Every federal, state, and utility rebate for your ZIP.
Washington · Heat pump rebates 2026

Washington heat pump rebates.
Stacked, checked, ready.

Washington homeowners can combine federal, state, and utility rebates — and in many cases pay less than half of sticker install cost. Here's the current rebate stack for ZIP 98101.

What heat pump rebates are available in Washington in 2026?

Washington approved but not yet open to applications. Typical rebate stack: $0 today, $8,000 to $14,000 when the portal opens on a whole-home heat pump install, depending on income tier and equipment choice. Utility programs and remaining federal items (solar, geothermal) layer on top where eligible.

Your personal Washington rebate stack

Enter your ZIP, income, and household size to see exactly what applies.

Why Washington is a priority state

Washington is one of the first states where HEEHRA actually launched — which means the rebate stack here isn't theoretical. Homeowners are approved, installers are trained, and paperwork flows through state-operated portals instead of sitting in DOE review queues. That's why we ship full state pages with live data here first, and why our installer partners have the deepest coverage in Washington ZIPs.

Cities in Washington

City-level rebate stacks with utility-specific detail. Same HEEHRA + state programs, plus local bonuses where they exist.

  • SeattleSeattle City Light heat pump rebates plus pending Washington HEEHRA — expected to launch late Q2 2026.

Utilities serving Washington

Each utility runs its own rebate rules on top of HEEHRA and state programs. Open one to see program caps, eligibility, and stacking notes.

  • Seattle City LightSeattle City Light offers residential heat pump rebates of roughly $1,500 to $1,800 per qualifying system, with an additional $800 ductless mini-split bonus and supplemental income-qualified amounts through the HomeWise program. Rebates stack with Washington HEEHRA — under the Washington State Department of Commerce rollout — for income-qualified households up to the federal $8,000 ceiling.

Washington heat pump rebates — frequently asked

Washington has accepted DOE funding and announced a program, but the consumer portal is still in development. See the live state-by-state HEEHRA rollout tracker for program launch dates and income caps.
No — the 25C federal heat pump tax credit was repealed by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act in July 2025 and expired December 31, 2025. Washington homeowners should focus on state-administered HEEHRA rebates, utility incentives, and remaining 25C items (solar PV, geothermal, battery storage).
Expected rebate stack in Washington: $0 today, $8,000 to $14,000 when the portal opens. Savings depend on household income, equipment tier, and whether your ZIP has utility programs that layer on top of state rebates. Use the rebate finder on this page to see the exact programs for your ZIP.
HEEHRA uses Area Median Income (AMI) tiers from HUD, which vary by county and household size. Under 80% AMI qualifies for the full rebate (up to $8,000 heat pump + $14,000 whole-package). Between 80–150% AMI qualifies for 50% of the rebate. Above 150% AMI is not HEEHRA-eligible but can still stack utility programs.
Yes — HEEHRA is designed to stack with state and utility programs. The application order matters: federal tax credits (where applicable), then state energy office rebates, then utility incentives, then manufacturer/dealer rebates. Stacking correctly is how homeowners reach net-cost savings of 50–90% off the pre-rebate install price.
WA · Next step

See your Washington rebate stack.

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