-9021) · Equipment: ENERGY STAR · Electricity: EIA / NREL · Rebates: Rewiring America · Climate: IECC 2021· Cold climate: NEEP · Quotes: 47+ homeowner reports · Updated March 2026