Not a government website. Not affiliated with any utility or program. Sources are linked and dated.
Home Upgrade Check
REBATE GUIDE
Rebate Calculator

Wisconsin Heat Pump Rebate Calculator

Estimate your Wisconsin heat pump rebate range through Focus on Energy. Use this guide to understand the key factors and check the official source for exact current amounts.

High confidenceLast checked: 2026-05-284 official sources
Rebate Range

How much is the Wisconsin heat pump rebate?

Focus on Energy provides instant discounts through participating Trade Ally contractors at the time of installation. Standard rebates are based on equipment efficiency tier: Tier 1 (SEER2 ≥ 15.2 / HSPF2 ≥ 8.1) — $400. Tier 2 (SEER2 ≥ 15.2 / HSPF2 ≥ 8.5) — $500. Tier 3 (SEER2 ≥ 16.0 / HSPF2 ≥ 9.0) — $600. Tier 4 (SEER2 ≥ 16.0 / HSPF2 ≥ 10.0) — $700. Income-qualified customers (≤80% AMI) receive higher tiers: $600/$700/$800/$900 for Tiers 1–4. Propane replacement bonus: add $100–$150 standard / $300–$350 income-qualified if replacing propane heating. Ground source heat pump (with natural gas service): $1,000. Applications must be submitted within 60 days of installation and no later than August 31, 2026.

Instant discount applied at point of installation — no mail-in rebate form required.

Must be a customer of a participating Wisconsin utility (We Energies, WPS, MGE, Alliant Energy, Xcel Energy WI, and others).

Income-qualified tiers require income documentation through the Trade Ally.

Propane replacement bonus ($100–$150 standard, $300–$350 income-qualified) adds to the base tier discount.

Applications must be submitted within 60 days of install and no later than August 31, 2026.

Programs funded annually — verify current year program at focusonenergy.com.

IRA HEAR funds may provide additional rebates up to $8,000 for income-qualified households — ask your Trade Ally.

Not a guarantee of eligibility. Verify current amounts with your utility or Focus on Energy.

Check Focus on Energy official site

Key factors that determine your Wisconsin rebate

Your electric utility
Which utility serves your home (Focus on Energy, We Energies, WPS (Wisconsin Public Service), etc.) determines which rebate tier applies.
Current heating fuel
Oil and propane homes typically qualify for the highest tiers. Natural gas homes usually qualify for lower amounts.
Whole-home vs. partial scope
A whole-home heat pump installation that replaces all primary heating earns the highest rebate. Supplemental or mini-split-only installs earn less.
System size in tons
Larger systems generally earn higher rebates, up to the program cap. Oversizing can disqualify equipment in some programs.
Equipment certification
Equipment must meet the program's current efficiency threshold. Verify the AHRI reference number or program-specific certification before purchase.
Income qualification
Income-qualified households may receive enhanced rebates or additional assistance. Ask your utility about documentation requirements.
Working Reference

See a fully interactive rebate calculator

Heat pump rebate calculators show how fuel type, utility, and system size interact to affect rebate amounts. The same logic — fuel type, utility tier, system size, income — applies across programs including Focus on Energy in Wisconsin.

View Wisconsin HVAC rebates
Related Tools
HVAC Rebates 2025Quote CheckerInsulation RebatesHeat Pump vs Oil
Official Sources
2026-05-28
2026-05-28