• Decoy321@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Did you even bother to read the article? There are rebates to help mitigate the cost which significantly reduce the up-front costs and ROI.

    Utility and local programs across the country are also giving consumers a financial boost to encourage them to switch to heat-pump water heaters. Check out the EPA’s Energy Star rebate finder for local incentives. It can be well worth digging them up; residents of Maine, for example, can get an instant rebate that allows them to buy a new heat-pump water heater for as little as $429.

    There’s help even for those of us not lucky enough to live in Maine. All U.S. taxpayers can claim the 25C tax credit to cover 30 percent, up to $2,000, of the installation and equipment costs for a qualifying Energy Star heat-pump water heater. (The $2,000 limit resets annually and can be used toward heat-pump HVAC systems as well; you can get the full value of the tax credit for both upgrades if you do them in different years.)

    Forthcoming rebates will also make heat-pump water heaters more affordable for lower-income families in the U.S., covering the costs of new heat-pump water heaters up to $1,750. State energy offices are working on how they’ll roll out their rebate programs, the earliest of which are anticipated to go live next year.

    • FiveMacs@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      No I didn’t because I had actual first hand experience selling, installing, and uninstalling the things…over and over and over. I really don’t care what some dude at a desk has to say about my industry. We also had rebates from the government…the tanks themselves were pure garbage, didn’t work and the rebate process was a nightmare for the homeowner.