Шинэ судалгаагаар дулааны насос суурилуулсан орон сууцны үнэ зах зээлд өндөр үнэлэгддэг болохыг нотлов.
“Smart Energy Consumer Collaborative” байгууллага, “257” платформ болон Үл хөдлөх хөрөнгийн үндэсний ассоциацын хамтарсан судалгаагаар дулааны насос нь орон сууцны үнэ цэнийг нэмэгдүүлдэг болохыг тогтоожээ. Судлаачид 2024-2025 оны хооронд АНУ-д хийгдсэн хагас сая орчим орон сууцны худалдааны мэдээлэлд дүн шинжилгээ хийсэн байна. Үр дүнд нь дулааны насостой гэдгээ зарласан орон сууцны үнэ бусад ижил төстэй орон сууцтай харьцуулахад 0.6-1 хувиар илүү үнээр зарагддаг болох нь тогтоогджээ.
Энэ нь дундаж үнэтэй орон сууцны хувьд 2,300-3,900 ам.долларын нэмэлт өсөлт болж байгаа юм. “257” компанийн гүйцэтгэх захирал Скотт Розенберг дулааны насос суурилуулах нь байгаль орчинд ээлтэйгээс гадна эдийн засгийн хувьд үр ашигтай хөрөнгө оруулалт гэдгийг онцоллоо. Уг төхөөрөмжийг суурилуулах зардал өндөр ч, борлуулалтын үнийн өсөлт нь уг зардлын 15-25 хувийг нөхөх боломжтой аж.
Судлаачид машин сургалтын арга ашиглан ижил төстэй орон сууцнуудыг бүлэглэн, дулааны насосны үнэлгээнд үзүүлэх нөлөөг нарийвчлан тодорхойлсон байна. Мэрилэндийн их сургуулийн эдийн засгийн профессор Юумин “Люси” Чиу энэхүү судалгааг үл хөдлөх хөрөнгийн зах зээл дэх эрчим хүчний хэмнэлтийн үнэ цэнийг харуулсан чухал ажил болсон гэж дүгнэжээ. Өмнө нь 2020 онд “Nature Energy” сэтгүүлд нийтлэгдсэн судалгаагаар ч дулааны насос нь орон сууцны үнэд эерэг нөлөө үзүүлдэг болохыг баталж байсан юм.
Дэлгэрэнгүйг эх сурвалжаас харах
↓Эх сурвалжийг нээх ↓
Would you pay more for ahome with aheat pump?
You can bet Iwould.
I’d gladly fork over more money to bypass agas or oil furnace, which—unlike an all-electric heat pump—spews toxic combustion byproducts, runs the risk of poisoning my family with carbon monoxide, and contributes to climate change. And while heat pumps, which provide both heating and cooling, typically cost more up front than conventional furnaces, they’re two to four times as efficient, and so could save me money in the longrun.
Apparently, I’m not alone in prizing the comfort, safety, and economic benefits of these appliances.
Heat pumps give home values aboost, according to anew report by the nonprofit Smart Energy Consumer Collaborative, which studies consumer behaviors, interests, and concerns in the energy transition; 257, acustomer-intelligence platform that profiles US. residential property characteristics for contractors, utilities, and others; and the trade group the National Association of Realtors. Their analysis showed that homeowners who install aheat pump can recoup up to aquarter of its cost just by mentioning it in real estate listings when they’re ready tosell.
While some homeowners may invest in aheat pump for its environmental bona fides, for most people, economics trumps all, said Scott Rosenberg, acofounder and chief executive officer of 257. “A homeowner who puts agarage on, redoes their bathroom, improves their kitchen, always thinks, ‘Am Igoing to get this valueback?’”
By analyzing more than half amillion sales of US homes with ducted heat pumps from 2024 to 2025, the authors found that those with real estate listings mentioning the heat pump typically enjoyed asales price boost of 0.6 percent to 1 percent over homes that didn’t advertise their efficient appliance. This modest lift translates to $2,300 to $3,900 per home, given amedian sale price of $399,000.
“Just shy of $4K doesn’t sound like alot of money on ahome sale,” Rosenberg said. “But it’s actually ameaningful piece of the investment that you made to get the heat pump in the firstplace.”
In 2026, aducted heat-pump system costs on average about $15,400, per energy marketplace EnergySage—though prices vary wildly depending on the region, ahome’s size and electrical service, and local contractors, to name afew variables. Acomparable gas furnace plus central AC system can cost half that, according to home services platform Angi. Mentioning ahome’s heat pump in the sale listing, assuming the appliance cost around the average price, can recoup about 15 percent to 25 percent of the outlay.
Now, every home is different, and people willingly pay premiums for awide variety of attributes, such as the floor plan, the views, and neighborhood vibes.
But Rosenberg is confident that when it comes to real estate listings, the heat-pump price bump is real, because of the approach his team used and the amount of data they analyzed. 257 used amachine learning technique to cluster homes across hundreds of attributes to identify those that are nearly identical, he said. Then, within those clusters, sales prices were contrasted for those homes where the heat pump was or wasn’t mentioned in the listing.
Yueming “Lucy” Qiu, an economics professor at the University of Maryland, called the report “very valuable” for helping to gauge the premium that people place on heat pumps. “I’m actually very happy that this came out,” said Qiu, who investigated the matter years ago at asmaller geographic scale.
In 2020, Qiu and her colleagues published apeer-reviewed study in Nature Energy that looked at home sales across 23 states from 2000 to 2018 for whether the presence of aheat pump improved the property’s sale prices.

