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R-410A vs. R-22 Refrigerant: What Minnesota Homeowners Need to Know in 2026

Published March 13, 2026· Last updated July 10, 2026· 3 min read
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If you are replacing an air conditioner or heat pump in Minnesota, refrigerant type matters more than you might think. The old standard R-22 (Freon) has been phased out, R-410A has been the replacement for two decades, and now R-454B is entering the picture. This guide explains what each refrigerant means for your wallet, your equipment choices, and your comfort.

The R-22 Phase-Out: Why It Matters Now

R-22 was the standard refrigerant in residential air conditioners and heat pumps for decades. However, as an ozone-depleting substance, the EPA phased it out. As of January 1, 2020, no new R-22 can be manufactured or imported into the United States. The only R-22 available today is recycled or reclaimed from decommissioned systems, which makes it incredibly expensive.

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R-22 prices have gone from roughly $10 per pound in 2010 to $75-$150+ per pound in 2026. A typical residential system holds 6-12 pounds. If you need a full recharge due to a leak, the refrigerant alone costs $450-$1,800 before labor. Any system still running R-22 is at least 15 years old and running at significantly lower efficiency than modern equipment.

R-410A: The Current Standard

R-410A (brand name Puron) replaced R-22 as the industry standard starting in 2010. It does not deplete the ozone layer and operates at higher pressures, which means R-410A and R-22 equipment are not interchangeable. R-410A systems deliver better efficiency because the refrigerant absorbs and releases heat more effectively, and the refrigerant remains affordable at $6-$15 per pound.

R-410A Performance in Minnesota

For central air conditioning, R-410A handles Minnesota summers with no issues. For heat pump applications, R-410A works well down to about 25-30 degrees Fahrenheit before efficiency drops significantly. This is why most Minnesota heat pump installations pair with a gas furnace in a dual-fuel configuration — the heat pump handles mild weather efficiently while the furnace takes over during deep freezes.

R-454B: The Next Generation Refrigerant

New EPA regulations require lower Global Warming Potential (GWP) refrigerants in new equipment. R-410A has a GWP of 2,088 while R-454B comes in at just 466 — a 78% reduction. Major manufacturers including Goodman/Daikin, Carrier, Trane, and Lennox are transitioning their product lines to R-454B.

R-454B is classified as A2L or mildly flammable. This sounds concerning but the practical risk is minimal — the refrigerant will not ignite from normal ignition sources under typical conditions. Equipment designs include leak detection sensors and other safety features. A2L refrigerants have been used in automotive applications for years.

Property R-22 R-410A R-454B
Status in 2026 Phased out Current standard New standard
Ozone Depleting Yes No No
Global Warming Potential 1,810 2,088 466
Flammability Non-flammable (A1) Non-flammable (A1) Mildly flammable (A2L)
Cost per Pound (2026) $75-150+ $6-15 $10-25
Availability Reclaimed only Widely available Growing

What Should Minnesota Homeowners Do in 2026?

If You Have an R-22 System

Replace it. Every dollar spent repairing an R-22 system is wasted. The refrigerant costs are astronomical, the equipment is aging out, and you are running at 8-12 SEER efficiency when modern systems hit 14-20+ SEER. Federal tax credits offer up to $2,000 for qualifying heat pumps and $600 for high-efficiency central AC. Minnesota utilities like Xcel Energy and CenterPoint offer additional rebates. Replacing a 10 SEER R-22 system with a 16 SEER R-410A system typically reduces cooling costs by 35-40%.

If You Are Buying New

Both R-410A and R-454B equipment will be available in 2026. There is no reason to avoid R-410A — it will remain fully serviceable for the entire 15-20 year lifespan of your new system. R-454B models may carry a modest initial premium that will normalize over the next year or two as production scales. Either refrigerant will serve you well.

If Your R-410A System Needs Repair

Repair it with confidence. R-410A refrigerant is affordable and abundantly available. The transition to R-454B only affects new equipment manufacturing — it is not a ban on existing R-410A systems or their refrigerant supply. Your R-410A system will be serviceable for its full useful life.

Matching Your New AC to Your Furnace

When replacing your air conditioner, the outdoor condenser unit must be paired with a compatible indoor evaporator coil. Mismatched systems lose efficiency and may void warranty coverage. If you have a Goodman furnace, a matched Goodman condenser ensures you hit the rated SEER efficiency and maintain full warranty protection.

At Furnace Direct, we sell matched Goodman AC systems and furnace-plus-AC bundles at factory-direct pricing — the same equipment contractors install, without the contractor markup. Same-day delivery to the Twin Cities metro on orders placed before 3 PM CT. Whether you are upgrading from R-22 or adding central air to your Minnesota home for the first time, we will help you get the right system at the right price.

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