District of Columbia · updated for 2026 rules

Is a Heat Pump Worth It in District of Columbia?

Last updated June 27, 2026 · based on District of Columbia energy prices

In District of Columbia, where residential electricity averages about 16¢/kWh and natural gas about $1.3/therm, a heat pump may actually cost a bit more to run than cheap natural gas here — the case is strongest if you're also replacing an aging AC. District of Columbia has a moderate heating climate, which means a heat pump runs at a seasonal efficiency (COP) near 3 here.

District of Columbia heating cost comparison (average 2,000 sq ft home)

SystemEstimated annual heating cost
Gas furnace (95% AFUE)$753
Heating oil$2,095
Heat pump$860

If you currently heat with oil, the picture is much stronger: a heat pump could save around $1,235/year versus heating oil at District of Columbia prices. Against electric baseboard heat, a heat pump cuts heating energy use by about two-thirds, so the savings are even larger.

What this means for District of Columbia homeowners in 2026

The federal heat pump tax credit expired December 31, 2025, so a 2026 install in District of Columbia carries the full upfront cost unless you qualify for a state or utility rebate. Because District of Columbia's climate is moderate, the strongest financial case is when you're replacing both an old furnace and an aging air conditioner at once — the heat pump does both jobs with one system. Since cheap gas keeps running-cost savings modest here, lean on the combined heating-plus-cooling replacement and any available rebates to justify the switch.

Get your exact District of Columbia number. These figures use District of Columbia averages — your utility rate and home differ. Run the full Heat Pump vs Gas Furnace Calculator → (it pre-loads District of Columbia prices).

District of Columbia rebates

Check whether District of Columbia has launched its HEEHRA home-electrification rebate program (worth up to $8,000 for income-qualified households) and confirm it still has funding before counting on it — availability changes month to month. Also check your local electric utility, which may offer its own heat pump rebate of a few hundred to a couple thousand dollars. See our 2026 rebate guide for details.

Estimates based on District of Columbia average energy prices and a simplified model; your results will vary. Energy prices and incentives change frequently. Not financial advice.