Select areas to insulate (cost auto-fills):
This calculator combines all 6 upgrade categories (HVAC, LED Lighting, Appliances, Insulation, Solar, and Smart Devices) into a single analysis with 2026 IRA tax credits, payback period, 10-year net savings, and CO₂ impact. Follow these steps to get your personalized report — no signup required.
The calculator offers 3 distinct modes because energy savings work differently for homeowners, landlords, and businesses. Your mode determines which KPIs, tax credits, and financial projections appear in the results panel.
You own and live in the home. Savings reduce your personal utility bills directly.
- Annual & monthly savings
- IRA residential tax credits
- Simple payback period
- 10-year net savings
- CO₂ reduction impact
You own rental property with one or more units. Who pays utilities matters.
- Multi-unit cost scaling
- Owner-pays vs. tenant-pays
- Rent increase value modeling
- Property ROI from upgrades
- IRA credits per property
You own or lease a commercial space. Deductions reduce taxable income.
- Section 179 deduction ($1.16M)
- Marginal tax rate integration
- After-tax cost of upgrades
- Business energy ROI
- Commercial IRA credits
Your home profile determines baseline energy usage patterns. A 3,000 sq ft colonial in Minnesota uses energy very differently than a 1,200 sq ft condo in Florida. These fields calibrate the savings estimates to your specific situation.
Climate Zone is the most impactful field here. The calculator maps all 50 states to 5 DOE climate zones. Homes in Cold Zone 6–7 (MN, WI, ME) spend 40–60% more on heating than Mixed Zone 4–5 (OH, PA, IL), which directly affects HVAC and insulation payback periods.
Grab your most recent utility bill — you’ll need the monthly dollar amounts and per-unit rates. The calculator uses these as the baseline to project savings. More accurate inputs = more accurate results.
Heating fuel type matters significantly. If you select Electric, the gas bill field disappears (all-electric home). If you select Natural Gas, Propane, or Heating Oil, both electric and fuel bills are used. Propane homes typically see the biggest savings from heat pump upgrades because propane costs $2.50–$3.50/gallon vs. $0.17/kWh equivalent.
This is the core of the calculator. Click any upgrade card to toggle it on — the checkbox fills navy and the configuration panel expands. You can enable any combination of the 6 categories simultaneously. The calculator combines all enabled upgrades into a single unified analysis.
Each category expands to show category-specific fields. For example, HVAC shows Current SEER → New SEER → System Size → Upgrade Cost. Solar shows System Size (kW) → Electricity Offset % → Installation Cost. Appliances shows a checklist of individual items (Fridge, Washer, Dishwasher, Water Heater, Dryer) with per-item savings.
The right panel updates instantly as you change any input. No “Calculate” button needed — results are live. Here’s what each section of the dashboard shows:
KPI cards show the headline numbers: Annual Savings (navy featured card), Monthly Savings, Payback Period (total cost ÷ annual savings), 10-Year Net Savings, Total IRA Credits, Total Upfront Cost, and CO₂ reduction with trees equivalent.
Upgrade Breakdown Table itemizes each enabled category with its individual annual savings, upfront cost, and IRA credit amount — plus a bolded total row at the bottom.
Bill Before/After Section shows your current monthly bill versus projected post-upgrade bill, with the dollar and percentage reduction for each fuel type (electric, gas).
Once you’re satisfied with the analysis, use the three action buttons at the bottom of the results panel:
PDF Report — generates a professional multi-page report using jsPDF directly in your browser. Includes your home profile, all enabled upgrades with costs, KPI summary, breakdown table, IRA credit details, and bill comparison. Perfect for sharing with HVAC contractors, showing your spouse the ROI numbers, or submitting to a lender for a home improvement loan.
WhatsApp Share — sends a pre-formatted text summary with your key numbers (annual savings, payback period, IRA credits, 10-year net) and a link back to the calculator. Useful for quickly sharing results with family or business partners.
Reset All — clears every input across all modes and upgrade categories back to defaults. This is irreversible — download your PDF first if you want to keep the analysis.
Run the calculator three times with different upgrade combinations: (1) Quick wins only — LED + Smart Devices (under $500, payback < 1 year), (2) Medium investment — add HVAC + Insulation ($10K–15K, payback 3–5 years), (3) Full upgrade — all 6 categories with solar ($25K–40K, payback 5–8 years). Compare the three PDF reports side-by-side to find the ROI sweet spot for your budget. Most families find the medium package delivers the best dollars-per-year-saved ratio.
This guide explains every concept the calculator uses — IRA tax credits, SEER ratings, R-values, solar ITC, Section 179 deductions, and DOE climate zones. All data is sourced from the IRS, DOE, ENERGY STAR, and EIA. Click any topic below to learn more.
The Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), signed into law in August 2022, created two main residential energy tax credits that homeowners can claim on their federal income tax return. These are not deductions — they’re dollar-for-dollar reductions in your tax bill. If you owe $5,000 in federal taxes and qualify for $3,200 in IRA credits, you pay only $1,800.
There are two separate credit programs under the IRA, each with different rules, limits, and eligible upgrades:
| Feature | 25C — Energy Efficient Home Improvement | 25D — Residential Clean Energy |
|---|---|---|
| IRS Form | Form 5695, Part II | Form 5695, Part I |
| Credit Rate | 30% of costs | 30% of costs |
| Annual Cap | $1,200 combined + $2,000 heat pump | No annual cap |
| Eligible Upgrades | HVAC, insulation, windows, doors, electrical panel, home energy audit | Solar panels, battery storage, geothermal, small wind, fuel cells |
| Carryover? | No — use it or lose it each year | Yes — excess carries to future years |
| Refundable? | No — can only reduce tax to $0 | No — but carryover helps |
| Expires | December 31, 2032 | Steps down: 26% in 2033, 22% in 2034 |
30% of cost. Separate $2,000 limit — does NOT count toward the $1,200 annual cap.
- Air-source heat pumps (ducted & ductless mini-splits)
- Heat pump water heaters
- Biomass stoves & boilers
30% of cost. Part of the $1,200 combined annual limit (shared with windows, doors, other HVAC).
- Attic, wall, and floor insulation
- Air sealing materials and labor
- Spray foam, blown-in, batt, rigid board
Under 25D. 30% of total installation cost including equipment, permits, and labor. No annual dollar limit.
- Rooftop solar PV systems
- Battery storage ≥3 kWh (standalone eligible)
- Solar water heating systems
Part of $1,200 combined limit. Windows/skylights up to $600. Exterior doors up to $500 (max $250/door).
- ENERGY STAR Most Efficient windows
- Exterior doors (ENERGY STAR certified)
- Central AC, furnaces, boilers (up to $600 each)
SEER stands for Seasonal Energy Efficiency Ratio. It measures how much cooling output (in BTUs) an air conditioner or heat pump delivers per watt-hour of electricity consumed over an entire cooling season. Think of it like MPG for your car — higher SEER = less electricity per degree of cooling.
In January 2023, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) introduced SEER2 — an updated testing procedure that uses higher external static pressure to more accurately reflect real-world ductwork conditions. SEER2 ratings are approximately 4.7% lower than the equivalent SEER rating for the same unit. All new equipment manufactured after 2023 is rated using SEER2.
| Old SEER Rating | Approx. SEER2 Equivalent | Efficiency Level | Typical Cost Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| 8 SEER | ~7.6 SEER2 | Very Old (pre-2006) | N/A — Replace ASAP |
| 10 SEER | ~9.5 SEER2 | Old (2006–2014) | N/A — Replace ASAP |
| 13 SEER | ~12.4 SEER2 | Minimum (pre-2023) | $3,000–$5,000 |
| 14 SEER | ~13.4 SEER2 | 2023+ Northern Minimum | $3,500–$6,000 |
| 16 SEER | ~15.2 SEER2 | Good Mid-Range | $4,500–$7,500 |
| 18 SEER | ~17.1 SEER2 | High Efficiency | $6,000–$9,500 |
| 20 SEER | ~19.0 SEER2 | Very High Efficiency | $8,000–$12,000 |
| 24 SEER | ~22.9 SEER2 | Ultra-Premium | $10,000–$16,000 |
The savings from upgrading SEER are not linear. Going from 8→16 SEER cuts cooling costs by 50%, but going from 16→24 SEER only saves another 33%. The biggest dollar savings come from replacing old, low-SEER systems.
| Upgrade Path | Cooling Cost Reduction | Est. Annual Savings* | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| 8 → 16 SEER | ~50% | $600–$1,100/yr | Homes with 15+ year old systems |
| 10 → 18 SEER | ~44% | $450–$850/yr | Most common upgrade path |
| 12 → 18 SEER | ~33% | $300–$600/yr | Sweet spot — best ROI for most homes |
| 14 → 20 SEER | ~30% | $250–$500/yr | Hot climates with high AC usage |
| 16 → 24 SEER | ~33% | $200–$400/yr | Ultra-premium, longest payback |
R-value measures a material’s resistance to heat flow. Higher R-value = better insulation = less heat escaping in winter and less heat entering in summer. R-values are additive — if you have R-19 batts plus R-11 foam board, your total wall R-value is R-30.
| Material | R per Inch | Cost per Sq Ft | Best For | Lifespan |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fiberglass Batts | R-3.2 | $0.40–$1.00 | Open walls during remodel | 80–100 years |
| Blown-In Cellulose | R-3.5 | $1.00–$1.50 | Attics, existing walls | 20–30 years |
| Blown-In Fiberglass | R-2.5 | $1.00–$1.50 | Attics (doesn’t settle like cellulose) | 80–100 years |
| Open-Cell Spray Foam | R-3.7 | $1.00–$1.50 | Interior walls, sound control | Lifetime |
| Closed-Cell Spray Foam | R-6.5 | $1.50–$3.50 | Basements, crawlspaces, vapor barrier | Lifetime |
| Rigid Foam Board (XPS) | R-5.0 | $0.75–$1.50 | Foundation, exterior sheathing | 50+ years |
| Mineral Wool (Rockwool) | R-4.0 | $1.40–$2.10 | Fire-resistant, soundproofing | Lifetime |
The biggest single-area impact is always the attic. Heat rises, and an under-insulated attic can account for 25–30% of total heat loss. If your attic has less than 10 inches of insulation, you’re almost certainly below the DOE minimum for your zone. The calculator’s insulation module factors in your climate zone to estimate savings.
The Solar Investment Tax Credit (ITC) is the most generous energy credit available. Under Section 25D of the tax code, you can claim 30% of the total cost of a residential solar installation — including panels, inverters, wiring, battery storage, permits, and labor. Unlike the 25C credits, there’s no annual dollar cap.
Here’s how the calculator computes solar savings for a typical 8 kW system:
| Line Item | Calculation | Value |
|---|---|---|
| System Size | Selected in calculator | 8 kW |
| Installation Cost | 8 kW × $3.00/watt × 1,000 | $24,000 |
| Federal ITC (30%) | $24,000 × 0.30 | −$7,200 |
| Net Cost After Credit | $24,000 − $7,200 | $16,800 |
| Monthly Electric Bill | User input | $180/month |
| Electricity Offset | Selected: 80% | 80% |
| Annual Savings | $180 × 12 × 0.80 | $1,728/year |
| Simple Payback | $16,800 ÷ $1,728 | 9.7 years |
| 25-Year Net Savings | ($1,728 × 25) − $16,800 | $26,400 |
| Year | Residential ITC Rate | Status |
|---|---|---|
| 2022–2032 | 30% | Current — full credit |
| 2033 | 26% | Step-down begins |
| 2034 | 22% | Final year (unless extended) |
| 2035+ | 0% | Expires for residential |
Section 179 allows businesses to deduct the full cost of qualifying equipment in the year it’s placed in service — instead of depreciating it over 5, 7, or 39 years. For energy upgrades, this means an HVAC system, commercial solar array, or insulation project can be written off immediately, creating a huge tax savings in Year 1.
Section 179 and IRA credits are not mutually exclusive — but they interact. When you claim an IRA credit, it reduces the depreciable basis of the asset. Here’s how a $25,000 commercial HVAC upgrade works for an SMB in the 25% marginal bracket:
| Step | Calculation | Value |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Upgrade Cost | Commercial heat pump system | $25,000 |
| 2. IRA Credit (25C) | $25,000 × 30%, capped at $2,000 | −$2,000 |
| 3. Adjusted Basis | $25,000 − $2,000 credit | $23,000 |
| 4. Section 179 Deduction | Full $23,000 in Year 1 | −$23,000 |
| 5. Tax Savings (25% bracket) | $23,000 × 0.25 | $5,750 |
| 6. Total Tax Benefit | $2,000 credit + $5,750 deduction savings | $7,750 |
| 7. Net After-Tax Cost | $25,000 − $7,750 | $17,250 |
The calculator’s SMB mode automatically performs this calculation. It asks for your marginal tax rate, applies the IRA credit, reduces the basis, and then computes the Section 179 deduction value and after-tax net cost.
The U.S. Department of Energy divides the country into climate zones (1 through 7, plus 8 for Alaska) based on heating and cooling demand. Your climate zone determines how much energy your home uses for temperature control — and therefore how much you can save from efficiency upgrades. The calculator maps all 50 states into 5 simplified zone groups.
| Zone | DOE Zones | Example States | Primary Load | Avg Annual Energy Cost | Best Upgrades |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hot-Humid | 1–2 | FL, LA, GA, S. TX, HI | Cooling (70–80%) | $2,400–$3,600 | High-SEER AC, solar, smart thermostat |
| Hot-Dry | 2–3 | AZ, NV, NM, W. TX, S. CA | Cooling (60–70%) | $2,000–$3,200 | Solar (high irradiance), insulation, cool roof |
| Mixed | 3–4 | VA, TN, NC, OR, N. CA, OK | Balanced (50/50) | $1,800–$2,800 | Heat pump (heats & cools), insulation |
| Mixed-Cold | 4–5 | OH, PA, IL, IN, MO, CO, NJ | Heating (55–65%) | $2,000–$3,000 | High-eff furnace/heat pump, insulation, air sealing |
| Cold | 6–7 | MN, WI, ME, MI, VT, MT, ND | Heating (70–80%) | $2,400–$4,000 | Insulation (R-49+), air sealing, heat pump |
The calculator uses your selected climate zone to adjust savings estimates across all 6 upgrade categories. For example:
| Upgrade | Hot-Humid (FL) | Mixed-Cold (OH) | Cold (MN) |
|---|---|---|---|
| HVAC (12→18 SEER) | $680/yr | $420/yr | $340/yr |
| Insulation (to DOE min) | $180/yr | $480/yr | $720/yr |
| Solar (8 kW, 80% offset) | $1,920/yr | $1,440/yr | $1,200/yr |
| Smart Thermostat | $210/yr | $250/yr | $320/yr |
Notice the pattern: HVAC and solar savings are highest in hot climates (more cooling hours, more sun), while insulation and air sealing savings are highest in cold climates (more heat loss through the envelope). Smart thermostats save more in cold climates because the temperature differential between indoor and outdoor is greater.
3 US ROI Case Studies: From Sun Belt Solar to Cold Climate Heat Pumps
We modeled five common American property types using 2026 energy rates and IRA tax codes. See how different climates and modes affect your bottom line.
A 2,200 sq ft home built in 1995 with gas heat. The owner adds Attic Insulation and switches from a 10 SEER AC to an 18 SEER Heat Pump.
Modern 2,500 sq ft home. Installing a 7.5 kW Solar Array to offset 90% of a massive summer electric bill.
A 3,000 sq ft office retrofits with 50 LEDs and 2 new high-eff units. Using Section 179 to write off 100% in Year 1.
Pro Tips to Maximize the $2,000 Heat Pump & Section 179 Deductions
Maximize your savings beyond the calculator with these strategic moves.
Never install a new HVAC system before air-sealing and insulating. If your home “leaks,” a new system will be oversized and inefficient, wasting the 18 SEER potential.
Schedule HVAC installs in April/May or September/October. Contractors are less busy than in the peak of summer/winter and are more likely to offer labor discounts.
The 2026 IRA credits are federal. Most local utility companies (Duke, PG&E, ConEd) offer additional instant rebates that can be stacked on top of the tax credits.
Use Smart Power Strips for your entertainment center. “Standby power” accounts for 5-10% of home energy use. It’s the cheapest way to shave $100 off your annual bill.
FAQs: Energy Bills, Insulation Costs & Landlord Upgrades
Legal Disclaimer & Editorial Standards: YMYL Compliance
We believe in radical transparency. This calculator is a professional-grade estimation tool, but energy savings and tax credit eligibility depend on complex local and federal variables. Here is how we source our data and the limits of this analysis.
This tool provides estimates only. Actual savings are influenced by variables we cannot predict, including weather extremes, contractor installation quality, and fluctuating utility rates.
- Not a guarantee of actual bill reduction.
- Payback periods assume current energy prices.
IRA tax credits (25C and 25D) are subject to strict IRS requirements. Equipment must meet specific efficiency thresholds (CEE Tiers) to qualify.
IRS.gov — Energy Credit Guidance
USFinanceCalculators.com is an independent platform. We are not affiliated with any solar installers, HVAC manufacturers, or utility companies.
- Zero commission-based results.
- No “pay-to-play” for equipment rankings.