2026 Cost Data
How Much Does a Heat Pump Cost in Hines?
Normal Range:$6,500 – $17,500
Heat pumps cost $15,000 on average in Oregon, based on 14 real homeowner quotes.
Get Your EstimateData from BLS · ENERGY STAR · EIA · 14+ 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.
Hines at a Glance
Average Cost
$15,000
median
14 crowdsourced quotes from Oregon
Electricity Rate
10.1¢
below 16¢ avg/kWh
EIA · Oregon Trail El Cons Coop, Inc
Climate Zone
Zone 5
IECC 2021
Rebates
$10,000
5 programs
DSIRE · EnergySage
A heat pump in Hines typically costs $6,500–$17,500 installed, based on 14 real quotes from Oregon homeowners. Hines's electricity runs 10.1¢/kWh (Oregon Trail El Cons Coop, Inc) — 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. There are currently 5 rebate programs that could save you up to $10,000.
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.
Single ductless mini-split
One room or area — no existing ductwork needed
$4,650 – $10,750
median $7,392 · 24 quotes
Ductless mini-split (2 zones)
Two rooms with individual temperature control
$7,925 – $15,750
median $10,700 · 46 quotes
Ductless mini-split (3 zones)
Three rooms — common for smaller homes without ducts
$9,862 – $18,359
median $15,735 · 52 quotes
Whole-home ductless (4 zones)
Full house coverage with 4 indoor units
$9,500 – $25,000
median $23,000 · 41 quotes
Central ducted heat pump
Replaces existing furnace — uses your current ductwork
$10,000 – $17,658
median $13,000 · 482 quotes
Dual-fuel / hybrid system
Heat pump + gas furnace backup for coldest days
$11,000 – $22,000
median $17,000 · 159 quotes
Based on real homeowner-reported costs nationally. Your actual cost depends on equipment brand, local labor rates ($28/hr in Hines), and site conditions.
What Oregon Homeowners Actually Paid
Based on 14 crowdsourced quotes from real homeowners. These are what people reported paying — not contractor estimates.
Budget (25th)
$6,500
Median
$15,000
Premium (75th)
$17,500
Lowest
$3,000
Highest
$20,000
In Their Own Words
"Quoted us ~14k for replacing central AC and/or furnace for a 2600 sq ft home."
$14,000
"Paid 17.5k to replace gas furnace and AC with a Daikin heat pump."
$17,500
"Previous bid from a company down in Eugene."
$18,000
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).
Ductless Mini-Split
$13,333
median · 6 quotes *
Wall-mounted units in individual rooms, no ductwork needed. Each room gets its own temperature control. Great for older homes or additions.
Ducted
$9,000
median · 2 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.
* Small sample size — may not reflect typical pricing.
Source: 14 homeowner reports from Oregon.
What Drives the Price in Hines
$28/hr
Local HVAC Labor Rate
Labor is the biggest variable between cities. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that HVAC installers in the Hines area earn a median of $28/hr. After business overhead (insurance, trucks, office), contractors typically charge around $98/hr. A typical install takes a 2-person crew 8–12 hours, putting Hines labor at $1,176–$1,960. That's near the national median of $28/hr.
Source: BLS Occupational Employment Statistics, SOC 49-9021
Zone 5
Your Climate Zone
Hines 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 Hines home under 1,500 sq ft typically needs a 2-ton system ($4,980–$9,068), while homes over 3,500 sq ft need 5 tons ($8,568–$14,852).
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
10.1¢/kWh
Your Electricity Rate
This is what you pay per kilowatt-hour of electricity through Oregon Trail El Cons Coop, Inc. 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 Hines's rate, that's roughly $172/year saved on heating alone.
Source: EIA Electric Power Monthly · Oregon Trail El Cons Coop, Inc
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 Hines's electricity rate of 10.1¢/kWh.
Current: Gas Furnace + AC
With Heat Pump (Heating + Cooling)
Switching could save you roughly $301/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 Hines
Rebates reduce your upfront cost — some are taken off the price at purchase, others come as tax credits or utility bill credits. There are currently 5 programs available worth up to $10,000.
Federal 25C Tax Credit
Expired December 31, 2025. May be renewed — check IRS.gov.
Home Efficiency Rebate Program (HOMES)
State program
Home Electrification and Appliance Rebate Program (HEAR)
State program
Community Heat Pump Deployment Program
State program
Multnomah County Wood Burning Exchange
county
Heat Pump Purchase Program
State program
Source: DSIRE · EnergySage · Rewiring America
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does a heat pump cost in Hines?
Based on 14 real homeowner quotes, the median installed cost in Oregon is $15,000. Budget installs (25th percentile) come in around $6,500, while premium systems hit $17,500+. The price depends on your home size, system type, and whether you need new ductwork.
What rebates are available in Hines?
The federal 25C tax credit (up to $2,000) expired December 2025. Oregon currently has 5 active programs worth up to $10,000. These include utility rebates, state incentives, and income-qualified programs.
Do heat pumps work in Hines's climate?
Yes. Hines 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 Oregon: Ductless Mini-Split median $13,333 vs Ducted median $9,000.
What does electricity cost in Hines?
10.1¢/kWh (Oregon Trail El Cons Coop, Inc). 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.
Labor: BLS (SOC 49-9021) · Equipment: ENERGY STAR · Electricity: EIA / NREL · Rebates: Rewiring America · Climate: IECC 2021· Cold climate: NEEP · Quotes: 14+ homeowner reports · Updated March 2026