December 4, 2024. A solar-installer client named Caroline B. in the Yalecrest neighborhood called us with a specific request: she wanted to eliminate natural gas from her 1956 brick rambler entirely. She’d just finished a 14.4 kW rooftop solar installation, was already on Rocky Mountain Power’s Schedule 6 net-metering rate, and wanted to convert her heating from a 2009 Carrier 80% AFUE gas furnace to electric heat pump. The HVAC contractor she’d called the previous week told her: “Heat pumps don’t work in Utah winters — you’ll have backup electric resistance heat running constantly when it drops below 30.” This is the most common heat pump myth in Salt Lake County, and it’s wrong by a factor of 25-30°F. Modern cold-climate heat pumps maintain 100% rated heating capacity down to 5°F outdoor temperature, and continue producing usable heat (40-65% capacity) down to -15°F. Salt Lake County’s ASHRAE 99% winter design temperature is 9°F — well within the operating envelope of a properly-specified cold-climate heat pump. Dakota Whitfield ran the heating Manual J on Caroline’s 2,140 sq ft home: 48,000 BTU/hr design load. We installed a Mitsubishi Hyper-Heat PUZ-A48NHA outdoor unit with 4 ducted indoor heads (CITY MULTI configuration) for $14,800 gross / $10,400 net after Rocky Mountain Power Wattsmart rebate ($1,200), Dominion Energy ThermWise rebate ($600, even though she’s leaving gas — the program credit applies for one year), and federal IRA 25C tax credit ($2,000) plus Caroline’s solar offset reducing her marginal electricity cost. Her first winter (December 2024 – March 2025) ran her electric bill approximately $187 lower than the prior winter’s combined gas + electric.
Heat pumps are the most significant change happening in residential HVAC right now, and Salt Lake County’s climate sits in the sweet spot for cold-climate heat pump adoption. We’re cold enough that the operating cost savings vs. gas are meaningful (Salt Lake’s roughly 5,650 heating degree days annually), but warm enough that even modest cold-climate equipment handles design conditions without backup electric resistance. Combined with federal IRA 25C tax credits ($2,000 cap for heat pumps), Rocky Mountain Power Wattsmart rebates ($1,200 for cold-climate units), and Dominion Energy ThermWise transition credits, the economics make heat pump conversion attractive for a growing portion of our customers. This page covers what cold-climate heat pumps actually are, how they perform at Salt Lake design conditions, the four installation configurations we use, and what the work costs. For the AC-replacement scenario where you’re also adding cooling, see the heat pump installation page in cooling services.
A heat pump is a refrigeration system run in reverse. In cooling mode (familiar from air conditioning), refrigerant absorbs heat from indoor air and rejects it outdoors. In heating mode, the cycle reverses — refrigerant absorbs heat from outdoor air (yes, even when outdoor air is cold) and rejects it indoors. The same physical equipment performs both functions; a reversing valve directs refrigerant flow appropriately.
The fundamental insight that makes cold-climate heat pumps work: air at 0°F still contains substantial thermal energy. Absolute zero (the theoretical point at which all thermal motion stops) is -459.67°F. So 0°F outdoor air is at 459.67 degrees above absolute zero — full of energy that a properly-engineered heat pump can extract. The challenge is engineering equipment that extracts that energy efficiently. Modern cold-climate platforms use:
Heat pump efficiency is measured by COP (Coefficient of Performance) — the ratio of heat output (BTU/hr) to electrical input (BTU/hr equivalent). A COP of 3.0 means the heat pump delivers 3 BTUs of heat for every 1 BTU of electrical energy consumed. Modern cold-climate heat pumps deliver:
Compare to electric resistance heat (a “1.0 COP” device by definition — 1 BTU out for every 1 BTU in) and you understand why heat pumps are dramatically more efficient than electric resistance even at cold temperatures. Even at our 9°F design temperature, a properly-specified cold-climate heat pump delivers 2.0-2.5x more heat per electricity dollar than electric resistance heating.
We hold Mitsubishi Diamond Contractor status since 2019 — the top dealer tier with manufacturer extended labor warranty available (12-year parts + 12-year compressor when installed by Diamond Contractor).
Daikin Comfort Pro Premier status since 2020. 12-year parts and 12-year compressor warranty.
Bosch Authorized Pro since 2021. 10-year parts and compressor warranty.
Carrier Factory Authorized Dealer since 2018. 10-year parts and compressor warranty.
Trane Comfort Specialist since 2019. 12-year compressor and 12-year parts warranty.
Heat pump sizing follows a different framework than AC-only systems because the equipment must handle both the cooling load and the heating load. Three scenarios:
Heat pump installations require detailed sizing analysis and electrical service evaluation. Free in-home assessment with Manual J calculation, Manual D duct analysis, electrical evaluation, and rebate stacking explanation. Written quote within 48 business hours.