Heat Pump vs Electric Resistance Heating Cost in Kansas

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In Kansas’s cool climate (effective HSPF 8.0), a heat pump cuts your heating bill by about 57.4% versus electric resistance baseboard — $808/year instead of $1894/year. Annual savings: $1086.

Heating typekWh used / yearCost / year
Heat pump (HSPF 8.0, COP 2.34)5,118 kWh$808
Electric resistance baseboard (COP 1.0)12,000 kWh$1894

Assumes 12,000 kWh of delivered heat per year — typical for an 1,800 sq ft home in a cool climate. Kansas’s electricity rate: 15.78¢/kWh.

20-year cost-of-ownership in Kansas

Over a typical 20-year heat-pump life, switching from resistance heat saves a Kansas homeowner about $21,720 on electricity. A typical cold-climate heat pump install runs $8,000-$15,000 — paying back in roughly 9.2 years against a $10,000 install.

How we calculated this

A heat pump’s seasonal heating coefficient of performance is HSPF ÷ 3.412. With HSPF 8.0, that’s a seasonal COP of 2.34 — meaning 2.34 units of heat delivered per 1 unit of electricity consumed. Resistance heating delivers 1-to-1.

For the same 12,000 kWh of heat per year, the heat pump needs 5,118 kWh of electricity; resistance needs 12,000 kWh. Multiplied by Kansas’s residential rate (15.78¢/kWh from the EIA), that’s the costs above.

Heating efficiency gear

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FAQ

Does a heat pump work in Kansas’s winters?

Kansas's mild winters are ideal for heat pumps — they operate at peak efficiency. Almost any modern model will work well.

What about gas heating?

If you have access to natural gas, the comparison is different — at typical 2025 gas prices, heat pump and gas furnace heating costs are often within ±20% of each other in Kansas, with the exact ranking flipping based on local gas vs electricity prices. Heat pumps also do cooling (a single system, two seasons), while a gas furnace needs a separate AC.

What is the federal tax credit?

As of 2026, U.S. homeowners can claim a 30% federal tax credit (up to $2,000/year) for ENERGY STAR-rated heat pump installations, which materially shortens the payback period above.