Ontario heat pump rebates

See how much you can get back on a heat pump in Ontario.

Most homeowners qualify for $2,000–$7,500 back — oil-heated homes can reach $22,000. Get your estimate in 60 seconds. Free, no obligation.

Independent Free & no obligation No energy audit required Ontario homeowners
Independent Free & no obligation No energy audit required Ontario homeowners

Homes like yours are getting back thousands.

Up to $7,500
electric, oil, propane & wood homes
Up to $12,000
geothermal systems
No energy audit
required for a heat pump on its own

How getting your rebate works

1

Check your rebate.

Tell us how your home is heated and where you live — we’ll estimate what you qualify for.

2

We match you with a registered contractor.

They confirm your exact amount and handle the rebate application for you.

3

Get your heat pump — and your rebate.

Lower bills, year-round comfort, money back.

One place for every Ontario heat pump rebate.

Most contractors only point you to one program. We’re independent — we look across the Home Renovation Savings Program, federal oil-conversion funding, and low-interest loans to find every dollar you’re owed, then connect you with a registered contractor who handles the paperwork. You don’t pay us anything.

Last updated: June 2026

How much is the heat pump rebate in Ontario?

Ontario homeowners can get $1,000–$2,000 (gas homes) or up to $7,500 (electric, oil, propane, wood) on an air-source heat pump, and up to $12,000 for geothermal, through the Home Renovation Savings Program. Oil homes can stack federal funding toward roughly $22,000.

How much you get back depends mostly on how your home is heated today.

Your home is heated byEstimated rebate (air-source)
Natural gas$1,000–$2,000
Electric / oil / propane / wood$3,000–$7,500
Geothermal (ground-source)$3,000–$12,000
Oil (stacked with federal OHPA)up to ~$22,000 combined

No energy audit required for a heat pump on its own. Amounts are estimates and depend on your home and eligibility — confirm current figures on the official program site. Last verified: June 2026.

Who qualifies for the rebate?

You qualify if you own your Ontario home, it’s an eligible home type, you’re on the electricity grid or an Enbridge gas customer, and you install NRCan-listed equipment through a registered contractor.

  • You own the home (the rebate is claimed by the homeowner).
  • The home is in Ontario, on the electricity grid or an Enbridge gas customer (Cornwall Electric excluded).
  • The equipment is on the NRCan approved list.
  • The application is submitted by an HRS-registered contractor.

How do you apply (without losing the rebate)?

Three steps: check your rebate, get matched with a registered contractor who confirms your amount and handles the application, then install and get paid — usually 60–90 days after install. The one rule that protects your rebate: don’t start work before your contractor confirms eligibility.

Which programs can you use?

The main one is the Home Renovation Savings Program (HRS). Oil homes can add the federal Oil to Heat Pump Affordability (OHPA) program. And the interest-free Canada Greener Homes Loan stacks on top to finance the rest.

Is there a deadline?

The program is confirmed through November 2026 but can close earlier, and contractor registration closes May 31, 2026 — so it’s worth not waiting.

Frequently asked questions

How much can I get back on a heat pump in Ontario?

$1,000–$2,000 for gas homes, up to $7,500 for electric/oil/propane/wood, and up to $12,000 for geothermal. Oil homes can stack federal funding toward roughly $22,000.

Do I need an energy audit?

Not for a heat pump installed on its own — that’s one of the best parts of the current program. Audits only come in if you bundle other upgrades.

Is this free?

Yes. Checking your rebate and getting matched with a contractor costs you nothing.

Do you submit my application?

We connect you with a registered contractor who handles the application for you — that’s who the program requires to submit it.

How long until I get paid?

Usually 60–90 days after your heat pump is installed.

Can I keep my gas furnace?

Yes — many homes keep the furnace as backup and still qualify.

What if I heat with oil?

Oil homes qualify for the most: the provincial rebate plus federal oil-conversion funding, which can approach $22,000 combined.

Is there a deadline?

The program is confirmed through November 2026 but can close earlier, and contractor registration closes May 31, 2026 — so it’s worth not waiting.

Find your rebate in 60 seconds.

Free, no obligation. Most homeowners qualify for $2,000–$7,500 back.

Check My Rebate

Check My Rebate