Heat Pump Sizing Guide — How Many Tons Do You Need?
Heat pump capacity is measured in tons — one ton equals 12,000 BTU per hour of heating or cooling output. Most single-family homes in the United States need somewhere between 1.5 and 5 tons. The wrong size costs you real money: undersized units run continuously and lose efficiency on the coldest days; oversized units short-cycle, wear out faster, dehumidify poorly, and cost 20-40% more upfront. This guide explains how to get to an accurate ballpark yourself, and when to stop guessing and bring in a licensed HVAC contractor for a Manual J load calculation.
Start with climate zone
The IECC defines eight U.S. climate zones from hot-humid (Zone 1, South Florida) to subarctic (Zone 8, most of Alaska). Zone maps are available from ACCA, Energy Star, or your state energy office. Your BTU-per-square-foot load scales roughly with climate zone and whether you're calculating cooling load (summer) or heating load (winter).
As a rough starting point:
- Zones 1–2 (hot-humid South) — 20–30 BTU/sqft cooling-dominated
- Zones 3–4 (mixed climates, mid-Atlantic, Southern California coast) — 25–35 BTU/sqft
- Zones 5–6 (Midwest, New England) — 35–45 BTU/sqft heating-dominated
- Zones 7–8 (Upper Midwest, Alaska) — 45–60 BTU/sqft heating-dominated
In cold climates, heating load drives sizing. In hot-humid climates, cooling and dehumidification drive it.
Apply insulation and envelope tier
The base BTU/sqft number assumes average insulation (R-19 walls, R-38 attic, average-quality windows). Adjust for your envelope:
- Tight envelope (R-30+ walls, R-60 attic, triple-pane windows, sealed) — reduce load 20-30%
- Average envelope — no adjustment
- Leaky envelope (pre-1980 construction, single-pane windows, no air sealing) — increase load 20-35%
Houses with spray-foam retrofits or deep-energy retrofits can drop from a 4-ton to a 2.5-ton heat pump, which is a significant equipment cost savings.
Tonnage calculation example
A 2,000-sqft home in Climate Zone 5 (Chicago) with average insulation:
- Base load: 2,000 sqft × 40 BTU/sqft = 80,000 BTU
- Envelope adjustment: none (average)
- Required capacity: 80,000 BTU ÷ 12,000 = 6.7 tons, round to 5-ton (largest residential size)
A 1,500-sqft home in the same zone with a tight envelope:
- Base load: 1,500 × 40 × 0.75 = 45,000 BTU
- Required capacity: 45,000 ÷ 12,000 = 3.75 tons, round to 4-ton
When approximation is not enough
Cold-climate heat pump sizing requires a proper Manual J calculation because variable-speed inverter heat pumps have different capacity curves at different outdoor temperatures. A unit rated at 3 tons at 47°F may deliver only 2 tons at 5°F. Pairing the right unit to your design temperature — the 1% coldest hour in your county — is work for a licensed HVAC professional running ACCA-approved software (Wrightsoft, Elite Software, or CoolCalc).
Our heat pump calculator runs a simplified Manual J approximation using your ZIP (which maps to climate zone and design temperature), square footage, and insulation tier — it's accurate enough to set budget expectations and get a rebate estimate. For the final equipment order, insist your contractor shows you the Manual J printout. Reputable installers do this automatically; anyone sizing by rule of thumb ("the old one was 4 tons, so the new one is 4 tons") is the wrong contractor. For the full equipment-buying walkthrough, see our heat pump guide.
Why proper sizing pays back
An oversized heat pump in a humid climate won't run long enough to dehumidify — you get cold, clammy air. An oversized cold-climate unit short-cycles and fails 5–8 years early. An undersized unit runs auxiliary heat strips in winter, driving electric bills up. The ROI on getting sizing right at install is roughly $3,000–$5,000 over the equipment lifetime, vs. the $200–$500 a contractor charges to do Manual J properly.