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Thermostat Wiring Guide: Understanding R, W, Y, G, C and How to Wire a Thermostat

Published March 8, 2026· Last updated July 10, 2026· 3 min read
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Whether you're installing a new smart thermostat, troubleshooting a wiring issue, or just trying to understand what those colored wires do, this guide covers everything you need. Thermostat wiring seems intimidating but follows a straightforward logic once you understand the terminals.

The Basic Terminal Map

Most residential thermostats use a standard set of terminal labels. Each terminal connects a colored wire that controls a specific function:

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Terminal Name Common Wire Color Function
R Power (24V AC) Red 24-volt power supply from transformer — required for all systems
Rc Cooling power Red Separate 24V supply for cooling (some systems split R into Rh/Rc)
Rh Heating power Red Separate 24V supply for heating (when split from Rc)
W / W1 Heat stage 1 White Calls for first-stage heat (opens gas valve in heating mode)
W2 Heat stage 2 White/Blue Calls for second-stage heat (two-stage and modulating furnaces)
Y / Y1 Cooling stage 1 Yellow Calls for first-stage cooling (starts AC compressor)
Y2 Cooling stage 2 Yellow/Blue Second-stage cooling
G Fan Green Runs the blower motor independently (for "fan ON" mode)
C Common Blue or Black Completes the 24V circuit — required for smart thermostats
O/B Heat pump reversing valve Orange/Blue Switches heat pump between heating and cooling mode
E Emergency heat Various Activates backup heat in heat pump systems

A Standard Gas Furnace + Central AC System (Most Minnesota Homes)

The typical 5-wire thermostat setup in a Minnesota home with gas furnace and central AC:

  • R (Red): 24V power
  • W (White): Heat call → furnace gas valve
  • Y (Yellow): Cooling call → AC contactor
  • G (Green): Fan call → blower motor
  • C (Blue/Black): Common → required for smart thermostat continuous power

Older homes may only have 4 wires (R, W, Y, G) without a C-wire — a common issue when upgrading to smart thermostats.

The C-Wire Problem: Why Smart Thermostats Need It

Traditional thermostats (non-digital "set it and forget it" types) draw power by "stealing" a tiny bit of current from the W or Y wire — barely enough to run a simple bimetallic strip but not enough for a smart thermostat's Wi-Fi, display, and processor.

Smart thermostats (Nest, Ecobee, Honeywell T6, etc.) require a dedicated C-wire for continuous 24V AC power. Without it, they either don't work or have intermittent connectivity issues.

Solutions If You Don't Have a C-Wire

  • Run a new thermostat wire: If you can fish a 5-wire cable from the furnace to the thermostat, this is the cleanest solution. Often doable in one hour through closets, attic, or basement.
  • Nest Power Connector: Installs at the furnace control board, uses existing wires to deliver C-wire equivalent power to the thermostat. Free from Nest for compatible systems.
  • Ecobee Power Extender Kit (PEK): Similar — installs at the furnace board and converts a 4-wire system to provide C-wire power to the Ecobee thermostat.
  • Add-a-wire adapter: Third-party devices that convert a 4-wire system to 5-wire equivalent without running new wire.
  • Use the unused wire: Many thermostat cables have 5–8 conductors, of which only 4–5 are connected. Pull the thermostat off the wall and check — there may be an unconnected wire already in the cable that can become your C-wire with a connection at the furnace board.

How to Check Your Current Wiring

  1. Turn off power to the furnace at the breaker
  2. Remove the thermostat from its wall plate (usually snaps off)
  3. Take a clear photo before touching anything — record which wire connects to which terminal
  4. Count the wires. If you have a blue or black wire NOT connected to any terminal, that's likely your unused C-wire conductor

Two-Stage Furnace Thermostat Wiring

A two-stage furnace adds a W2 terminal for second-stage heat. The thermostat must support two-stage heating and have a W2 terminal. When the thermostat calls for heat, it signals W1 first; if the home hasn't reached setpoint within 10–15 minutes, it signals W2 as well, escalating to second-stage operation. Two-stage compatible smart thermostats: Ecobee SmartThermostat Premium, Honeywell T9, Nest Learning Thermostat (with 2-stage configured).

Common Wiring Mistakes

  • Shorting R to C: Blows the furnace's 3-amp control fuse. Always verify power is off before making any connections.
  • Swapping W and Y: AC runs instead of heat and vice versa. Easy fix — swap the wires.
  • Leaving the Rh/Rc jumper removed: Some thermostats have a jumper between Rh and Rc terminals. If removed and your system uses a single R wire, the thermostat won't power. Reinstall the jumper.
  • Not labeling wires before disconnection: Always photograph before removing the old thermostat.

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