Mini-splits and central heat pumps both do the same job — move heat into your home in winter and out in summer — but they're built for very different houses. If you don't have ductwork, a central system means a costly retrofit. If you have a well-sealed ducted system already, a mini-split adds complexity without much benefit. Here's how to figure out which one actually fits your home.
Disclaimer: Cost estimates are based on contractor quote data, DOE reports, and manufacturer published specifications as of early 2026. Installed costs vary by region, home size, and labor market. Always get at least three quotes from licensed HVAC contractors. Tax credit eligibility should be confirmed with a tax professional or at IRS.gov.
Key Takeaways
- Mini-splits cost $3,000–$8,000 per zone installed; central heat pumps run $6,500–$12,000 for the whole home
- Mini-splits achieve COP 3.0–4.5 (avoiding duct losses); central systems run COP 2.5–3.5 with typical ductwork
- Central systems win when existing ducts are well-sealed — duct retrofits for mini-splits add $0 but duct upgrades for central can add $2,000–$6,000
- Both qualify for Section 25C: 30% federal credit up to $2,000/year, active through 2032
How Each System Works
Mini-split (ductless): Refrigerant lines run from an outdoor compressor unit directly to wall- or ceiling-mounted indoor air handlers in each zone. No ductwork required. Each zone has independent temperature control, and you only condition rooms that are occupied.
Central heat pump: A single outdoor unit connects to an air handler inside that distributes conditioned air through your existing duct network. Every room on the duct system gets heated or cooled — whether occupied or not. The thermostat controls the whole house as one zone (though multi-zone damper systems can add some flexibility).
The architecture difference is the root of every other comparison: efficiency, comfort, installation cost, and which homes each system suits.
Efficiency: Where Mini-Splits Have the Edge
Standard duct systems lose 20–30% of conditioned air to leakage and heat gain/loss before it reaches living spaces, according to the U.S. Department of Energy. A mini-split delivers refrigerant — not air — through insulated lines, so there's virtually no transit loss.
| System Type | Typical COP | HSPF2 Range | Duct Loss Penalty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mini-split (ductless) | 3.0–4.5 | 10–14 | None |
| Central heat pump (tight ducts) | 2.8–3.5 | 9–12 | ~10% |
| Central heat pump (leaky ducts) | 1.8–2.5 | 6–9 effective | 20–30% |
A mini-split in a leaky-duct home easily outperforms a central heat pump in the same house. But a well-designed central system in a tight-duct home comes close to mini-split efficiency — the gap narrows significantly.
Cost Comparison
Mini-split pricing is per zone, which is both a strength and a complexity. A 4-zone multi-split covering a 2,000 sq ft home can cost more than a central system even before factoring in individual thermostat controls.
| System | Equipment Cost | Installation Labor | Total Installed |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mini-split, single zone | $1,200–$3,000 | $800–$1,500 | $3,000–$5,000 |
| Mini-split, 3-zone multi-split | $3,500–$6,000 | $2,500–$4,500 | $8,000–$14,000 |
| Mini-split, 4-zone multi-split | $5,000–$9,000 | $4,000–$6,000 | $12,000–$20,000 |
| Central heat pump (2-ton, existing ducts) | $3,500–$6,000 | $2,500–$4,500 | $6,500–$10,000 |
| Central heat pump (3-ton, existing ducts) | $4,500–$7,500 | $3,000–$5,000 | $8,000–$12,000 |
For homes without ductwork, the central system cost jumps by $4,000–$10,000 for duct installation — closing or reversing the cost gap versus a comparable multi-zone mini-split.
Zone Control: When It Matters (and When It Doesn't)
Mini-splits shine in homes where different rooms have dramatically different comfort needs. A south-facing bedroom that overheats in winter while the north-facing living room stays cold is a classic mini-split use case. Each zone runs its own thermostat, so you heat or cool only what you need.
Central systems condition the whole house simultaneously (unless you add zone dampers). That's fine for open floor plans, well-insulated homes with consistent sun exposure, and households with consistent schedules. It wastes energy in a 4-bedroom house where only 1–2 rooms are occupied during the day.
When zone control is worth the mini-split premium:
- Multi-story homes where upper floors overheat
- Finished basements or additions with poor duct connections
- Home offices or guest rooms used irregularly
- Homes with large south-facing glass areas
When central is fine:
- Open-plan single-story construction
- Homes with even sun exposure and good insulation
- Households with consistent all-day occupancy patterns
Which Homes Should Choose Mini-Splits
No existing ductwork: The clearest case. Older homes with radiator heat, in-floor radiant, or baseboard electric have no ducts to repurpose. A 4-zone mini-split avoids a $6,000–$15,000 duct installation and typically performs better than a ducted system would anyway — especially if walls and ceilings are already finished.
Room additions: If you're adding a room or converting a garage or attic, extending existing ducts is often impractical. A single-zone mini-split handles the addition independently with no disruption to the main system.
Partial electrification: Some homeowners want to electrify 1–2 high-use rooms (bedroom, living area) while keeping existing gas or oil heat for the remainder of the house. Mini-splits make partial replacement practical without replacing the whole HVAC system.
Which Homes Should Choose Central Heat Pumps
Existing well-maintained ductwork: If your ducts are in good shape — sealed, insulated, and properly sized — a central heat pump drops into your existing system with minimal disruption. The contractor replaces the outdoor unit and air handler; the duct network stays.
New construction: Building a new home with a central heat pump is the efficient choice. Ducts are designed from scratch to match the system, duct losses are minimized, and the total installed cost is competitive with mini-splits in larger homes.
Whole-home consistency preference: Some households simply prefer one thermostat. Central systems are also easier to explain to house guests, family members, and future buyers.
What the Section 25C Credit Covers
Both mini-splits and central heat pumps qualify for the federal Section 25C credit — 30% of equipment and installation cost, capped at $2,000 per year, active through December 31, 2032. The $2,000 annual cap applies per taxpayer, so a homeowner installing a $14,000 4-zone mini-split gets the same $2,000 credit as one installing a $9,000 central system.
The credit cannot be "stacked" across multiple systems in the same tax year — but it does reset annually. If you're replacing systems in phases, consider timing installations across two calendar years to claim $2,000 twice.
Use our Heat Pump vs Gas Furnace Calculator to model side-by-side operating costs for your home size, climate zone, and electricity rate. For a full picture of electrification costs including panel upgrades, the Whole-Home Bundle Calculator shows combined costs across HVAC, water heating, and EV charging.
Bottom Line
Mini-splits win in homes without ductwork, in homes with leaky ducts, and in situations where zone control meaningfully reduces energy use. Central heat pumps win in homes with existing tight ductwork, in new construction, and when whole-home simplicity is the priority. Neither is universally better — the right answer depends on your house, not on which product has the higher efficiency rating on paper.
Related Guides
- Best Heat Pumps for Cold Climates 2026 — Mitsubishi H2i, Daikin Aurora, and Bosch IDS Ultra compared for northern U.S. homes.
- Ductless Heat Pump Installation Cost 2026 — Detailed cost breakdown for single-zone and multi-zone mini-split installations.
- Heat Pump vs Gas Furnace 2026 — 15-year total cost comparison by climate zone.
- Dual Fuel Heat Pump Guide 2026 — How heat pump + gas backup systems work for cold climates with cheap gas.