Smart Thermostat Salt Lake City | ecobee Honeywell

Smart Thermostat Installation in Salt Lake County

November 17, 2024. A customer named Stephanie N. in Sugar House — the same homeowner whose January 2024 inversion-season IAQ story appears on the indoor air quality page — called us about an unexpected outcome from her layered IAQ upgrade. The MERV 13 media filter, AprilAire 213 cabinet, and Coway Mighty bedroom HEPA had dramatically improved her family’s respiratory symptoms during inversion events. But her gas bill had jumped 22% in the year following installation. The increased filtration created higher static pressure load on her ECM blower; she’d compensated by running the system fan on continuous mode (recommended for IAQ during inversion events) without recognizing the heating-cycle implications. Combined with her existing programmable thermostat (a 2014 White-Rodgers basic unit with limited scheduling capability), her usage pattern was suboptimal. Solution: Honeywell T10 Pro smart thermostat with humidity sensing, geofencing capability, and integration with the existing Carrier Performance equipment. Replaced the old thermostat ($385 installed including configuration and smartphone app setup). Programmed: aggressive temperature setback during away periods (work hours, school hours), recovery 45 minutes before scheduled return, optimal stage management for the existing two-stage equipment, fan-mode reduction to “Auto” with periodic IAQ-friendly cycles, geofencing using her smartphone for “away” detection. Six months later: gas usage dropped 31% from peak. Electric usage dropped 18% (less blower runtime, lower fan-only operation). IAQ benefits preserved through the configured periodic IAQ cycles. Smart thermostats aren’t a gimmick — they’re a meaningful efficiency and comfort upgrade when properly configured.

Smart thermostats have become the standard residential thermostat category over the past decade. The transition from traditional programmable thermostats (Honeywell RTH series, White-Rodgers basic units, basic Carrier and Trane offerings) to smart thermostats (Honeywell T10 Pro, ecobee SmartThermostat Premium, Google Nest Learning, Carrier Infinity, Trane ComfortLink II) reflects real capability differences: smartphone integration, occupancy detection, geofencing, multi-room temperature sensing, energy reporting, voice control integration, and equipment-specific optimization. The upgrade isn’t about novelty; it’s about delivering measurable efficiency and comfort improvements that traditional programmable thermostats can’t match. Below is what we install, how each platform differs, and what to expect from the installation. For broader installation context see the installation services hub.

Smart Thermostat Platforms We Install

Honeywell T10 Pro (Most Versatile)

What it is:
Honeywell’s flagship smart thermostat. Compatible with most HVAC equipment regardless of brand. Multi-room sensors available for sensing temperature in different parts of the home. WiFi connectivity, smartphone integration via Honeywell Home app. Geofencing capability for automatic setback when away.
Equipment compatibility:
Standard 24V HVAC equipment (most residential), single-stage and two-stage equipment, modulating equipment (with specific configuration), heat pumps, electric heat, multi-stage AC. Wired or battery-powered installations.
Notable features:
Built-in humidity sensor and humidifier control. Up to 20 wireless sensors (T10 Pro plus T10 Smart Sensor combination) for multi-room temperature. Voice control via Alexa, Google Home, Apple HomeKit. Smart Home integration with major platforms. Algorithm-based optimization (learns home patterns, adjusts pre-heat timing).
Cost:
$285 retail (T10 Pro plus 1 smart sensor). $145-$245 installation labor including configuration. Total typical installed cost: $385-$525.

ecobee SmartThermostat Premium

What it is:
ecobee’s flagship smart thermostat with significant occupancy detection capabilities. SmartSensor remote sensors detect both temperature and motion (occupancy), allowing the thermostat to “follow” occupants throughout the home for better comfort optimization.
Notable features:
Apple Siri voice integration (in addition to Alexa, Google Home). Built-in air quality monitor (rough PM2.5 and VOC indication). Energy reports showing usage patterns. Smart home integration including HomeKit. Two-way audio for intercom function. Multi-room occupancy sensing.
Cost:
$245 retail (SmartThermostat Premium). Additional SmartSensors $85 each. Installation labor $145-$245. Total typical installed cost: $385-$525.

Google Nest Learning Thermostat (4th Gen)

What it is:
Google’s flagship smart thermostat. Self-learning behavior algorithm that observes usage patterns and automatically adjusts schedules. Distinctive circular dial interface.
Notable features:
Self-learning algorithm reduces user programming effort. Google Home and Assistant integration. Energy reports. Auto-Away detection via internal motion sensor. Multi-room temperature via additional Nest Temperature Sensors.
Limitations:
Smaller HVAC ecosystem compatibility than Honeywell (some commercial-grade variable-capacity equipment doesn’t integrate well). No Apple HomeKit native integration (workarounds exist via Homebridge). Self-learning algorithm sometimes makes unexpected schedule changes that some users find frustrating.
Cost:
$245 retail. Additional Temperature Sensors $35 each. Installation labor $145-$245. Total typical installed cost: $385-$525.

Carrier Infinity Touch Control

What it is:
Carrier’s flagship integrated control system. Designed specifically for Carrier Infinity variable-capacity equipment (Greenspeed heat pumps, Infinity modulating furnaces, Infinity variable-capacity AC). Larger touch display than competitor thermostats.
Why Carrier customers choose it:
Full integration with Carrier Infinity equipment. Communicates with equipment via proprietary protocol enabling precise modulation control. Equipment performance optimization not available with universal thermostats. Combined warranty when Infinity components installed together.
Limitations:
Only optimal with Carrier Infinity equipment. With non-Carrier equipment, functions as basic smart thermostat without proprietary benefits. No Apple HomeKit integration.
Cost:
$640-$840 with installation when installing Carrier Infinity equipment (often included or discounted as part of equipment installation). Standalone retrofit: $545-$745 installed.

Trane ComfortLink II XL850

What it is:
Trane’s flagship integrated control. Designed for Trane variable-capacity equipment (XV20 heat pumps, S9V2 modulating furnace, XV20 variable-speed AC). Similar concept to Carrier Infinity Touch.
Why Trane customers choose it:
Full integration with Trane variable-capacity equipment. ComfortLink II communication protocol enables precise modulation. Trane Equipment Warranty optimization.
Cost:
$640-$840 with new Trane equipment installation. Retrofit: $545-$745 installed.

Lennox iComfort S30

What it is:
Lennox’s flagship integrated control. Designed for Lennox premium equipment (SLP99V modulating furnace, XC25 variable-capacity AC, PureAir IAQ integration).
Why Lennox customers choose it:
Full Lennox equipment integration. SmartHome Bridge for major smart home platforms. Built-in monitoring of multiple zones and IAQ systems.
Cost:
$540-$840 retrofit. Often included in Lennox premium equipment installations.

Mitsubishi kumo cloud (for Ductless Equipment)

What it is:
Mitsubishi’s smart control platform for ductless mini-split equipment. Smartphone app provides multi-zone control. Integration with Alexa and Google Home (limited Apple HomeKit integration through workarounds).
Why Mitsubishi customers use it:
Required for full smart functionality of Mitsubishi multi-zone systems. Allows remote monitoring and control of all indoor heads. Each indoor head independently controlled via the app.
Cost:
kumo cloud interface module $185-$285 installed. Free smartphone app. Required for smart functionality on Mitsubishi mini-split installations.

What “Smart” Actually Delivers

Geofencing for automatic setback:
Using smartphone location, the thermostat knows when household members leave and return. Automatic setback reduces temperature during away periods (heating: setpoint reduced 4-8°F; cooling: setpoint raised 4-8°F). Pre-heat or pre-cool begins automatically 30-90 minutes before scheduled return. Stephanie N.’s gas usage reduction in the opening case study was significantly driven by geofencing setback during work hours.
Smartphone monitoring and control:
Remote temperature adjustment from anywhere with internet connection. Useful for: returning home early (pre-heat or pre-cool), realizing you forgot to adjust before vacation, monitoring elderly parents’ homes, vacation rental property management, second home temperature management.
Energy usage reporting:
Detailed reports on heating and cooling runtime, energy consumption, comparison to previous months and years. Helps identify usage patterns, equipment issues (sudden increase in runtime may indicate equipment problem), and opportunities for further optimization.
Multi-room temperature sensing:
Wireless sensors in different rooms allow the thermostat to consider temperatures throughout the home rather than just at the main thermostat location. Average-multiple-zones logic or follow-me logic (heating/cooling based on where occupants currently are) improves whole-home comfort.
Voice control integration:
“Alexa, set the temperature to 72.” “Hey Google, what’s the temperature?” “Hey Siri, lower the temperature 3 degrees.” Convenient for hands-free adjustment, particularly useful for elderly users or accessibility considerations.
Equipment-specific optimization:
Smart thermostats with multi-stage and modulating equipment can optimize stage selection. Two-stage equipment: low stage for shorter cycles and dehumidification; high stage for rapid catch-up. Modulating equipment: continuous output level matched to load. Better comfort and efficiency than single-stage operation.
Algorithm-based learning:
Self-learning thermostats (Nest, ecobee, Honeywell T10 Pro algorithms) observe usage patterns and automatically optimize: pre-heat timing learns how long the home takes to reach setpoint, fan operation timing adjusts based on actual run characteristics, schedule changes are suggested based on observed behavior.
Humidity sensing and control:
Built-in humidity sensor measures indoor RH. Controls connected humidifier (winter) and dehumidifier (summer). Coordinates AC operation for dehumidification benefit during humid weather.
Smart home integration:
Integration with Apple HomeKit, Google Home, Amazon Alexa, Samsung SmartThings. Allows thermostat to be part of automation routines: “Goodnight” routine reduces temperature, “I’m leaving” routine sets away mode, weather-based routines adjust for forecast.
Air quality monitoring (some platforms):
ecobee Premium and some other platforms include basic IAQ sensors (PM2.5, VOC indication). Not as detailed as professional IAQ measurement, but provides ongoing awareness of indoor air conditions.

The Installation Process

  1. In-home assessment (30-45 minutes). Existing thermostat inspection. HVAC equipment inventory (compatibility verification). Wiring inspection (modern smart thermostats typically need a “C” wire for power; older homes may need C-wire adapter or transformer). WiFi signal strength assessment (smart thermostat needs reliable WiFi at installation location). Customer preference discussion (which features matter, smart home platform compatibility, household routine considerations).
  2. Equipment recommendation. Based on existing HVAC equipment, customer preferences, and budget, specific thermostat platform recommended. Honeywell T10 Pro for most universal applications; ecobee for households prioritizing occupancy detection; Carrier Infinity for Carrier customers; etc.
  3. Quote within 48 business hours or same-visit pricing. Thermostat cost plus installation labor. Add-ons (multi-room sensors, C-wire adapter if needed, smart home integration consulting): itemized separately.
  4. Installation (typically 1-2 hours):
    • Existing thermostat removed (electrical isolated before removal)
    • Wiring inspected and labeled per HVAC equipment requirements
    • C-wire installation if needed (running new wire from HVAC equipment to thermostat location, or installing C-wire adapter at HVAC equipment)
    • New thermostat backplate mounted
    • Wiring connected to new thermostat
    • Thermostat powered up and initial setup performed
  5. Configuration and setup:
    • WiFi connection established
    • Smartphone app downloaded and account created
    • Initial schedule programmed
    • HVAC equipment type configured (single-stage, two-stage, heat pump, multi-stage)
    • Geofencing setup if customer is using it
    • Multi-room sensors configured (if applicable)
    • Smart home integration enabled (Alexa, Google Home, Apple HomeKit, etc.)
    • Voice control tested
  6. Customer walkthrough. Operation explained. Smartphone app navigation demonstrated. Recommended setpoints discussed. Smart home integration tested. Customer questions addressed.
  7. Documentation. Installation paperwork, warranty information, brief user reference card. Online configuration available for customer to log in remotely if any adjustments needed.

Pricing Reference (Q2 2026)

Standard smart thermostat installation:
$245-$485 installed depending on thermostat model and complexity. Most common installations: $385-$485 range.
Equipment-specific premium thermostat installation:
$545-$840 installed (Carrier Infinity Touch, Trane ComfortLink II, Lennox iComfort S30 retrofit). Higher cost reflects equipment-specific integration capabilities.
Mitsubishi kumo cloud module:
$185-$285 installed for ductless mini-split systems.
Common add-on costs:
  • Additional remote temperature sensor: $35-$85 each (ecobee, Honeywell, Nest)
  • C-wire adapter installation: $145-$285 (less invasive than running new wire)
  • C-wire run from equipment to thermostat: $245-$485 (more invasive but cleaner solution)
  • Smart home integration configuration (multi-platform setup): $85-$185
  • Multi-thermostat system (for zoned applications): pricing per zone
  • Combined installation with zoning system: $585-$1,200 total (zoning thermostats per zone)
Rocky Mountain Power Wattsmart rebate:
$50 rebate for qualifying smart thermostat installations. Filed within 72 hours of installation. Most current smart thermostats qualify (Honeywell T10 Pro, ecobee Premium, Nest Learning, Carrier Infinity, Trane ComfortLink II, Lennox iComfort).
Federal IRA 25C tax credit consideration:
Smart thermostat purchase qualifies as part of the $1,200/year energy efficiency credit when combined with qualifying equipment installation. As standalone purchase, the smart thermostat alone may not generate meaningful tax credit; check current IRS guidance.
Comfort Care plan integration:
Smart thermostat installation included in Premium Care plan ($295/year). Comfort Care plan ($189/year) offers 15% discount on standalone smart thermostat installation.

Smart Thermostat Selection Guide

For Carrier equipment customers:
Carrier Infinity Touch Control if you have Carrier Infinity variable-capacity equipment. Universal Honeywell T10 Pro or ecobee Premium if you have basic Carrier equipment.
For Trane equipment customers:
Trane ComfortLink II XL850 if you have Trane variable-capacity equipment. Universal smart thermostat if you have basic Trane equipment.
For Lennox equipment customers:
Lennox iComfort S30 for premium Lennox equipment. Universal smart thermostat for basic Lennox equipment.
For Mitsubishi mini-split systems:
kumo cloud module is required for smart functionality. Each indoor head also has its own thermostat or wireless controller; kumo provides multi-zone management.
For households prioritizing smart home integration:
ecobee Premium (Apple HomeKit native, Alexa, Google) or Honeywell T10 Pro (broadest integration). Nest works for Google-centric households.
For households prioritizing occupancy detection:
ecobee Premium has the most sophisticated multi-room occupancy detection. SmartSensor wireless remote sensors detect both temperature and motion, allowing the thermostat to “follow” occupants throughout the home.
For households prioritizing self-learning:
Nest Learning Thermostat is the most aggressive self-learning platform. Algorithm observes usage patterns and automatically adjusts schedules. Some users love this; others find it frustrating when the thermostat changes schedules unexpectedly.
For households prioritizing universal compatibility:
Honeywell T10 Pro has the broadest HVAC equipment compatibility across multiple brands. Best universal choice when you want flexibility for future equipment changes.
For households on a budget:
Honeywell T6 Pro WiFi (around $145 retail) provides core smart thermostat functionality at lower cost. Honeywell T9 (multi-room sensing capability at lower price than T10) is another good option.

Common Considerations

Will my current wiring support a smart thermostat?
Maybe. Smart thermostats need a “common” or “C” wire to provide constant power; older homes may have only 4-wire thermostat installations (R, W, Y, G) without the C wire. Solutions: C-wire adapter (smaller transformer installed at HVAC equipment that adds power to the existing wires) or running new wire from equipment to thermostat. We verify wiring during the assessment and quote any modifications needed.
Does the smart thermostat work without internet?
Smart thermostats function as programmable thermostats without internet, but lose smart features (smartphone control, voice control, geofencing, smart home integration). Most retain locally-stored schedules and continue normal operation during temporary internet outages.
What if I have a permanent power outage?
Smart thermostats lose function during power outages just like all HVAC equipment. They restart automatically when power returns; some require WiFi reconnection (typically automatic within 30-60 seconds of power restoration).
How long does the battery last (if applicable)?
Some smart thermostats can operate on battery power (Honeywell T6 Pro, some basic units). Battery life typically 12-18 months depending on usage. Wired installations (Nest, Honeywell T10 Pro, ecobee Premium) use HVAC equipment power so battery isn’t a concern.
Can I install the smart thermostat myself?
Standard installation is within reach of moderately handy homeowners. Risks: incorrect wiring can damage HVAC equipment or short-circuit transformers; C-wire installation requires understanding of equipment side wiring; configuration errors can prevent proper equipment operation. We recommend professional installation for warranty preservation and proper operation, particularly for equipment-specific premium thermostats (Carrier Infinity, Trane ComfortLink II, Lennox iComfort).

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does smart thermostat installation cost?
Standard smart thermostat: $245-$485 installed. Equipment-specific premium thermostat (Carrier Infinity, Trane ComfortLink II): $545-$840 installed. C-wire adapter or new wire installation: $145-$485 additional if needed.
How long does installation take?
Typical installation including configuration: 1-2 hours. C-wire installation if needed adds 30-60 minutes. Multi-room sensor setup adds 15-30 minutes per sensor.
Will a smart thermostat save me money?
For most households, yes. Geofencing setback during away periods typically reduces HVAC operating cost 8-15% for typical Salt Lake homes. Combined with proper scheduling and equipment optimization, total savings can reach 15-25%. Stephanie N.’s case study (31% gas savings, 18% electric savings) is on the higher end but not atypical for households that had previously been over-running their HVAC.
Are smart thermostats secure?
Modern smart thermostats from major manufacturers (Honeywell, ecobee, Google) implement security best practices: encrypted communications, secure authentication, regular firmware updates. Like any internet-connected device, smart thermostats have potential security implications, but manufacturer security investment is generally robust. Use strong passwords for the manufacturer account, keep firmware updated, and follow general smart home security best practices.
Which smart thermostat is best?
“Best” depends on your situation. Honeywell T10 Pro for universal compatibility and broad smart home integration. ecobee Premium for occupancy detection and Apple HomeKit households. Carrier Infinity / Trane ComfortLink II / Lennox iComfort for equipment-specific premium installations. Nest for self-learning behavior. We provide recommendations based on your specific equipment, preferences, and smart home ecosystem during the assessment visit.

Schedule Smart Thermostat Installation

30-45 minute assessment visit determines compatibility and recommends specific platform. Installation typically completed within 1-2 weeks of authorization. Same-day installation available when standard equipment and compatibility verified.

Schedule Installation →

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