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HVAC Tax Credits in 2026: How to Save $600–$2,000 on a New Furnace or AC

Published March 8, 2026· Last updated July 10, 2026· 3 min read
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The federal government is currently offering some of the best HVAC incentives in history under the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA). If you're buying a new furnace, heat pump, or central AC in 2026, you may qualify for a tax credit worth $600 to $2,000—money directly off your federal tax bill, not just a deduction.

Here's everything Minnesota homeowners need to know.

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The Energy Efficient Home Improvement Credit (Section 25C)

The Section 25C credit covers high-efficiency heating and cooling equipment installed in your primary residence. The credit is nonrefundable (it reduces taxes you owe, but won't generate a refund on its own) and has annual caps by equipment type.

Equipment Type Max Annual Credit Efficiency Requirement Credit % of Cost
Gas/Propane/Oil Furnace $600 96% AFUE 30%
Central Air Conditioner $600 ≥16 SEER2 / 12 EER2 30%
Air-Source Heat Pump $2,000 ≥8.5 HSPF2 (cold climate) 30%
Heat Pump Water Heater $2,000 Energy Star certified 30%
Biomass Stove/Boiler $2,000 ≥75% efficiency 30%
Home Energy Audit $150 Certified auditor 30%
Annual Cap (all 25C items) $1,200/year
Heat pump exception $2,000/year Heat pumps have their own $2K cap
💡 Best combo for 2026: If you replace your furnace AND central AC in the same year, you can claim $600 for the furnace + $600 for the AC = $1,200 total (the annual max). If you install a heat pump instead, you can claim up to $2,000 separately from the $1,200 cap.

Does My Goodman Furnace Qualify?

To qualify for the $600 furnace tax credit, your furnace must be at least 96% AFUE (the highest efficiency tier). All Goodman furnaces with model numbers containing "96" or "97" in the efficiency designation meet this threshold. Specifically:

  • GMVC96 / GMSS96 — 96% AFUE, qualifies
  • GMVC97 / GMSS97 — 97% AFUE, qualifies
  • GMVC80 / GMSS8080% AFUE, does NOT qualify
  • GMEC96 — 96% AFUE, qualifies

You'll need the manufacturer's Certificate of Qualification (also called a "25C certificate") — Goodman provides this for qualifying models on their website. Keep it with your tax records.

How to Claim the Credit

The process is straightforward:

  1. Buy and install a qualifying furnace, AC, or heat pump in your primary home (rental properties don't qualify)
  2. Get the manufacturer's certificate confirming the equipment meets 25C requirements
  3. Keep your receipt/invoice showing the purchase price and installation date
  4. File IRS Form 5695 with your federal tax return — this is where you calculate and claim the credit
  5. The credit reduces your tax liability dollar-for-dollar (not just a deduction)
⚠️ Note: Tax laws can change. The IRA credits were enacted in 2022 and are currently authorized through 2032, but consult a tax professional to confirm your eligibility for your specific situation. We're HVAC experts, not tax advisors.

Minnesota State & Utility Rebates

On top of the federal credit, Minnesota homeowners can often stack additional rebates from their utility provider:

Utility / Program Rebate Amount Equipment Type
Xcel Energy (gas) $50–$200 96%+ AFUE furnace
CenterPoint Energy $100–$300 High-efficiency furnace
Xcel Energy (electric) $200–$600 Heat pump (ENERGY STAR)
Great Plains Energy $50–$150 High-efficiency AC
MN Power / Lake Country Power Varies Heat pump, smart thermostat
PACE financing Low-interest loan Energy efficiency upgrades

Check your specific utility provider's rebate portal — rebate amounts change seasonally and are often first-come, first-served. Stacking a $200 utility rebate on top of a $600 federal credit effectively reduces your out-of-pocket furnace cost by $800.

Real-World Example: What You Actually Save

Let's say you buy a Goodman 96% AFUE two-stage furnace for $1,400 from Furnace Direct (factory-direct pricing) and pay $800 for licensed installation. Total project cost: $2,200.

  • 30% federal tax credit on the equipment cost: $420 (30% of $1,400)
  • Xcel Energy rebate (estimate): $150
  • Annual fuel savings vs. 80% AFUE unit: ~$280/year
  • Effective first-year savings: $850
  • 10-year total savings vs. 80% unit: ~$3,650
Get the most from your tax credit: Furnace Direct sells 96%+ AFUE Goodman furnaces at factory-direct prices — so you're maximizing the qualifying purchase base before the 30% credit applies. Shop qualifying furnaces →
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