Updated: April 2025 | bremo.io financial guides
Furnace Replacement Cost in Canada (2025)
A furnace replacement is one of the most urgent and least deferrable home expenses. When a furnace fails in a Canadian winter, you need action fast. Understanding what you'll pay — and what alternatives exist — helps you make a good decision under pressure.
Average Furnace Replacement Costs in Canada
- Mid-efficiency gas furnace (80% AFUE): $3,500 – $6,000 installed
- High-efficiency gas furnace (95%+ AFUE): $4,500 – $8,000 installed
- Electric furnace: $1,800 – $4,500 installed
- Air-source heat pump (replacing furnace): $6,000 – $16,000 installed
- Ground-source (geothermal) heat pump: $20,000 – $45,000 installed
Most common replacement: A standard high-efficiency natural gas furnace for an average Canadian home (1,500–2,500 sq ft) costs approximately $5,000–$7,500 fully installed in 2025.
Cost Factors for Furnace Replacement
Home Size and BTU Requirements
Furnaces are sized in BTUs (British Thermal Units). An oversized or undersized furnace creates efficiency and comfort problems. Proper Manual J load calculations determine what size you need:
- Small home under 1,200 sq ft: 40,000–60,000 BTU
- Average home 1,500–2,000 sq ft: 60,000–80,000 BTU
- Large home 2,500–3,500 sq ft: 80,000–120,000 BTU
Installation Complexity
- Simple swap (same location, same fuel): Lowest cost
- Upgrading from 80% to 95%+ efficiency: May require new venting ($500–$1,500 for PVC exhaust)
- Switching fuel type (oil to gas): Gas line installation adds $500–$2,000
- Moving location: Ductwork modification adds $1,000–$5,000
Brand and Model
Major brands (Carrier, Lennox, Trane, Napoleon, Goodman) have varying price points. A Goodman 95% AFUE furnace might cost $1,500 in materials, while a comparable Carrier or Lennox unit costs $2,500–$3,500 in materials. Both will keep you warm; the difference is in warranty, features, and long-term reliability track record.
Gas vs. Heat Pump: A Major Decision Point
When your furnace needs replacing, consider whether to replace like-for-like or switch to a heat pump. This decision has major financial implications:
Stay with Gas Furnace If:
- Your climate is extremely cold (regular temperatures below -25°C)
- Gas prices in your area are much cheaper than electricity
- You need the lowest upfront cost
- Your home needs significant duct improvements before a heat pump would work well
Switch to Heat Pump If:
- You want to reduce carbon emissions
- Electricity is cost-competitive with gas in your area
- You also want air conditioning (heat pump provides both heating and cooling)
- You qualify for significant rebates (CleanBC: up to $6,000; federal: up to $5,000)
Ontario and BC homeowners: With available rebates, an air-source cold-climate heat pump can be installed for net cost similar to a high-efficiency furnace, while providing cooling and potentially lower operating costs. Do the math before defaulting to a gas furnace replacement.
Available Rebates for Furnace Replacement
If you're upgrading to a high-efficiency or electric option, rebates are available:
High-Efficiency Gas Furnace Rebates
- Enbridge Gas (Ontario/Alberta): Up to $500 for 95%+ AFUE
- FortisBC (BC): Up to $1,000 for qualifying models
Heat Pump Rebates (Replacing a Furnace)
- Canada Greener Homes Grant (when available): Up to $5,000
- CleanBC (BC): Up to $6,000
- Ontario: Enbridge offers incentives for fuel switching to heat pump
- Alberta: Check ATCO and Enbridge for current programs
Emergency Furnace Replacement: What to Do
When a furnace fails in winter, time is critical. Here's the smart approach:
- Get 2–3 quotes even urgently — good HVAC companies can install within 24–48 hours
- Don't automatically choose the first company that shows up — prices vary enormously
- Confirm the company is licensed and insured
- Ask specifically about rebate-eligible models — even in an emergency, choosing the right model matters
- Get the quote in writing including all components
How Long Do Furnaces Last in Canada?
A quality gas furnace in Canada lasts approximately:
- Basic 80% furnace: 15–20 years
- High-efficiency 95%+ furnace: 20–25 years with proper maintenance
- Annual maintenance (filter changes, inspection): Extends life and preserves efficiency
Financing Furnace Replacement
Most homeowners don't have $6,000–$8,000 available on short notice for an emergency furnace replacement. Options include:
- HELOC: Best rate if you have an existing line of credit set up
- Personal loan: Fastest option for homeowners without existing HELOC — approval often same day online
- HVAC contractor financing: Through Financeit or other lenders — convenient but verify rate before signing
- Canada Greener Homes Loan: 0% interest up to $40,000 — requires planning ahead, not for emergencies