Heat Pump Systems: Types, Operation, and Climate Suitability

Heat pump systems transfer thermal energy rather than generate it through combustion, making them a distinct category within residential and commercial HVAC. This page covers the operational mechanics, major system types, climate performance boundaries, regulatory context, and common misunderstandings that affect system selection and code compliance across the United States. Understanding these distinctions matters because federal efficiency standards, state incentive eligibility, and local permit requirements all depend on correct system classification and installation documentation.


Definition and scope

A heat pump is a refrigeration-cycle device that moves heat between an indoor conditioned space and an outdoor or underground source, operating in both heating and cooling modes using the same refrigerant loop. The defining characteristic is reversibility: a reversing valve allows the system to absorb heat from a low-temperature source in winter and reject heat from the conditioned space in summer.

Heat pumps are classified under HVAC system types by building type standards applicable to residential, light commercial, and large commercial installations. The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) regulates minimum efficiency for heat pumps under 10 CFR Part 430 (residential) and 10 CFR Part 431 (commercial), with enforcement tiers tied to system capacity measured in British Thermal Units per hour (BTU/h). The Environmental Protection Agency's ENERGY STAR program separately certifies heat pumps that exceed federal minimums, typically by 15 to rates that vary by region in rated efficiency.

Scope within this page is limited to electrically driven vapor-compression heat pumps. Absorption heat pumps (gas-driven) exist but represent less than rates that vary by region of the installed U.S. residential market according to DOE's Buildings Energy Data Book and are not the primary subject here.


Core mechanics or structure

The refrigeration cycle in a heat pump follows four discrete stages: compression, condensation, expansion, and evaporation. A compressor raises the pressure and temperature of a refrigerant gas. That hot, high-pressure gas travels to a heat exchanger (condenser in cooling mode, acting as the indoor coil in heating mode), where it releases heat and condenses to a liquid. The liquid passes through an expansion device — typically a thermostatic expansion valve (TXV) or electronic expansion valve (EEV) — where pressure drops sharply, cooling the refrigerant. The cold refrigerant then absorbs heat in the evaporator coil before returning to the compressor.

The reversing valve, a four-way valve controlled by the thermostat or control board, redirects refrigerant flow so that the outdoor coil becomes the evaporator in heating mode, extracting heat from outdoor air even at temperatures as low as −13°F (−25°C) in cold-climate models. Standard heat pumps begin losing efficiency below approximately 35°F (1.7°C); cold-climate heat pumps (CCHPs) rated under the Northeast Energy Efficiency Partnerships (NEEP) specification maintain a Coefficient of Performance (COP) above 1.75 at 5°F (−15°C).

For a detailed breakdown of the refrigerant compounds involved and the current R-410A phase-down timeline under the AIM Act, see HVAC refrigerants and phase-out schedules. The compressor type — single-stage, two-stage, or variable-speed scroll — directly affects seasonal efficiency ratings; variable-speed systems are addressed at two-stage and variable-speed HVAC systems.


Causal relationships or drivers

Heat pump performance is governed by the temperature differential between the heat source and the conditioned space. As outdoor temperatures drop, the pressure differential across the compressor increases, requiring more electrical work to move the same quantity of heat — reducing COP proportionally. This thermodynamic relationship, described by the Carnot efficiency limit, means system selection must account for local design temperatures, not average temperatures.

Three primary causal drivers determine installed efficiency outcomes:

Source temperature: Air-source systems depend on ambient outdoor air. Ground-source (geothermal) systems use soil or groundwater at stable temperatures of 45°F to 75°F (7°C–24°C) depending on geographic location, eliminating the cold-climate efficiency penalty. Water-source systems use a building loop or lake/pond, with performance dependent on water temperature management.

Refrigerant selection: Refrigerant thermodynamic properties — specifically the pressure-enthalpy curve — set the practical operating range. R-410A systems are limited at extremely low outdoor temperatures; newer refrigerants such as R-32 and R-454B (a lower-GWP replacement entering the market under EPA SNAP Program rules) offer improved low-temperature enthalpy characteristics.

Control strategy: Variable-speed compressors modulate capacity between roughly 30 and rates that vary by region of rated output, allowing the system to match building load continuously rather than cycling on and off. This reduces temperature variance in the conditioned space and improves Heating Seasonal Performance Factor (HSPF2) — the metric DOE adopted in 2023 under revised test procedures at 10 CFR Part 430.


Classification boundaries

Heat pumps divide into four main categories with distinct installation, permitting, and performance profiles:

Air-Source Heat Pumps (ASHP): The dominant residential type, using outdoor air as the heat exchange medium. Subcategories include ducted split systems (requiring existing or new ductwork), ductless mini-split systems (no ductwork, individual zone control), and ducted package units housed entirely outdoors. See packaged HVAC units for the package variant.

Cold-Climate Air-Source Heat Pumps (CCHP): Defined by NEEP's minimum specification as maintaining at least rates that vary by region of rated capacity at 5°F and a COP above 1.75 at 5°F. Qualifying models are listed in the NEEP CCHP database. These systems typically use variable-speed inverter-driven compressors and enhanced vapor injection circuits.

Ground-Source Heat Pumps (GSHP) / Geothermal: Exchange heat with the earth through a ground loop — horizontal trenches, vertical boreholes (typically 150 to 400 feet deep per ton of capacity), or pond/lake loops. These are covered in detail at geothermal HVAC systems. GSHP permitting involves geotechnical drilling permits separate from mechanical permits in most jurisdictions.

Water-Source Heat Pumps (WSHP): Common in multi-tenant commercial buildings where individual units connect to a shared water loop maintained between 60°F and 90°F. Each unit operates as either a heat pump or a cooling-only unit, and the building loop uses a central boiler and cooling tower to maintain loop temperature. This architecture is classified under Variable Refrigerant Flow and commercial system standards in ASHRAE Standard 90.1.


Tradeoffs and tensions

The central tension in heat pump system selection is between upfront cost and long-term operational efficiency. Ground-source systems achieve COP values of 3.0 to 5.0 year-round (DOE EERE data), but ground loop installation adds amounts that vary by jurisdiction to amounts that vary by jurisdiction to project cost depending on soil conditions, drilling depth, and site access. Air-source systems cost substantially less to install but face efficiency degradation in climates with extended sub-20°F periods.

A second tension exists between electrification policy goals and building infrastructure readiness. Heat pumps require adequate electrical service — many pre-1980 residential panels in the U.S. are rated at 100 amps, which may be insufficient when adding a heat pump alongside electric water heating and EV charging without a panel upgrade. The HVAC system costs and pricing page addresses the cost components involved in service upgrades.

Refrigerant policy creates a third tension. R-410A — used in the majority of installed heat pumps in the U.S. as of 2023 — is subject to an rates that vary by region production and import reduction under the AIM Act (Public Law 117-58) by 2036. Equipment manufacturers transitioning to R-32 and R-454B require new handling certifications under EPA Section 608 rules, affecting technician qualification requirements during the transition period.

Noise presents an additional design constraint, particularly in high-density residential settings. Outdoor compressor units on ASHPs typically produce 55 to 72 decibels (dB) at 10 feet. Local zoning ordinances in cities including New York and Portland set maximum residential equipment noise limits, sometimes as low as 45 dB at the property line, requiring equipment selection and placement strategies detailed at HVAC system noise levels and sound ratings.


Common misconceptions

"Heat pumps don't work in cold climates."
Standard heat pumps do lose efficiency below 35°F, but cold-climate models with variable-speed inverter compressors maintain functional heating output to −13°F. Maine, Minnesota, and Vermont have documented thousands of successful CCHP installations in NEEP regional program data. The misconception stems from the performance limits of older single-speed equipment from the 1990s and early 2000s.

"A heat pump replaces the need for any backup heat."
In climate zones 5 through 7 (using IECC designations), sizing a heat pump to rates that vary by region of peak heating load is economically and mechanically feasible with CCHP equipment, but most installed systems incorporate auxiliary electric resistance strips or a gas furnace in a dual-fuel configuration. The dual-fuel configuration is not a system failure — it is a deliberate design choice governed by local utility rate structures and design-day temperatures.

"SEER ratings tell you how well a heat pump heats."
SEER (Seasonal Energy Efficiency Ratio) measures cooling efficiency only. Heating efficiency is measured by HSPF2 (Heating Seasonal Performance Factor, second edition test procedure), which DOE adopted for heat pumps manufactured after January 1, 2023. Comparing heating performance requires HSPF2 values — covered at SEER ratings and efficiency standards.

"Heat pump installation requires no permit."
All heat pump installations involving refrigerant handling, electrical work, or structural penetrations require permits in every U.S. jurisdiction under International Mechanical Code (IMC) Section 106 and the National Electrical Code (NEC) Article 440 (Air-Conditioning and Refrigerating Equipment). Ground-source installations additionally require drilling permits. HVAC system permits and code compliance maps this process in detail.


Checklist or steps (non-advisory)

The following sequence describes the standard phases of a heat pump project from assessment through commissioning. This is a documentation framework, not installation guidance.

Phase 1 — Load Calculation
- Perform Manual J (ACCA) whole-building heating and cooling load calculation
- Document design temperatures per ASHRAE Fundamentals climate data
- Record existing duct system leakage if applicable

Phase 2 — System and Refrigerant Selection
- Confirm refrigerant type is compliant with EPA SNAP Program current approval list
- Verify equipment efficiency ratings meet or exceed DOE 10 CFR Part 430 minimums
- Check ENERGY STAR and NEEP CCHP database listing if applicable

Phase 3 — Permitting
- Submit mechanical permit application per local jurisdiction requirements
- Submit electrical permit for service upgrade or new dedicated circuit (NEC Article 440)
- Obtain drilling/boring permit for ground-source loop installations

Phase 4 — Installation
- Install refrigerant line sets with proper insulation per manufacturer specifications
- Complete EPA Section 608 refrigerant handling documentation
- Install electrical disconnect and overcurrent protection per NEC

Phase 5 — Inspection and Commissioning
- Schedule mechanical and electrical inspections
- Document system refrigerant charge using manufacturer charging procedure
- Record measured airflow, static pressure, and operating temperatures in commissioning report

Phase 6 — Incentive Documentation
- File for federal tax credit under IRS Form 5695 (25C for residential) if equipment qualifies
- Submit utility rebate documentation referencing equipment model and efficiency ratings
- Retain all permit closeout documentation for warranty and resale records — see HVAC system warranties explained


Reference table or matrix

Heat Pump Type Comparison Matrix

System Type Heat Source Typical COP (Heating) Approx. Install Cost Adder Climate Zone Suitability Key Permit Type
Standard ASHP (single-stage) Outdoor air 1.5–2.5 at 17°F Baseline Zones 1–4 Mechanical + Electrical
Cold-Climate ASHP (inverter) Outdoor air 1.75–3.2 at 5°F +10–rates that vary by region over standard Zones 1–7 Mechanical + Electrical
Ductless Mini-Split ASHP Outdoor air 2.0–4.0 at 47°F Varies by zone count Zones 1–6 Mechanical + Electrical
Ground-Source (GSHP) Earth/groundwater 3.0–5.0 year-round +amounts that vary by jurisdiction–amounts that vary by jurisdiction All zones Mechanical + Electrical + Drilling
Water-Source (WSHP) Building water loop 3.0–4.5 (loop-dependent) High (loop infrastructure) Commercial, all zones Mechanical + Electrical + Plumbing
Dual-Fuel (ASHP + gas furnace) Air + natural gas Varies by switchover point Moderate Zones 4–7 Mechanical + Electrical + Gas

COP values are representative ranges from DOE EERE and AHRI certified data. Actual performance varies by equipment model, installation quality, and operating conditions.

Minimum Federal Efficiency Standards (DOE, effective 2023)

Product Category Minimum SEER2 Minimum HSPF2 Regulatory Citation
Residential split-system heat pump (≤65,000 BTU/h, North) 15.0 8.8 10 CFR Part 430, Subpart B
Residential split-system heat pump (≤65,000 BTU/h, South) 15.0 8.1 10 CFR Part 430, Subpart B
Small duct high velocity heat pump 15.0 8.2 10 CFR Part 430, Subpart B
ENERGY STAR certified (split-system) 16.0 9.5 EPA ENERGY STAR Version 6.1

South region includes Alabama, Arkansas, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, Nevada, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, and the District of Columbia per DOE regional definitions.


References

📜 4 regulatory citations referenced  ·  ✅ Citations verified Feb 25, 2026  ·  View update log

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